Mata Hari
Mata Hari was a Dutch exotic dancer and courtesan who was convicted of being a German spy in World War I. Whether or not she was actually a spy is disputed, but she was executed in France.
Black Tuesday
October 29th, 1929 marked a dark turn in American history when the New York Stock Exchange crashed. After six days of anarchy and chaos at the Stock Exchange, stock prices totally collapsed, marking the day as “Black Tuesday.” This event led the United States to enter the Great Depression.
Jayne Mansfield and Sophia Loren
This infamous photo was taken at a Paramount party in Beverly Hills that was thrown in honor of Sophia Loren. However, socialite Jayne Mansfield had other ideas and decided to pose suggestively for a photo and steal the spotlight as a publicity stunt.
Beaches Of Normandy
On June 6th, 1944, American, British, and Canadian soldiers stormed the beaches of Normandy in order to try to vanquish the German army. Tom Jensen who was a sergeant in the 626th Engineer Light Equipment Company said: “They didn’t tell us anything we didn’t need to know. Heck, some of the guys on our ship thought we were headed to Japan, not Normandy. Just months earlier, we were either in high school or working odd jobs. We weren’t soldiers, at least not yet.”
Marilyn Monroe, 1952
This photo of Marilyn Monroe was captured by silent film actor Harold Lloyd and was featured in Life Magazine. Lloyd’s daughter said of Monroe: “She was my age, or maybe a year or two younger, but we came from very different worlds. She sat down to put on her makeup, and we just started chatting about our lives. She insisted on seeing the baby and talked about how she dreamed of having a child of her own one day.”
Captured German Ally
This photo captures the raw emotion of a 16-year-old German soldier’s reaction to being captured by the US 9th Army on April 3rd, 1945. The boy lost his parents at 15 and decided to join the Luftwaffe to support his siblings. Here we see him completely distraught after being captured by American forces.
Tallest, Shortest, Fattest Men In Europe
This photo captures a lovely moment in history when the tallest, shortest, and fattest men in Europe gathered together in order to play a game of cards in 1913. It just goes to show that humans have always been fascinated by those who are different from what we expect.
Jungle Pam
Pam Hardy, also known as Jungle Pam, was known as the queen of drag racing, who got into the scene after meeting Jungle Jim and becoming his girlfriend. She would work on the car and check for fluid leaks under the car before races.
Mona Lisa During WWII
As one of the most famous and treasured paintings of all time, the Mona Lisa (which had previously been stolen several times) was immediately packed away for safekeeping during World War II. Curators feared that if the Nazis got ahold of the painting it would be destroyed or it could be ruined during a bombing.
Young Brigitte Bardot
Brigitte Bardot was the Hollywood “it” girl back in the 1950’s and 60’s. However, despite all the fame and glamour, she yearned for anonymity. In an interview with The Guardian she said: “I don’t know what it means to sit quietly in a bistro, on a terrace, or in the theatre without being approached by someone.”
Arsenal Goalkeeper Jack Kelsey
During a game in 1954, goalkeeper Jack Kelsey struggled to keep an eye out for the ball due to incredibly thick fog that filled the pitch. Eventually, the game was called off since it was nearly impossible to see anything at all.
Ruby Bridges
In 1960, Ruby Bridges became the first African-American child to attend a newly-desegregated William Frantz Elementary School in Louisiana. She had to be escorted by U.S. Marshals due to threats to her safety. She had to walk past vicious dissenters hurling vitriol her way each day on her way to school.
The Kiss Of Life
This photo, known as “The Kiss of Life” was captured by Rocco Morabito in 1967 and shows utility worker J.D. Thompson saving his co-worker Randal G. Champion’s life with mouth to mouth resuscitation after Champion accidentally touched a low voltage line. Morabito explained: “I heard screaming. I looked up and I saw this man hanging down. Oh my God. I didn’t know what to do. I took a picture right quick. J.D. Thompson was running toward the pole. I went to my car and called an ambulance. I got back to the pole and J.D. was breathing into Champion. I backed off, way off until I hit a house and I couldn’t go any farther. I took another picture. Then I heard Thompson shouting down: He’s breathing!”
German Soldier WWI
This photo shows a German soldier during World War I engaged in trench warfare, armed with a saw tooth bayonet and wearing a brow plate down to his neck.
