People Are Sharing Pics Of Life 50-100 Years Ago And They Might Put Things In A New Perspective
The easiest way for us to get a glimpse into the good old days is to open up our family's photo album. But what if we go through the images and instead of calming down our curiosity, they only fuel it? Easy. We open up the subreddit r/TheWayWeWere next.
It's a place where folks share pictures from 50, 100, and even more years ago to show what everyday life looked like in the past. Featuring old photos, scanned documents, articles, and personal anecdotes, this subreddit has become one of the biggest vintage archives online.
Continue scrolling and check out why 528K people subscribe to r/TheWayWeWere.
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Mary Wallace: First Female Bus Driver For Chicago Transit Authority (1974)
My Ridiculously Attractive Grandparents Sitting For A Portrait In The Early 1940s
The last 100 years have produced profound changes in human history.
Wars, technological developments, progress in civil rights, and breakthroughs in science and medicine, the old world has been swept away. Whether it's for better or worse.
Centuries-old empires crumbled as new ideologies – like communism and fascism – took over in many parts of the world. Wars in the early part of the 20th century put an end to the colonial world and gave birth to new nations. However, these wars also cost millions of lives and trillions of dollars.
My Mom On Her Wedding Day November 1951
Cats Blackie & Brownie Catching Squirts Of Milk During Milking At Arch Badertscher's Dairy Farm In Fresno, California, 1954
Throughout the past century, technological innovations have transformed our lives in ways we never dreamed of. Progressive ideas emerged and changed the world as women, African Americans, and the LGBTQ community demanded, and often won, equal rights; from the ratification of the 19th Amendment in the United States to the legalization of same-sex marriage in many countries. But recent civil rights conflicts tell us the fight for equality is not over.
A Native American Girl Of The Kiowa Tribe, Oklahoma, 1894
My Great-Great-Grandmother Sometime In The 1890s
The pandemic that began ravaging the world in 2020 reminds us that even though we can buy a ticket to go to space, we're still vulnerable to viruses that can shut down economies and disrupt society.
People are hoping science can save Earth from the devastating changes to the climate that continue to imperil the ecosystems of our planet. In the coming years, natural disasters may have an increasingly impactful role in the course of history. Who knows where we will end up in another 100.
Protesting The High School Dress Code That Banned Slacks For Girls, Brooklyn C.1940
Two Pals (1920)
Gay Men Pose For A Photo While Being Detained At A Police Station For Being Homosexuals In Mexico, 1935
1945: The Day Daddy Came Home. Gunner Hector Murdoch Had Been Gone Over Four Years, Most Of It As A Prisoner Of War In Singapore. His Wife Rosina And Son John Hadn't Known If He Was Dead Or Alive. He Got Home On His Birthday
Dad Showing Off His Skill To The Surprise Of His Little Daughter In Melbourne, Australia, Ca. 1940s
London's First Black Police Officer, PC Norwell Roberts, On Point Duty Near Charing Cross Station, 1968
He's definitely on point duty. That's a fantastic point he's got there.
This 1955 Photo Is One Of Walter Chandoha’s Most Famous Shots. “My Daughter Paula And The Kitten Both ‘Smiled’ For The Camera At The Same Time. …but The Cat’s Not Smiling, He’s Meowing”
Sisters In Skirts, 1950s
My Great Grandmother In The Early 1900’s. Thought She Looked Too Awesome Not To Share
My Parents’ Wedding Photo, Okinawa, 1964
My Grandpa (Left) And His Best Friend Willie Hall During The Korean War. Those Smiles Say It All
My Grandfather, Great-Grandfather, Great-Great-Grandfather, And Great-Great-Great Grandmother, Ca 1918
My Great-Grandfather That Was Too Poor To Afford A Suit In Sicily, So He Had To Pose In Front Of A Cardboard Cut-Out, 1930s~
This Is Hazel, My Grandmother-In-Law. 1916
My Grandmother And Mom Circa 1974. My Grandmother Took My Mother To National Parks Over The Course Of A Few Months, Just The Two Of Them
“Our Michael”, 1938
A Sailor "Meets" His Baby For The First Time After Fourteen Months At Sea, 1940s
Okay, some parenting lessons may be needed. Day One: How to Hold the Baby.
