Old School Cool: Some of the greatest photos ever taken

Last updated on June 24th, 2024 at 12:45 am

There’s cool, and then there’s the timeless “old-school cool.”

Whether it’s the punks of the 1980s or sophisticates from the 1880s, each period has its own version of cool.

Let’s take a moment to reminisce about the rad, the awesome, and the awe-inspiring figures from the past

A man and his beloved pet duck that he raised from an egg, 1994.
Old School Cool: Some of the greatest photos ever taken Read More

50+ Must-See Moments In History

Last updated on May 22nd, 2024 at 04:54 pm

No one can predict the future, but we can better understand the present by looking back at history. 

Here are 100 must-see historical moments – significant events that have shaped our world. From wars and revolutions to scientific discoveries and technological innovations, these are some of the most important moments in human progress. 

Whether you’re a history buff or want to learn more about our fascinating past, check out this list!

A protestant husband and his catholic wife were not allowed to be buried together. Here are their headstones reaching across the two cemeteries in 1888.
Demonstrating how bulletproof vests work, 1923.
A family poses with their covered wagon in Kansas, 1908.
Building the hand and torch of the Statue of Liberty, Paris, 1876.
The tallest man to ever live, Robert Wadlow, poses with his family in 1935.
Workers building theEmpire State building, c. 1930s
Two women, minutes after voting, London, 1929.
Mother and son pose for a photo, Ireland, 1890.
Henry Ford in the first car he ever built, 1896.
Two newsies, New York, 1896.
The absolutely massive chain for the Titanic’s anchor, c. 1909.
A woman plays a piano designed for people undergoing bedrest, 1935.
A photo by Berenice Abbot of a woman wiring an IBM computer, 1948.
A man repairs the antenna on the World Trade Center, NYC, 1979. Photo by Peter Kaplan.
Bottling ketchup at the Heinz factory, Pittsburgh, 1897
A meeting of the Mickey Mouse Club, California, c. 1930.
The Great Blizzard of 1888, New York City
A WWI-era German submarine washed ashore in Hasting, England, in 1919.
The intact seal on Tutankhamun’s Tomb, 1922. It went untouched for 3,424 years.
Lumberjacks take a photo with a Douglas fir tree, Washington, 1899.
A woman is ticketed for wearing a bikini, 1957.
The employee cafeteria at Disneyland, 1961.
An unknown soldier, Vietnam, 1965
An Austrian child gets new shoes during WWI
Painting the Eiffel tower, 1932.
A girl tries to get a reaction from a royal guard. Stockholm, Sweden, 1970s.
Audrey Hepburn with her pet deer, 1958.
A hippie sells flowers on the road, Oklahoma, 1973.
An East German soldier sneaks a little boy across the Berlin Wall, 1961.
Wojtek the bear, who fought in WW2.
“No dog biscuits today,” London, 1940s
Mom contains her baby with a trashcan while she crochets, 1969.
Mobsters hide from the camera during Al Capone’s trial, 1931.
Protesting against low pay for teachers, 1930
People stop to watch the “Seinfeld” finale in Times Square in 1998. Photo by Ken Murray.
Samurai pose in front of the Sphinx, 1864.
Monet with his wife Alice, 1908
Protesting in Miami Beach, Florida, 1980s.
Archaeologists dine in the tomb of Pharaoh Ramses XI, 1923
Selling lemonade with a portable dispenser, Berlin, 1931.
A young Elvis with his parents, 1937.
Louis Armstrong plays for his wife in front of the Great Sphinx, 1961.
Loggers pose with a massive redwood, 1892.
Blackfoot tribein Glacier National Park, 1913
The Titanic docked at Southampton, 1912.
Collecting golf balls, 1920s
Teaching the physics of surfing, California, 1970s.
Young German soldier after being captured, 1945. Getty Images
Lenin giving a speech in Moscow, 1920
Samurai in full armor and sword, c. 1860.
Photo of an ironworker during construction of the Columbia Tower, Seattle, 1984.
After Randall Champion touched a high-voltage line, electrocuting himself and stopping his heart, J.D. Thompson gave him CPR until help arrived, allowing Champion to survive. “The Kiss of Life.” (1967) by Rocco Morabito.
Three-year-old Robert Quigley smoking a cigar, 1928. Photo by Henry Miller
A father searches for his two sons who went missing during the Kosovo war in 1999.
Windows on the World. Restaurant on the top of the North Tower of the World Trade Center, 1976. Photo by Ezra Stoller
Disco Granny, a regular fixture at Studio 54.
A 17-year-old Fidel Castro playing basketball, 1943.
A baby cage, initially named a “health cage”, was essentially a bed encased in wire, dangling from the windows of city apartments.
During World War II, Steinway & Sons air-dropped pianos with large parachutes and complete tuning instructions into the battle for the American troops.
Anne Frank photographed with her sister Margot at the beach in Zandvoort, Netherlands, in 1940.
This photo from 1902 shows French knife grinders. They would work on their stomachs in order to save their backs from being hunched all day.
Japanese soldier Shoichi Yokoi (1915 – 1997) is emotionally overcome on his return to Tokyo on February 2nd, 1972.
The photo, taken by Irving Penn in 1947, shows Peter Freuchen, a Danish adventurer, writer, and scientist.
Captain Lewis Nixon of Easy Company, suffering a hangover after celebrating V-E Day in 1945.
The Statue of Liberty as seen from the torch.
Three soldiers who lost their left leg in the New Georgia Campaign exercise the stump of their legs in preparation for using artificial limbs. McCloskey General Hospital, Texas, January 1944.
A young man unphased by his arrest for growing marijuana, 1970s.
This is the first image captured of Chernobyl, taken 14 hours after the explosion on April 26, 1986.
The old Cincinnati library before it was demolished.
Two Maori Women. New Zealand, 1902.
Cats drinking milk straight from the source. 1954.
Joe Biden withdraws from the 1988 presidential election
Father and son take silly photos, 1910s.
Flattening hills to build Seattle
Robert McGee, who was scalped as a child. 1890.
Anita Bryant after receiving a pie to the face, 1977.
A man records a concert in Poland, 1980s.
Princeton students after a snowball fight, 1893.
Gerald Ford plays Soccer with Pele, 1975.
The Endurance trapped in ice, 1915.
Prototype spacesuit for the Apollo mission. 1962.
Soviet Cosmonaut, Sergei Krikalev, who was stuck in space for 311 days, 1991
The Twin Towers from a wheat field in Manhattan.
Workers lay wooden pipes in Lewsiton, Idaho. 1891.
Working at the top of the New York skyline, 1925.
Niagara Falls frozen over, 1911.
Massive organ pipe cactus. Baja California, 1895.
A NYC trolley rolls in a snowstorm, 1910.
A Zebra drawn carriage, Buckingham Palace, 1900.
Wife of a coal miner and their three of their children, 1938.
Device to detect aircraft before radar.
Children saluting the flag at school, c. 1890.
Leo Tolstoy tells a story to his grandchildren, 1909.
Flappers pose with a car, 1920s.
Portrait of a young girl, 1863.
A young girl rides her tricycle, 1927.
Two sisters pose for a photo, 1950s.
Los Angeles drive-in, 1932.
Taking a joyride in the 1920s.
Posing for a photo with a car, c. 1920.
Jack’s Saloon in Arkansas, 1935
New Year’s Eve 1904
Beach day, 1930s
A boy’s first television experience, 1948.
A mom and her daughter, c. 1905.
An old school band
A young couple, 1920s
Two best friends c. 1925.
High school girls in auto mechanics class, 1927.
A family has a picnic on the side of the road, c. 1915.
Friends pose for a photo, 1920s
1920s New York
Iconic 1970s haircuts
A young boy and his cat.
Georgia Holt, Cher’s mother, c.1950s
Sorority sisters, University of Texas, 1944
Bob Marley’s wedding day, 1966.
Hippies hitchhiking.
1900s military bicycle with spring wheels.
A teenager attends an Elvis Presley concert 1957.