Elizabeth Taylor, 1956
Here we see Elizabeth Taylor on the set of Giant in 1956. She said she enjoyed the filming greatly. In an interview with Rolling Stone she said: “It’s been a long time since I’ve seen Giant. I don’t look at old movies of myself. I don’t even look at new ones of myself. But I loved Jimmy and I loved Rock. And I was the last person Jimmy was with before he drove to his death…But that was a private, personal moment.”
Night Fishing In Hawaii, 1948
This photo shows a night fishing session in Hawaii that involved a fire hanging precariously above the fisherman’s head as he uses a spear to capture fresh fish. The light from the fire would attract the fish and made it easier to spear them.
Charlie Chaplin and Albert Einstein
In this photo we see Charlie Chaplin attending the premiere of his film City Lights in Los Angeles alongside none other than Albert Einstein. The two became close friends after being introduced by Carl Laemmle, head of Universal Studios.
Band of Brothers, 1945
Here we see the paratroopers of Easy Company, who were also known as the Band of Brothers, relaxing in the newly captured home of Adolf Hitler in the Bavarian Alps in 1945. The Allied troops then helped themselves to the alcohol left behind before going on to loot the home.
Brothers Separated By Berlin Wall Reunited
When the Berlin Wall was erected in 1961, nobody was allowed to cross it, and it left many families separated. In 1963 a border pass agreement came into effect, which meant people living in West Berlin were allowed to cross to the East side. These brothers separated by the wall were finally reunited.
Vivien Leigh as Scarlet O’Hara
Actress Vivien Leigh portrayed Scarlet O’Hara in the classic film Gone with the Wind in 1939. At the time, she was in a relationship with Laurence Olivier. The two believed the film would absolutely fail, and Olivier wrote to O’Hara: “You have got to justify yourself in the next two or 3 films (or even 2 or 3 years) by proving that the presumable failure of Gone W.T.W. was not your fault and you can only do that by being really good in the following parts. To make a success of your career in pictures [is] ESSENTIAL for your self respect, and our ultimate happiness therefore. … If you don’t, I am afraid you may become just — well boring.”
Lawrence of Arabia
While WWI was taking place, Colonel Thomas Edward Lawrence, who was also known as Lawrence of Arabia, held a unique position as a demolition artist working with Arab rebel allies in the Middle East in order to attack bridges and depots belonging to the Ottoman Empire.
World’s Smallest Man, 1956
Henry Bahrens was the smallest man in the world and is photographed here in 1956 along with his cat by his home in Worthing. He was about 30 inches tall, and weight just about 32 pounds. He toured with Bruton Lester’s troupe of little people and enjoyed being in the spotlight.
Japanese-Americans Relocated To Internment Camp
After the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941, the United States military decided to take revenge and began to relocate Japanese-Americans into internment camps in the west coast. These were basically just prisons. One survivor of these camps, Aiko Herzig-Yoshinaga said: “The only thing that was in the ‘apartments’ when we got there were army metal beds with the springs on it, and a potbellied stove in the middle of the room. That was the only thing. No chest of drawers, no nothing, no curtains on the windows. It was the barest of the bare.”
Lyndon B. Johnson Swearing In
Following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, there was an hour where the United States did not have a sitting president. Aboard Air Force One, Lyndon B. Johnson was promptly sworn-in as president, joined by First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy and Lady Bird Johnson.
Kaboto Santaro, 1863
Kaboto Santaro was a Japanese military leader who is pictured in the traditional armor. The photograph was taken by Felice Beato and shows the typical attire of the samurai, soldiers of noble class who worked for Japanese rulers from the 12th century until the 1800s.
Sally Field as Gidget
Early in her career, Sally Field got her first taste of success in 1965 when she starred as the lead actress in the show Gidget. She was just 18 when she was cast in the role. Field said: “After the first night of my workshop, a casting guy asked me if I had an agent. I didn’t, but I still went in for an interview. The waiting room was filled with girls who looked like movie stars. They all had professional head shots; the only pictures I had were wallet photos of me with my friends. At my screen test, I walked in and said, ‘Which one is the camera?’ The crew members were like, ‘Oh, boy.’ But the casting director said, ‘You’re it.’ God was looking out for me. He thought he’d throw me in the ocean and see if I could swim.”