Grandma And Papa In 1937. She Passed Away Today At 100 Years Old
Last Picture Of My Great Uncle Kennith, Before He Drowned In The Buffalo River, 1940’s. He Gave His Life Saving My Grandpa
My Mother Made Us Matching Dresses For A Fancy Party Back In 1954
Saw This Photo Posted Here.. Noticed I Have The Photo The Grandmother Took That Day. (Bought At An Antique Shop Years Ago In Phx)
A Parisian Woman With Her Cat In Her Cannabis Garden, 1910
I have a cat. All I need now is the garden (and some law changes please).
This Is My Grandma Dorothy. She Was A Dress Designer In The 50s Which Always Made This Photo More Funny To Me. She Passed Away Today At Age 89. A Life Well Lived
Vintage Photo From A Family Album, Freeport, Il
Besides the obvious that he is a black man and she a white woman in the 1900s, when this required a lot of guts, I love the fact he's wearing puttees as part of civilian dress. This was pretty common before WW1. After the war... not so much.
Me And My Best Friend Rocky Watching TV, 1959
Ladies At A Lesbian Club In Chelsea, 1953
A Mostly Happy Family Outing At Chicken Bone Beach, The Segregated Section Of Atlantic City's Beach Area, New Jersey, 1950s (Photographed By John W. Mosley)
1976 vs. 2018; 42 Years And We're Still Going Strong
Young Oyster Shuckers, Port Royal, South Carolina, 1909
Crikey - the “thousand yard stare” at that young age. Life must have been tough for these girls.
Sad thing is that some politicians opposed child labour laws. Claimed it was going to ruin the economy.
Some still would. Remember when Newt Gingrich proposed that children on the free lunch program work at the schools to earn their lunches?
Load More Replies...Children should never be treated such that they develop the thousand yard stare of despair and hopelessness.
If child labour laws had been introduced sooner then many of the kids would've had a better childhood, or even a childhood in the first place.
Well, maybe not. Because their money was helping to feed their family.
Load More Replies...To me, they all look like they are missing fingers. That is horrifying!
Load More Replies...The last time I saw a look that intense on someone so young was in a photograph of small boys who were made to work in a coal mine at around the same time period. :(
Stephen Moore, drumpf’s Fed pick back in 2019, wanted to abolish child labor laws, and out 11 and 12 year olds to work. F*****g terrifying.
Yeah. Doing chores and light work. Not going back to Stuart times.
Load More Replies...What a horrible life for them. Oyster shucking is a terrible job. Look at their damaged hands.
Child Slave labour. Can see on their faces that oyster shucking wasn’t the worst things they were put through.
Look at their ragged and mangled hands - that is an unspeakable tragedy.
Those bandaged bleeding hands. Those faces burnt from cold salt water. How sad.
Lul what crap comments. If anyone actually cared they'd speak out for the children that are in the exact same situation today
Yes, I just see comments about how easy kids today have it. They may not have to work super hard to make a living, but there are children in horrible situations. Plus, social media ruining these young kids. They don't have it easier.
Load More Replies...OMG . . . life was tough . . . and our kids think they have it bad (:
Poor little girls. They already look so hardened at such a tender age.
I am glad we have child labor laws now. No child should have to work to survive at that age, and no child should have sore, chapped hands that bleed from working. No child should be in a situation that puts that look on their face. Ever.
Growing-up in New Orleans I shucked many an ouster. Never commercially but for family and or friends get-togethers. Or for Friday meals, The first thing I look at in the picture or the girls hands. For me the hands tell more of a horrible story than anything else. Not as dangerous as the coal miner children but still. So sad. Thank god for child labor laws.