Wyatt Earp poses for a photo at his home in Los Angeles, 1927.
Two Boys in London, c. 1902.
Opening ceremonies of the Moscow Olympics 1980.
Train in Syracuse, NY, 1936.
Cats wait for the fisherman to return, Istanbul, 1970s
Drinking a glass of Belgian beer, 1971
An Inuit girl with her dog, 1949.
Riding a rocket scooter. 1931
Jean Bugatti poses with his Bugatti Royale, one of seven built, 1932.
A young couple in 1955.
Electric bathtub, 1910.
Nellie and Annie Lyons
Albert Einstein as a boy, 1884.
B-17 gunner.
Learning to swim, 1920s.
Miners in Brazil, 1980s
Taking a phone call.
1895 Crescent haircut.
Boeing 747 – Economy seats in 1970.
The future Beatles in 1957. George is 14, John is 16 and Paul is 15.
The shark from Jaws.
The last four couple of a Chicago dance marathon, 1930s.
One of the last known photos of the RMS Titanic, 1912.
A farmer’s son plays on one of the large soil drifts of the “Dust Bowl,” 1936.
A young woman operates a compressed-air grinder during WW2
A ghostly image of a boat from 1900.
A man poses on the first cables during construction of the Golden Gate Bridge, 1935
The Los Angeles Public Library Bookmobile program for the sick, 1928.
A mailman delivers Christmas mail. Chicago, USA, 1929.
Women drink coffee at a cafe, Paris, 1925.
Women have tea, New Zealand, 1890.
The first known documented wheelie, 1936.
America’s first female traffic cop, 1918
Talking on a hand crank telephone, 1900s.
A miners’ boardinghouse, California, 1860s.
Former coal miner, now blind, and his son. Washington County, Missouri, 1939.
A family and their newly-built log cabin, Kentucky, 1914.
Drunk women fighting on a rooftop. London, 1902.
Combine driver threshing oats, 1940.
A Native American man sends smoke signals in Montana, June 1909.
A Barbershop, 1869.
A couple with their Buick, California, 1930.
James and Amelia, Texas, 1867.
Portrait of a man in a wheelchair taken in front of Western Hotel, California, July 4, 1889.
Two young women delivering ice, 1918.
Kids share a laugh in Nebraska, 1910.
A Coke delivery truck, Knoxville, 1909.
A Chippewa Indian named John Smith who lived in the woods near Cass Lake, Minnesota claimed to be 137 years old before he died in 1922. Photo taken in 1915
A man changes a Model T Coupe’s flat tire, 1927.
Two men from the early 1900s. Lincoln Nebraska
Two kids go fishing, texas, 1925.
A bike club, 1885.
Facade of department store with five floors covered in coats.
Check out the ingredients of a cough syrup manufactured in Baltimore back in 1888
A saloon that gave children their own child-size beers, Wisconsin, 1890.
Portrait of a young grumpy girl, 1850s
Easter, 1926
Cow shoes used by Moonshiners during Prohibition.
Willard Scott, the original Ronald McDonald, 1963.
Kids posing with largest log cabin in Portland, Oregon, USA, 1938. It was built in 1905 and later burned down In 1964.
The Great Blizzard of 1888, New York City
Photo of the train wreck at Montparnasse Station in Paris, France, 1895.
Brighton Beach life guard, New York, 1906.
A French man tries Coca-Cola for the first time in 1950.
Giant snowman, Aberdeen, Scotland, 1963.
A Lithuanian book smuggler, 1800s.
A napping kitty, 1930. Photo by Alton Blackington.
Anne Frank outside her father’s company, 1935.
Inuit mother and her child, Alaska, 1927.
Marilyn Monroe performs onstage during the Korean War, 1954.
Tourists have tea on top of the Great Pyramid of Giza, 1938.
A young Kim Jung-Un, 1990s.
Lacemakers in France, 1920.
Jimmy Carter with his sons on his peanut farm, 1960.
Kids play on piled-up mattresses, England, 1981.
Young Stalin in Prison, 1910.
Children forced to pray at a residential school, Canada.
A British blacksmith takes the leg irons off a slave, 1907.
A young Serbian soldier naps with his visiting father at the front line, 1914/1915.
The “Happiest Man in China,” 1901.
The wreck of U-118, a German U-boat , 1919.
A Japanese battleship serving as one of the target ships during atomic testing at Bikini Atoll in 1946.
Alfred Hitchcock and MGM’s Leo the Lion, 1958.
Franco and Kissinger, 1973.

50+ Must-See Moments In History Read More

Billy Joel’s Lavish Long Island Estate Returns to Market for $49.9 Million After 5-Year Renovation

Legendary musician Billy Joel has relisted his extraordinary Long Island waterfront estate for a staggering $49.9 million. After undergoing an extensive five-year renovation, the property, famously known as “MiddleSea,” has been transformed into a luxurious haven that seamlessly blends elegance, privacy, and breathtaking water views.

This world-class estate has 4 distinct homes: The Main House, The Beach House, The Guest House, and The Gate House.

This exclusive 26-acre estate, located in one of Long Island’s most coveted enclaves, offers an unparalleled living experience, with over 2,000 feet of prime beachfront along the Long Island Sound. MiddleSea comprises four distinct residences: the Main House, the Beach House, the Guest House, and the Gatehouse. Each residence is designed as a standalone luxury home, ensuring utmost privacy and exclusivity for potential buyers.

