19 Fascinating Photos Collected From History
Nathan Johnson
Published
02/18/2019
in
wow
interesting stuff from the history vault. Let's learn all about the past and some interesting and strange fun facts. Like, oh gosh, what was up with world wars. It would really suck to be in one of those.
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1.
Man standing on lap of colossal figure of Ramses, 1856 -
2.
Cowboys drinking at a saloon in Tascosa, Texas 1907 -
3.
Cowboys sit around Bob Leavitt’s Saloon in Jordan, Montana, 1904 -
4.
The American Look in 1945 according to the department store, Lord & Taylor -
5.
A black Union soldier sits, posted in front of a slave auction house on Whitehall Street in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1864 -
6.
An advertisement for a slave auction in Charleston, South Carolina. -
7.
Class Divide in Britain, 1930’s -
8.
Gym aboard The Titanic, 1912 -
9.
A Meccan merchant with his Circassian slave. (1886-1887) -
10.
African-American, sharecropper & mother teaching her children numbers and alphabet at home in Transylvania, Louisiana in 1939. -
11.
Marine First Lieutenant Hart H. Spiegal of Topeka, Kansas, uses sign language as he tries to strike up a conversation with two tiny Japanese soldiers captured on Okinawa. The boy on the left claims he is “18” while his companion boasts “20” years. 1945 -
12.
Brothers Sril and Zelig Jacob shortly after their arrival at Auschwitz, 1944. -
13.
Polish children await physical examinations, the passing of which would allow them to be adopted by German families. Failure led to the death camps. c.1940. -
14.
B-17 bombers encounter heavy flak fire over Merseburg, Germany c.1944 -
15.
The remains of Vladimir Komarov, after he died due to parachute failure of Soyuz I, 24 April 1967 -
16.
Partisan before hanging out of the Nazis shouting:”Death to fascism,freedom to people” 1944 -
17.
Miners using an “aerial tram” to descend into the Kimberly Diamond Mine in South Africa, ca. 1885 -
18.
Newly liberated Jewish survivors of Buchenwald concentration camp are joined by Jewish U.S. Army soldiers who helped liberate the camp for the first day of Shavuot religious service conducted by U.S. Army chaplain Rabbi Herschel Schachter. 18 May 1945. -
19.
A series of Allied firebombing raids begins against the German city of Dresden, reducing the “Florence of the Elbe” to rubble and flames, and killing as many as 135,000 people. It was the single most destructive bombing of the war—including Hiroshima and Nagasaki 1945
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