These are "the good old days" Republicans are always trying to bring back. Any takers?
Makes me angry just to think of what some children had to go through!
What's wrong with their hands I assume that's from being made to work very long hours and everyday.
Their little chapped hands epitomize the weary neglect of their childhood.
Look at those red hands and arms. Shucking oysters is dangerous.Poor kids!
Look at the girl on the left… her hands. And those 1000 yard stares. Or as one child protective worker I knew of called “the zombie stare”.
Their poor little red fingers! I just want to hug them and take them home.
Those poor babies. 💔 They look neither healthy, nor happy. Child labor is a crime & a depravity. 👿
Oyster shucking ain't for the weak man.. it'll slice your hands to bits. Poor kids..
Too young to be working glad for the new laws so kids can get to be kids
Umm I thought they didn’t make colors photos until later in time. Am I wrong??
They look like they were born for this picture. It is somewhat strange but it makes you want to keep staring at it. They have that pull you in. Their poor little arms and hands look painful. Children were treated so bad back in the day if they were not born into some money. Not rich but enough the family could survive. Just babies!!!!
All so the rich could enjoy their fancy oysters. Those poor girls.
DAMN.....they ALL have that same stare...I'm a grown ass man, and those stares are scary...can't even imagine what they have endured
The way poor children were used makes me sick to my stomach. I guess needing food makes a big difference.
They started young, to help the family, perhaps they lost their childhood !!!
Aww, look at their poor raw hands and faces older than their age, how awfully sad.
Astounding picture, reminding us how lucky we are to live nowadays.
One picture that screams the requirements that brought about the Child Labor Laws! Especially in the south.
Pix like this need to be shown to modern - kids -with -iphones- not that long ago..
Look at their little hands..such red, scratched and work-worn hands on mere toddlers...like my grandmother, she worked in a textile mill in England at age 9. She was the oldest child of 9.
What a terrible photo, what a terrible thought, what a terrible legacy Poor, poor people....
The girl on the far right looks like she is missing her thumb ... I'm surprised they have any fingers left.
Inequity comes in all forms, unfortunately. Amazing you don’t know that.
Load More Replies...good to see that children were put to good use..this needs to come back to teach a few of the entitled generation how to work and live..and you cant all have a blog and make money off youtube
It’s up to older people to learn or remember and teach the young.
Load More Replies...The issue back then was that children were seen as miniature adults and therefore expected to do the work of adults, plain and simple. Our children have no idea.
Lmao, there are so many problems with your comment, I can’t even begin.
Load More Replies...Reddit Seems To Love My Taita (Grandma), So Here Is Another One Of Her From 1950’s Beirut
The Wedding Rings Of My Ggm, Gggm, Ggggm, And Gggggm Oldest Dating Back To 1832!
Police Officer Unaware Of The Imminent Danger, Chicago, 1959
After Spending More Than Five Years In A North Vietnamese Camp, Lt. Col. Robert L. Stirm Is Reunited With His Family At Travis Afb, March 13, 1973
This photo, called "Burst of Joy" won a Pulitzer prize. It has an unhappy ending though. According to Wikipedia "Despite outward appearances, the reunion was an unhappy one for Stirm. Three days before he arrived in the United States, the same day he was released from captivity, Stirm received a Dear John letter from his wife Loretta informing him that their marriage was over. Stirm later learned that Loretta had been with other men throughout his captivity, receiving marriage proposals from three of them. In 1974, the Stirms divorced and Loretta remarried, but Lieutenant Colonel Stirm was still ordered by the courts to provide her with 43% of his military retirement pay once he retired from the Air Force. Stirm was later promoted to full Colonel and retired from the Air Force in 1977."
My Grandpa’s Schoolhouse In Texas Ca. 1930’s. He Was Always Embarrassed Of This Picture Because He Was Too Poor To Afford Shoes
My dad remembered going to school in Ireland in the early 1940s alongside kids with no shoes. Extreme poverty is more recent than you think.