The centerpiece of the estate is the 20,000-square-foot Main House, a grand red-brick mansion that exudes timeless sophistication. The residence opens to a stunning 30-foot entry foyer with a dramatic marble staircase, leading to formal living and dining areas that boast French doors, fireplaces, and expansive water views. The mansion also includes five spacious ensuite bedrooms, including a lavish primary suite featuring dual luxury bathrooms, private terraces, and sweeping views of the Long Island Sound.

Showcasing spectacular panoramic views, this exceptional property features over 2,000 feet of Sandy Beach, ensuring complete privacy.

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The main house features, 30 ft ceiling entry foyer with a timeless black and white marble floor and wrought iron white marble wrap around staircase, five ensuite bedrooms, including a lavish primary suite with dual luxury baths and a private balcony that overlooks breathtaking water views.

The renovation has left no detail overlooked, with high-end finishes and cutting-edge technology integrated throughout. The chef’s kitchen is a true showstopper, featuring Calacatta Caldia Marble center islands, Waterstone faucets, and top-of-the-line Sub-Zero and Thermador appliances. Other standout amenities in the Main House include a wine cellar, a private bowling alley, a luxurious spa, and a ballroom designed for entertaining on a grand scale.

The state-of-the-art gourmet kitchen features two Calacatta Caldia Marble Center Islands, complimented by Waterstone faucets, bronze and gold farm sink, Officine Gullo Firenze Oven, dual Thermador Dishwashers side by side Sub-Zero refrigerator, paired with a separate professional stainless steel Chef’s Kitchen and a 20-foot ceiling breakfast room.
A formal dining room with a striking white marble fireplace, a mahogany library with a wood and stone fireplace, and a office/bay view parlor, each adding to the home’s grandeur.

Outdoors, MiddleSea offers two separate swimming pools—one located near the main house and the other by the Gatehouse—a cascading waterfall, beautifully landscaped gardens, and a boat ramp. The estate’s meticulous landscaping offers unobstructed panoramic water views, creating a serene and tranquil environment just a short distance from New York City.

Beautifully landscaped grounds offer panoramic waterfront views, cementing this estate’s status as an unparalleled retreat.

Originally purchased by Billy Joel for $4 million in 2018, MiddleSea underwent significant upgrades, transforming it into one of the most desirable luxury properties on the East Coast. After being briefly removed from the market in 2023, the estate is now back on the market at an increased price, reflecting the extensive renovations and enhancements made over the past five years.

The property’s unique combination of privacy, opulence, and unrivaled waterfront access makes it a one-of-a-kind offering in the competitive world of luxury real estate. From its meticulously crafted interior spaces to its expansive outdoor amenities, MiddleSea stands as a testament to both Billy Joel’s refined taste and the grandeur of Long Island’s most prestigious estates.

Billy Joel, often referred to as the “Piano Man,” is a legendary American singer-songwriter and composer known for his remarkable contributions to music. With a career spanning over five decades, Joel has produced numerous chart-topping hits, including iconic songs like “Uptown Girl,” “We Didn’t Start the Fire,” and “New York State of Mind.” He is one of the best-selling music artists of all time, with over 150 million records sold worldwide. Joel has won multiple Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1999. His impressive discography and electrifying live performances have cemented him as one of the most influential musicians of his generation. Beyond music, Joel is a prominent figure in the entertainment industry, continuing to captivate audiences with his timeless songs and unforgettable stage presence.

Billy Joel’s Lavish Long Island Estate Returns to Market for $49.9 Million After 5-Year Renovation Read More

Old School Cool: Some of the greatest photos ever taken

Last updated on June 24th, 2024 at 12:45 am

There’s cool, and then there’s the timeless “old-school cool.”

Whether it’s the punks of the 1980s or sophisticates from the 1880s, each period has its own version of cool.

Let’s take a moment to reminisce about the rad, the awesome, and the awe-inspiring figures from the past

A man and his beloved pet duck that he raised from an egg, 1994.
Susan Kare, famous Apple artist who designed many of the fonts, icons, and images for Apple, NeXT, Microsoft, and IBM. (1980s)
The Three Stooges visiting Yellowstone in 1969.
The Undertaker poses with an older woman, c. 1990s
Phil Collins in the 1990s.
Epic 80s moments
Uncle and Nephew playing poker, c. 1978.
Dolly Parton, 1970s
Burlington Mayor Bernie Sanders picks up trash on his own in a public park after being elected in 1981.
Carrie Fisher feeds Meryl Streep chocolate cake, 1991
Mark Hamill and Annie Potts on the set of Corvette Summer, 1978.
Heading to a concert in 1977.
A young Phil Collins in the 1960s.
Sarah Jessica Parker, Rob Lowe, and Robert Downey Jr. at the Governors Ball, 1988.
Prince stands victorious over Charlie Murphy during a game of basketball, 1985.
Heath Ledger’s Polaroid selfie with Larisa Oleynik, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Julia Stiles on the set of 10 Things I Hate About You, 1999.
Hippie dad walking with his daughter. Amsterdam,1968
A 17-year-old’s yearbook photo, 1970s.
Kurt Cobain with his girlfriend Tracey, 1980’s
Awesome frog Halloween costume, 1977.
Larry Nance at the inaugural NBA Slam Dunk Contest – 1984
Johnny Depp and Salma Hayek at a party, Hollywood, 1995.
Vincent Price, Carrie Fisher, Ringo Starr and John Ritter, 1978.
Princess Grace of Monaco visiting JFK at the White House, 1961.
Ryan Dunn and Bam Margera in their High School yearbook, 1990s.
Jim Carrey and Cameron Diaz and their stunt doubles on the set of The Mask, 1994
Britney Spears and Melissa Joan Hart on the set of the (You Drive Me) Crazy music video, 1999.
Queen Elizabeth with her mother in the 1990s
Sigourney Weaver and Mel Gibson pose for a photo in 1982
Fisher Stevens and Michelle Pfeiffer, 1992.
Sharon Tate at the premiere of Rosemary’s Baby, 1968.
Jennifer Lopez at her a birthday party in New York, 1999
Jayne Mansfield and Mariska Hargitay, 1960s
Dennis and Randy Quaid, 1982
Sean Penn’s yearbook photo, 1975.
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Hugh Hefner, and Wilt Chamberlain at the Playboy Mansion, 1977.