Liberation of Auschwitz
On January 27th, 1945, the largest Nazi concentration and death camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau was finally liberated by the Red Army. The soldiers first found a warehouse full of victims’ belongings like eyeglasses, pots, pans, and countless pairs of shoes. They then stumbled upon the emaciated survivors, abandoned by the Nazi who fled the camp in order to avoid persecution for their atrocities.
Unemployed Lumber Worker, 1939
Lumber worker Thomas Cave and his wife Annie found themselves completely down on their luck as the Great Depression began. Cave tattooed his Social Security number on his arm in order not to forget it so that he could take advantage of the Social Security Act which provided economic relief to those who needed it.
Sophia Loren
Following her debut in the 1951 film Quo Vadis, Sophia Loren became one of the most sought after actresses of her time. In an interview, Loren said: “In a long, long career like I had—and by the way, I have—it’s very difficult to be able to criticize some of the moments that you do by yourself that you never tell to other people. It’s a very normal thing to do because you cannot every time have a big victory – no, there have been moments, maybe weak moments, where you did something that you are not really very happy about.”
Homecoming Solider, Vienna
This photograph shows a soldier returning home to Vienna, Austria after the end of World War II. Taken by photojournalist Ernst Haas, he said: “What I want is to stay free, so that I can carry out my ideas… I don’t think there are many editors who could give me the assignments I give myself.”
Civil War Vet, 1935
Here we see some bootblacks, who polished people’s shoes, sitting around a Civil War veteran in 1935. The last Civil War vet died in 1956. Young men were conscripted into the Civil War without a choice. We can only imagine what stories they had after the war.
Winston Churchill, 1895
Here is a 21 year old Winston Churchill as a Cornet in the 4th Queen’s Hussar’s Cavalry. He was totally dedicated to his military career, and at the time England was completely supreme as a military force. He took some time off and had a brief stint in Cuba before heading to India with his regiment.
Albert Einstein
Although we regard Albert Einstein is one of the world’s greatest scientific minds, he did not think of himself in this way. In a 1929 interview with Saturday Evening Post he said: “I believe in intuitions and inspirations. I sometimes feel that I am right. I do not know that I am… [but] I would have been surprised if I had been wrong… I am enough of the artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.”
Hitchhiking
Back in the 1970’s, before we ever heard the phrase “stranger danger,” hitchhiking was a popular method of transportation. As awareness of the dangers of getting into a stranger’s car grew, fewer young people were hitchhiking and now it has pretty much died out. At least we have Uber now!
Side of an Iceberg, 1911
On January 5th, 1911, meteorologist Charles Wright and geologist Thomas Griffith Taylor travelled on the Terra Nova ship and reached a grotto in the side of an iceberg in the Arctic in a journey dubbed the Terra Nova Expidition. The two got off the ship to take an up close look and were photographed in the grotto.
Charlie Chaplin in 1916, Aged 27
When we picture Charlie Chaplin, most likely we think of his most famous character, the Tramp, clad in his bowler hat and mustachioed. However, Chaplin looked quite different from his famous image. His father was his inspiration for the Tramp, saying: “It was just released whole from somewhere deep within my father, it was really my father’s alter ego, the little boy who never grew up: ragged, cold, hungry, but still thumbing his nose at the world.”
Men of the Seaforth Highlanders, 1915
The Scottish contributed to the fight against the Central Powers during World War I with the Seaforth Highlanders. Forming in 1881, they became the county regiment for a group of Scottish counties after the 72nd and 78th Highlanders merged.
Salvador Dali, 1936
Salvador Dali often traveled to New York City in order to inspire him and generate more ideas for his art. He and his wife Gala were placed in a cabin near the machine rooms, and rather than complain, he said: “I am next to the engine, so that I’ll get there quicker.”
Eunice Hancock Operates Compressed-Air Grinder, WWII
21 year old Eunice Hancock operates a compressed-air grinder in a Midwest aircraft plant in August 1942, during World War II. This is a perfect example of women entering the workforce due to the men’s conscription to the army to fight Germany and Japan. By 1945, one in four married women began working outside of the home.
Pablo Picasso, 1958
Pablo Picasso is pictured in Cannes in 1958, wearing a hat and precariously holding a revolver and holster which were given to him by actor Gary Cooper who starred in films like A Farewell To Arms, The Pride of the Yankees, and For Whom the Bell Tolls.