Women Trainees Of The Lapd Practice Firing Their Newly Issued Revolvers, 1948
Dublin, 1962
Caught On The Firescape, 1946
Offerings To The Unknown Dead, Kyoto, Japan, 1963
The 70s Transition: My Parents In 1968 And Again In 1970
My American Grandmother Visiting Athens In The 1960s
Such style in a lot of these pictures! Too bad nobody really dares to wear anymore
Listening To The Radio On The Beach, Circa 1940s
The Rolled-Stockings Trend Of The 1920's Brought On A Fad Of Hand-Painted Knees
Class Divide In Britain, 1930's
Me Ready For Friday Night Lights, 1969
Note: this post originally had 117 images. It’s been shortened to the top 50 images based on user votes.
I have all my grandparents and great grandparents old picture albums ! Come on over !
Load More Replies...It was my grandfather's birthday. This WWII "happy event" shows the wear and tear of the times on the faces of the participants. My mother - upper left - almost has a smile. Who knew in 1943 where the war would take us, how it would end? war-birthd...549034.jpg
My other fave pic from that era. 1967, my Mum and Dad looking like freakin' movie stars at the Fortuna Hotel in Bangkok, Thailand. In a band, they were fresh out of a night in jail because their shady agent forgot to renew their visas. Still no sign of their luggage, they had to borrow the hotel's bathrobes while they waited. Love the back story behind the "glamour" shot, lol! 1967-Dad-a...63e818.jpg
My parents on their first date in 1963. I came along about a year later :-) 1963-Dad-a...c52148.jpg
This is a reminder that parents / grandparents were once young people doing what young people do. My dad used to always say “of course I know what you’re up to, because I did the same things when I was your age” and I would always think “you were never my age age, you’re the dad”
Lastly, 'cause I could go on and on (you're welcome!), here I am with Mum and Dad at their "second" wedding in 1974 (big semi-scandal at the time, I'm the only one that didn't know it was their first). Wonderful example of my Dad's style and porn 'stache. And I look adorable. 1974-Mum-a...b84dae.jpg
It genuinely saddens me that when people look at photographs 100 years from now, they'll see garbage like their grandmother's trout pout and not at all like the elegance and grace of 'our' 100 years ago.
I enjoyed the post, so different, I truly love old, styles as compared to today, is blah !!!
I have all my grandparents and great grandparents old picture albums ! Come on over !
Load More Replies...It was my grandfather's birthday. This WWII "happy event" shows the wear and tear of the times on the faces of the participants. My mother - upper left - almost has a smile. Who knew in 1943 where the war would take us, how it would end? war-birthd...549034.jpg
My other fave pic from that era. 1967, my Mum and Dad looking like freakin' movie stars at the Fortuna Hotel in Bangkok, Thailand. In a band, they were fresh out of a night in jail because their shady agent forgot to renew their visas. Still no sign of their luggage, they had to borrow the hotel's bathrobes while they waited. Love the back story behind the "glamour" shot, lol! 1967-Dad-a...63e818.jpg
My parents on their first date in 1963. I came along about a year later :-) 1963-Dad-a...c52148.jpg
This is a reminder that parents / grandparents were once young people doing what young people do. My dad used to always say “of course I know what you’re up to, because I did the same things when I was your age” and I would always think “you were never my age age, you’re the dad”
Lastly, 'cause I could go on and on (you're welcome!), here I am with Mum and Dad at their "second" wedding in 1974 (big semi-scandal at the time, I'm the only one that didn't know it was their first). Wonderful example of my Dad's style and porn 'stache. And I look adorable. 1974-Mum-a...b84dae.jpg
It genuinely saddens me that when people look at photographs 100 years from now, they'll see garbage like their grandmother's trout pout and not at all like the elegance and grace of 'our' 100 years ago.
I enjoyed the post, so different, I truly love old, styles as compared to today, is blah !!!