Sting, the wrestler, reading a Far Side book, 1980s
Mister Rogers throws the opening pitch at a 1988 Pittsburg Pirates game
A hippie teenager in the 70s
Sophia Loren and Jayne Mansfield, 1957.
Senior Picture, 1990.
Rowan Atkinson and Christian Bale, 1984.
The Storyville Jazz Club in Copenhagen, Denmark, 1952
Chris Farley and his dad in the 1990s
Judy Garland with her baby Liza Minelli, c. 1945.
Brittany Murphy, 1998.
Woman at the beach in 1910.
Marlène Jobert, French actress and the mother of Eva Green, 1970s

The cast of Pulp Fiction, 1994.
Mrs. Fields, the founder of the Mrs. Fields cookie company, 1982.
Kate Capshaw, Harrison Ford and Ke Huy Quan during the filming of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom in 1984
Ric Flair meets a 12-year-old Dwayne Johnson c. 1984
Freddie Mercury and Michael Jackson, early 1980s,
Nirvana at a party just before they became famous.
Cameron Diaz cheerleading in high school, 1989.
Jodie Foster rides a skateboard in Paris, 1970s.
Model Jenny Claire and her mini, 1972.
Robert Plant backstage with The Runaways, 1975. Photo by Barry Schultz.
Bam Margera riding his first skateboard, 1988.
Tom Cruise and Rebecca De Mornay, 1983.
Dan Cortese, Jon Stewart. and George Clooney at MTV’s Rock & Jock Baseball, 1994.
Gary Oldman and Demi Moore, 1995
Original frontman of AC/DC Bon Scott in 1979
Jane Seymour, c.1970s
Linda Ronstadt, 1969
Debbie Reynolds with a Stanley cup, 1951
Bruce Springsteen, Michael Jackson and Billy Joel, 1985
Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David, 1989
Skateboarding in Uvalde, Texas, 1965.
Marlon Brando and photographer Mary Ellen Mark, 1970s
The ice man delivering a 25 pound block of ice, 1928.
First day in school for Mila Kunis, 1980’s.
Enjoying cocktails in the 1970s.
Barack Obama with a group of friends called the “Choom Gang” in 1979.
Nicolas Cage and his father, August Coppola, 1988
A same high party in 1997.
Christian Bale at his 18th birthday party, 1992
A wedding in 1949.
Chi Chi Rodriguez and his cool caddie John Lynch at the 1975 masters.
Lynda Carter representing Arizona at the Miss World USA 1972
My Mom on her wedding day in November, 1951
Albert Einstein at the Beach, 1939.
7 year-old George Clooney, 1968
Penelope Cruz and Salma Hayek, 1990s.
Princess Diana look-alike contest in Washington D.C., 1985
Stephen King opens the gates to his new Victorian-style house, guarded by bats. November 1982
Fifth Avenue, NYC, 1972.
Dolly Parton, 1960s.
Cybill Shepherd, 1972
Britney Spears in Tokyo, 1999
Helen Mirren, 1970s
Jayne Mansfield, 1960
Sally Fields, 1970s
Sandra Bullock, 1990s
Joaquin Phoenix and River Phoenix, with their parents and siblings, Summer,Liberty & Rain at home in LA California circa 1983
Sting giving his autograph to a young Gwen Stefani, 1983
Anthony Bourdain at his High School Graduation, New Jersey, 1974
Rose Byrne and Heath Ledger, 1999
Catherine O’Hara, 1970s
Anita Ekberg, 1950s
Betty White in 1948
The Beatles waiting to cross Abbey Road, 1969
Jimi Hendrix aged 15, with his first electric guitar
Michael and Shakira Caine, 1973
Winona Ryder, Jodie Foster and Julia Roberts in 1989
14-year-old Sigourney Weaver attends a Beatles concert at the Hollywood Bowl, 1964
Molly Ringwald, 1985.
Shakira, 1990.
Danny DeVito at Oratory Preparatory School, Summit, NJ, 1961
Drew Barrymore at 9 lighting Stephen King’s cigarette, 1984
Michael Jackson, 1980s
John Wayne on Vacation in Acapulco, 1959. Photo by Phil Stern
Willie Nelson in 1960
Keanu Reeves, 1990s
Arnold Schwarzenegger and Grace Jones on the set of ‘Conan the Destroyer,’ 1984
Ladies of the 70s
Actor Sean Connery reading while doing push-ups, 1957.
Jane Russell drawing Marilyn Monroe behind the scenes of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, in 1953.
Pictures of Buddy Holly and his fans taken backstage, 1959.
The first selection of the Miss Slender Legs competition, Miami, 1952.
Photographer Ansel Adams, 1950
Marilyn Monroe with Lassie, 1950s.
Harry Belafonte and Dorothy Dandridge, 1950s
Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller on their wedding day, 1956
A woman is ticketed for wearing a bikini, 1957.
The employee cafeteria at Disneyland, 1961.
Peter Dinklage in high school.
Sean Connery, 23.
A woman cuts her birthday cake in Iran, 1973
Prince, 17.
Young FDR Jr. in 1937 at age 23.
A young woman photographed in the 1910s.
A cowboy, 1890s.
3 young women eat spaghetti on inflatable mattresses, 1939.
Two ladies ride in an early car model, 1900.
A cool girl posing with her car around 1920.
This mirror portrait was taken 100 years ago in Japan.
New car in South Richmond, Virginia, 1938.
Taking a break while building the Chrysler Building, New York, 1930.
A Victorian Girl from the 1860s!
A stylish family outing in 1946.
David Lee Roth and his signature leap circa 1982
Valerie Bertinelli and Eddie Van Halen getting married in 1981
Robert Downey jr at the academy awards 1993
Hedy Lamarr photographed by Alfred Eisentaedt, 1938
Jayne Mansfield, 1950s
Grace Kelly, 1950s
“How’s your leg?” Grace Kelly’s entrance scene in “Rear Window”-1954
Lauren Bacall and Marilyn Monroe at the premiere of “How to Marry a Millionaire,” 1953
Marilyn Monroe and Sammy Davis Jr. publicity photographs for “How to Marry a Millionaire,” 1953.

Lana Turner, Judy Garland, and Hedy Lamarr on the set of Ziegfeld Girl, 1941.
Marilyn Monroe photographed by Bruno Bernard at Racquet Club Resort Hotel in Palm Springs, 1949.
Elizabeth Taylor on the set of Giant, November 1956
Audrey Hepburn hanging out with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis at Paramount Studios, 1953
Marilyn Monroe in cat-eye glasses, 1950s.
Barbara Stanwyck, 1920s
Lana Turner – “The Postman Always Rings Twice” 1946
Hedy Lamarr, 1940s
Lauren Bacall, Humphrey Bogart and Marilyn Monroe-1953 Oscars by Michael Ochs Archives
Judy Garland with her baby Liza Minelli, 1947
Lucille Ball, 1940s
Johnny Cash eating cake in a bush, 1971.
Clara Bow, 1927
A young Agatha Christie.
Gillian Anderson, 1990’s
David Bowie, 1975
Cameron Diaz and Jim Carrey at Cannes Festival, 1994
Fans watching the 1992 MLB All-Star Game in San Diego
English singer, songwriter Kate Bush, 1978
A Teenager At An Elvis Presley Concert At The Philadelphia Arena 1957
Joan Jett, 1977
Mike Tyson playing Punch Out, NES • 1987
Sid Vicious, Baton Rouge 1978
Jimi Hendrix and The Who at the Monterey Pop Festival, 1967
One of the first pictures taken of Black Sabbath, 1968.
Kurt photographed by his sister, Kim Cobain, Aberdeen, WA, September, 1986
Alice Cooper drinking a beer with Colonel Sanders
Sister Rosetta Tharpe: The Godmother of Rock & Roll.
Tina Weymouth – the bassist of Talking Heads, 80s.
Keith Richards in Seattle airport on the 1972 Stones tour of the USA
Ozzy Osbourne, 1976
David Gilmour, Pink Floyd. Live At Pompeii 1971.
Ozzy Osbourne, dressed as a ’50s housewife, ironing his daughter Aimee, 1984
Stevie Nicks working on Rumours, 1976
Bob Marley, Mick Jagger and Peter Tosh
Louis Armstrong plays for his wife, Lucille, in front of the Sphinx and Great pyramids in Giza, Egypt, 1961
Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash
Les Paul and Paul McCartney
Muhammad Ali and The Beatles, 1964
Dolly Parton, live late ’60’s
Candice Bergen photographed by Milton Greene, 1966.
Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight in Midnight Cowboy, 1969.
In 1956, Marilyn Monroe poses for photographers as she boards an American Airlines plane from New York.
Seventeen-year-old Elizabeth Taylor washing her golden cocker spaniel.
Vivien Leigh in a publicity photo for Waterloo Bridge, 1940.
Joséphine Baker, France, 1920
Vivian Leigh in ‘Caesar and Cleopatra,’ 1945.
Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman in Paris during the filming of Paris Blues, 1961.
Dean Martin, Kirk Douglas, Jimmy Durante, and Tony Curtis at a Friars Club event, in the late 1950s.
Publicity photo of Carole Lombard, 1935.
Joan Fontaine and Laurence Olivier in Rebecca, 1940.
Paul Newman in Cool Hand Luke, 1967.
Kim Novak and James Stewart in Vertigo, 1958.
Ingrid Bergman and her daughter Isabella Rossellini.
Elizabeth Taylor c. 1951.
Robert Redford and Barbra Streisand in ‘The Way We Were,’ 1973.
Audrey Hepburn in My Fair Lady, 1964.
Janet Leigh and Tony Curtis at home with their daughters, Jamie Lee and Kelly in 1959.
Jacqueline Kennedy and Princess Grace Kelly of Monaco, 1966.
Alma Reville with the prop head of her husband, Alfred Hitchcock, 1972.
Lauren Bacall, Humphrey Bogart, and Katharine Hepburn arriving in London after the filming of “The African Queen”
Gregory Peck and Brock Peters in To Kill a Mockingbird, 1962.
Jessica Tandy, 1949
Don Johnson and Melanie Griffith
Vivien Leigh behind the scenes of Gone with the Wind, 1939.
Grace Kelly, c. 1955.
Katharine Hepburn on the set of The Philadelphia Story in 1940.
Janet Leigh, 1950s.
Audrey Hepburn, Rex Harrison, and director George Cukor, My Fair Lady, 1964.
Marilyn Monroe, 1950s.
Susan Hayward “I Want to Live!” Best Actress Oscar, 1958.
Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman dancing at an after-party celebrating her Oscar win for “Three Faces of Eve,” 1958.
Jack Nicholson and Barbra Streisand during an Academy Awards party in 1970.
Elizabeth Taylor with her Oscar for Best Actress in “Butterfield 8” at the Academy Awards, 1961.
Elizabeth Taylor smiles while walking with her second husband, British actor Michael Wilding, at the Academy Awards in 1954.
Robert De Niro and Meryl Streep in Falling in Love, 1984
Teenage Elvis with his cousin Harold in 1953.
Steve McQueen at Paramount Studios Gym, 1962, by William Claxton.
Vivien Leigh pictured with her mother, Gertrude Hartley, circa 1922.
Doris Day at the Aquarium, jazz club on Seventh Avenue.
Sophia Loren Holding the chin of her sister, Maria.
Katharine Hepburn with her sisters Marion and Margaret, 1939.
After traveling for work, Josephine Baker greets three of her children at the airport in 1954.
Vivien Leigh, seen here at the Oscars ceremony in 1940 with Laurence Olivier.
Leonardo DiCaprio, Johnny Depp, and Brad Pitt.
John Wayne, with his son, on location in Mexico for the filming of “The War Wagon.”
The first meeting of Grace Kelly and Prince Rainier III of Monaco, 1955.
Marilyn Monroe surrounded by fan mail, 1955. Photo by Slim Aarons.
Dana Andrews & Teresa Wright in The Best Years of Our Lives – 1946.
Liberace and Elvis Presley jam backstage at a night club in 1956.
Elizabeth Taylor and daughter Liza Todd, c. 1950s.
Sophia Loren on the set of Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, 1963.
Marilyn Monroe and Mickey Rooney at the premiere of ‘The Emperor Waltz’, 1948.
Christopher Lloyd (Banquo) and Christopher Walken (Macbeth) in the stage production Macbeth at Lincoln Center, New York, 1974
A young Slash with his parents, 1970
Shirley MacLaine with her brother, Warren Beatty in 1942.
1934 dance marathon participants at Crystal Lake Park in Marion, Ohio.
Princess Diana look-alike contest in Washington D.C., 1985
Liberace being seen off to France by a fan in the 1950s.
Elvis Presley and Cissy Houston (Whitney Houston’s mother), 1969
Michelle Phillips and Dennis Hopper’s during their 8-day marriage in 1970
Michael Caine at home with his mother, Ellen (1964)
Axl Rose sits handcuffed in the back of a police car after he was arrested at Kennedy Airport upon his return from a European concert tour, 1991. Photo by Bill Turnbull.
Frank Zappa with his parents, 1970
Jimi Hendrix getting his hair done. 1960’s
Joni Mitchell playing guitar for Eric Clapton and David Crosby, 1968
Linda Blair with Black Sabbath, 1976.
Lars Ulrich with his father, Tennis pro Torben Ulrich. Mid 1970s
Young men smoking, drinking, and playing cards Stetson University dorm room, Florida, ca 1900.
Janis Joplin pouring herself a drink before going on stage at Woodstock, 1969
Siouxsie Sioux, 1983
The Cure on Columbus Avenue, 1980
Lunch at the Universal studio commissary, 1963.
Andre the Giant holding up NFL quarterback Joe Theismann, 1975
Marilyn’s last photo taken by George Barris, 1962
A champagne inspector wearing a special mask to protect against accidental discharges, c. 1933.
24 Year-Old Orson Welles outside CBS’s Columbia Square studios at 6121 Sunset Boulevard on his first day in Hollywood, August 1939
A cop poses with some Flappers, Los Angeles, California, 1920s
Elton John at home with his collection of shoes, 1975.
Miss Idaho Potato, 1935
Alan Rickman, Hugh Laurie, Kate Winslet, Harriet Walter and Emma Thomson- 1994
Edward VIII wearing Japanese garb while on a tour of Japan as Prince of Whales in 1922
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, 1974. Photo by Joel Bernstein.
Mick Jagger and his bride Bianca at their wedding in 1971, Keith Richards in the background
‘The Half Suit’ Photo and concept by Pippa Garner, 1982
Zitkala Sa, Sioux Indian and activist, c. 1898.
The line to see Goonies on opening day at the Liberty Theatre in Astoria, Oregon way back in 1985.
The Who drummer Keith Moon playing pinball, sometime before September 1968
John Belushi, Muddy Waters, Johnny Winter, and Dan Aykroyd. 1977
Punk Rock girl London, 1979
A young Elizabeth/Liz Hurley at the Batcave in London, 1984.
William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy Taking a Lunch Break On the Star Trek Set
Change of swimsuit on the beach. 1930s
A woman and dogs spotted in Los Angeles, 1970.
The Clash & The Undertones photographed together in 1979
George Harrison photographed by Paul McCartney whilst on a hitchhiking trip to Wales in 1959.
John Lennon dancing with Louise Harrison, mother of George Harrison, at the Dorchester Hotel after the film premiere of, “A Hard Days Night” at the London Pavilion on July 1964.
Brian May, 1963
Diana Ross finishing up a Rib, 1980. Photographed by Ruven Afanador
The damned in New York, 1980’s
A vintage selfie from 1934
Burt Lancaster and Audrey Hepburn in The Unforgiven, 1960.
Karl Malden and Marlon Brando on the set of One-Eyed Jacks, 1961.
Cary Grant and Alfred Hitchcock on the set of North by Northwest, 1959.
Audrey Hepburn wears the costume for her Broadway debut in the play Gigi written by Colette and Anita Loos, photographed in 1952. Photo by Norman Parkinson.
Grace Kelly at the 8th Cannes Film Festival in 1955.
Jon Voight brings his children, Angelina Jolie and James Haven to the Oscars, 1988.
Robert Redford attends the premiere of All the President’s Men, in which he plays the legendary journalist Bob Woodward, in Washington, D.C. in 1976.
Audrey Hepburn in Roman Holiday (1953). Color by Klimbim.
Vivien Leigh and Lauren Bacall at a party celebrating the opening night of Duel of Angels on Broadway, 1960.
Sophia Loren in Scandal in Sorrento, 1955.
Clint Eastwood at home circa 1961.
Grace Kelly on the set of To Catch a Thief, 1955.
Janet Leigh, 1954.
Elizabeth Taylor with her Siamese cat (1956). Photo by Sanford Roth.
Tom Ewell and Marilyn Monroe in The Seven Year Itch, 1955.
Ingrid Bergman and her daughter Isabella Rossellini, 1960s.
Kirk Douglas, Jean Simmons, and Tony Curtis between scenes in Spartacus, 1960.
Frank Sinatra and his wife Nancy listening to music in their home in 1943.
Mel Ferrer and Audrey Hepburn in War and Peace, 1956
Audrey Hepburn greeting Barbra Streisand after watching her performance in Broadway’s Funny Girl at the Winter Garden Theatre in 1964.
Audrey Hepburn arrives at London Airport in 1953.
Robert Redford with journalist Bob Woodward on their way to the book party for All The President’s Men in June 1974.
Clint Eastwood, washing his car, North Hollywood, Calif., (1958) Photo by John R. Hamilton.
Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman, 1958.
Johnny Carson at 15 (1940).
Jane Fonda, younger brother Peter, father Henry Fonda, and his third wife Susan holding their daughter Amy.
Bette Davis, 1930.
Marilyn Monroe and Dale Robertson at a charity baseball game, 1952.
Paul Newman and Sophia Loren photo shoot for Lady L, 1965.
Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, and Marilyn Monroe (1953).
Paul Newman and Elizabeth Taylor in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, 1958.
Lucille Ball in 1935.
Tom Cruise, Matt Dillon, Patrick Swayze, Ralph Macchio, Emilio Estevez, C. Thomas Howell, and Rob Lowe on the set of “The Outsiders,” 1983.
Hattie McDaniel and Vivien Leigh in Gone with the Wind (1939).
Grace Kelly relaxing with family and friends aboard the Constitution. April, 1956.
Grace Kelly with her mother, Margaret, and sister, Lizanne, 1954.
Rita Hayworth standing on a yacht in a scene from Lady From Shanghai, 1947.
A young Elizabeth Taylor with a cat.
Elizabeth Taylor with her mother.
Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman relaxing at home.
Audrey Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart on the set of ‘Sabrina’ (1954).
Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller.
Sophia Loren and son Carlo Ponti Jr. at home, photographed by Alfred Eisenstaedt, 1969.
Olivia de Havilland by George Hurrell, 1938.
Bette Davis and her mother at the premiere of ‘All About Eve’ at Grauman’s Chinese Theater (1950).
Robert Redford and Meryl Streep in ‘Out of Africa’ (1985).
Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh.
Cary Grant and Marilyn Monroe on the set of Monkey Business (1952).
Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift in ‘A Place in the Sun’ (1951). 
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton at the 1970 Academy Awards.
John Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands, August 1982.
Bette Davis on vacation in Hawaii after filming The Letter, 1940.
Rita Hayworth cooking at home, c. 1942.
Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961).
Old School Cool: Some of the greatest photos ever taken Read More

50+ Must-See Moments In History

Last updated on May 22nd, 2024 at 04:54 pm

No one can predict the future, but we can better understand the present by looking back at history. 

Here are 100 must-see historical moments – significant events that have shaped our world. From wars and revolutions to scientific discoveries and technological innovations, these are some of the most important moments in human progress. 

Whether you’re a history buff or want to learn more about our fascinating past, check out this list!

A protestant husband and his catholic wife were not allowed to be buried together. Here are their headstones reaching across the two cemeteries in 1888.
Demonstrating how bulletproof vests work, 1923.
A family poses with their covered wagon in Kansas, 1908.
Building the hand and torch of the Statue of Liberty, Paris, 1876.
The tallest man to ever live, Robert Wadlow, poses with his family in 1935.
Workers building theEmpire State building, c. 1930s
Two women, minutes after voting, London, 1929.
Mother and son pose for a photo, Ireland, 1890.
Henry Ford in the first car he ever built, 1896.
Two newsies, New York, 1896.
The absolutely massive chain for the Titanic’s anchor, c. 1909.
A woman plays a piano designed for people undergoing bedrest, 1935.
A photo by Berenice Abbot of a woman wiring an IBM computer, 1948.
A man repairs the antenna on the World Trade Center, NYC, 1979. Photo by Peter Kaplan.
Bottling ketchup at the Heinz factory, Pittsburgh, 1897
A meeting of the Mickey Mouse Club, California, c. 1930.
The Great Blizzard of 1888, New York City
A WWI-era German submarine washed ashore in Hasting, England, in 1919.
The intact seal on Tutankhamun’s Tomb, 1922. It went untouched for 3,424 years.
Lumberjacks take a photo with a Douglas fir tree, Washington, 1899.
A woman is ticketed for wearing a bikini, 1957.
The employee cafeteria at Disneyland, 1961.
An unknown soldier, Vietnam, 1965
An Austrian child gets new shoes during WWI
Painting the Eiffel tower, 1932.
A girl tries to get a reaction from a royal guard. Stockholm, Sweden, 1970s.
Audrey Hepburn with her pet deer, 1958.
A hippie sells flowers on the road, Oklahoma, 1973.
An East German soldier sneaks a little boy across the Berlin Wall, 1961.
Wojtek the bear, who fought in WW2.
“No dog biscuits today,” London, 1940s
Mom contains her baby with a trashcan while she crochets, 1969.
Mobsters hide from the camera during Al Capone’s trial, 1931.
Protesting against low pay for teachers, 1930
People stop to watch the “Seinfeld” finale in Times Square in 1998. Photo by Ken Murray.
Samurai pose in front of the Sphinx, 1864.
Monet with his wife Alice, 1908
Protesting in Miami Beach, Florida, 1980s.
Archaeologists dine in the tomb of Pharaoh Ramses XI, 1923
Selling lemonade with a portable dispenser, Berlin, 1931.
A young Elvis with his parents, 1937.
Louis Armstrong plays for his wife in front of the Great Sphinx, 1961.
Loggers pose with a massive redwood, 1892.
Blackfoot tribein Glacier National Park, 1913
The Titanic docked at Southampton, 1912.
Collecting golf balls, 1920s
Teaching the physics of surfing, California, 1970s.
Young German soldier after being captured, 1945. Getty Images
Lenin giving a speech in Moscow, 1920
Samurai in full armor and sword, c. 1860.
Photo of an ironworker during construction of the Columbia Tower, Seattle, 1984.
After Randall Champion touched a high-voltage line, electrocuting himself and stopping his heart, J.D. Thompson gave him CPR until help arrived, allowing Champion to survive. “The Kiss of Life.” (1967) by Rocco Morabito.
Three-year-old Robert Quigley smoking a cigar, 1928. Photo by Henry Miller
A father searches for his two sons who went missing during the Kosovo war in 1999.
Windows on the World. Restaurant on the top of the North Tower of the World Trade Center, 1976. Photo by Ezra Stoller
Disco Granny, a regular fixture at Studio 54.
A 17-year-old Fidel Castro playing basketball, 1943.
A baby cage, initially named a “health cage”, was essentially a bed encased in wire, dangling from the windows of city apartments.
During World War II, Steinway & Sons air-dropped pianos with large parachutes and complete tuning instructions into the battle for the American troops.
Anne Frank photographed with her sister Margot at the beach in Zandvoort, Netherlands, in 1940.
This photo from 1902 shows French knife grinders. They would work on their stomachs in order to save their backs from being hunched all day.
Japanese soldier Shoichi Yokoi (1915 – 1997) is emotionally overcome on his return to Tokyo on February 2nd, 1972.
The photo, taken by Irving Penn in 1947, shows Peter Freuchen, a Danish adventurer, writer, and scientist.
Captain Lewis Nixon of Easy Company, suffering a hangover after celebrating V-E Day in 1945.
The Statue of Liberty as seen from the torch.
Three soldiers who lost their left leg in the New Georgia Campaign exercise the stump of their legs in preparation for using artificial limbs. McCloskey General Hospital, Texas, January 1944.
A young man unphased by his arrest for growing marijuana, 1970s.
This is the first image captured of Chernobyl, taken 14 hours after the explosion on April 26, 1986.
The old Cincinnati library before it was demolished.
Two Maori Women. New Zealand, 1902.
Cats drinking milk straight from the source. 1954.
Joe Biden withdraws from the 1988 presidential election
Father and son take silly photos, 1910s.
Flattening hills to build Seattle
Robert McGee, who was scalped as a child. 1890.
Anita Bryant after receiving a pie to the face, 1977.
A man records a concert in Poland, 1980s.
Princeton students after a snowball fight, 1893.
Gerald Ford plays Soccer with Pele, 1975.
The Endurance trapped in ice, 1915.
Prototype spacesuit for the Apollo mission. 1962.
Soviet Cosmonaut, Sergei Krikalev, who was stuck in space for 311 days, 1991
The Twin Towers from a wheat field in Manhattan.
Workers lay wooden pipes in Lewsiton, Idaho. 1891.
Working at the top of the New York skyline, 1925.
Niagara Falls frozen over, 1911.
Massive organ pipe cactus. Baja California, 1895.
A NYC trolley rolls in a snowstorm, 1910.
A Zebra drawn carriage, Buckingham Palace, 1900.
Wife of a coal miner and their three of their children, 1938.
Device to detect aircraft before radar.
Children saluting the flag at school, c. 1890.
Leo Tolstoy tells a story to his grandchildren, 1909.
Flappers pose with a car, 1920s.
Portrait of a young girl, 1863.
A young girl rides her tricycle, 1927.
Two sisters pose for a photo, 1950s.
Los Angeles drive-in, 1932.
Taking a joyride in the 1920s.
Posing for a photo with a car, c. 1920.
Jack’s Saloon in Arkansas, 1935
New Year’s Eve 1904
Beach day, 1930s
A boy’s first television experience, 1948.
A mom and her daughter, c. 1905.
An old school band
A young couple, 1920s
Two best friends c. 1925.
High school girls in auto mechanics class, 1927.
A family has a picnic on the side of the road, c. 1915.
Friends pose for a photo, 1920s
1920s New York
Iconic 1970s haircuts
A young boy and his cat.
Georgia Holt, Cher’s mother, c.1950s
Sorority sisters, University of Texas, 1944
Bob Marley’s wedding day, 1966.
Hippies hitchhiking.
1900s military bicycle with spring wheels.
A teenager attends an Elvis Presley concert 1957.

Wyatt Earp poses for a photo at his home in Los Angeles, 1927.
Two Boys in London, c. 1902.
Opening ceremonies of the Moscow Olympics 1980.
Train in Syracuse, NY, 1936.
Cats wait for the fisherman to return, Istanbul, 1970s
Drinking a glass of Belgian beer, 1971
An Inuit girl with her dog, 1949.
Riding a rocket scooter. 1931
Jean Bugatti poses with his Bugatti Royale, one of seven built, 1932.
A young couple in 1955.
Electric bathtub, 1910.
Nellie and Annie Lyons
Albert Einstein as a boy, 1884.
B-17 gunner.
Learning to swim, 1920s.
Miners in Brazil, 1980s
Taking a phone call.
1895 Crescent haircut.
Boeing 747 – Economy seats in 1970.
The future Beatles in 1957. George is 14, John is 16 and Paul is 15.
The shark from Jaws.
The last four couple of a Chicago dance marathon, 1930s.
One of the last known photos of the RMS Titanic, 1912.
A farmer’s son plays on one of the large soil drifts of the “Dust Bowl,” 1936.
A young woman operates a compressed-air grinder during WW2
A ghostly image of a boat from 1900.
A man poses on the first cables during construction of the Golden Gate Bridge, 1935
The Los Angeles Public Library Bookmobile program for the sick, 1928.
A mailman delivers Christmas mail. Chicago, USA, 1929.
Women drink coffee at a cafe, Paris, 1925.
Women have tea, New Zealand, 1890.
The first known documented wheelie, 1936.
America’s first female traffic cop, 1918
Talking on a hand crank telephone, 1900s.
A miners’ boardinghouse, California, 1860s.
Former coal miner, now blind, and his son. Washington County, Missouri, 1939.
A family and their newly-built log cabin, Kentucky, 1914.
Drunk women fighting on a rooftop. London, 1902.
Combine driver threshing oats, 1940.
A Native American man sends smoke signals in Montana, June 1909.
A Barbershop, 1869.
A couple with their Buick, California, 1930.
James and Amelia, Texas, 1867.
Portrait of a man in a wheelchair taken in front of Western Hotel, California, July 4, 1889.
Two young women delivering ice, 1918.
Kids share a laugh in Nebraska, 1910.
A Coke delivery truck, Knoxville, 1909.
A Chippewa Indian named John Smith who lived in the woods near Cass Lake, Minnesota claimed to be 137 years old before he died in 1922. Photo taken in 1915
A man changes a Model T Coupe’s flat tire, 1927.
Two men from the early 1900s. Lincoln Nebraska
Two kids go fishing, texas, 1925.
A bike club, 1885.
Facade of department store with five floors covered in coats.
Check out the ingredients of a cough syrup manufactured in Baltimore back in 1888
A saloon that gave children their own child-size beers, Wisconsin, 1890.
Portrait of a young grumpy girl, 1850s
Easter, 1926
Cow shoes used by Moonshiners during Prohibition.
Willard Scott, the original Ronald McDonald, 1963.
Kids posing with largest log cabin in Portland, Oregon, USA, 1938. It was built in 1905 and later burned down In 1964.
The Great Blizzard of 1888, New York City
Photo of the train wreck at Montparnasse Station in Paris, France, 1895.
Brighton Beach life guard, New York, 1906.
A French man tries Coca-Cola for the first time in 1950.
Giant snowman, Aberdeen, Scotland, 1963.
A Lithuanian book smuggler, 1800s.
A napping kitty, 1930. Photo by Alton Blackington.
Anne Frank outside her father’s company, 1935.
Inuit mother and her child, Alaska, 1927.
Marilyn Monroe performs onstage during the Korean War, 1954.
Tourists have tea on top of the Great Pyramid of Giza, 1938.
A young Kim Jung-Un, 1990s.
Lacemakers in France, 1920.
Jimmy Carter with his sons on his peanut farm, 1960.
Kids play on piled-up mattresses, England, 1981.
Young Stalin in Prison, 1910.
Children forced to pray at a residential school, Canada.
A British blacksmith takes the leg irons off a slave, 1907.
A young Serbian soldier naps with his visiting father at the front line, 1914/1915.
The “Happiest Man in China,” 1901.
The wreck of U-118, a German U-boat , 1919.
A Japanese battleship serving as one of the target ships during atomic testing at Bikini Atoll in 1946.
Alfred Hitchcock and MGM’s Leo the Lion, 1958.
Franco and Kissinger, 1973.
Babies sleep outside in Moscow, 1958. This practice is thought to boost their immune system.
A woman cuts her birthday cake in Iran, 1973
Into the Jaws of Death, 6th of June, 1944
New Yorkers stop to watch Seinfeld’s finale, Times Square, 1998 

50+ Must-See Moments In History Read More

50+ Must-See Moments In History

Last updated on May 22nd, 2024 at 04:54 pm

No one can predict the future, but we can better understand the present by looking back at history. 

Here are 100 must-see historical moments – significant events that have shaped our world. From wars and revolutions to scientific discoveries and technological innovations, these are some of the most important moments in human progress. 

Whether you’re a history buff or want to learn more about our fascinating past, check out this list!

A protestant husband and his catholic wife were not allowed to be buried together. Here are their headstones reaching across the two cemeteries in 1888.
Demonstrating how bulletproof vests work, 1923.
A family poses with their covered wagon in Kansas, 1908.
Building the hand and torch of the Statue of Liberty, Paris, 1876.
The tallest man to ever live, Robert Wadlow, poses with his family in 1935.
Workers building theEmpire State building, c. 1930s
Two women, minutes after voting, London, 1929.
Mother and son pose for a photo, Ireland, 1890.
Henry Ford in the first car he ever built, 1896.
Two newsies, New York, 1896.
The absolutely massive chain for the Titanic’s anchor, c. 1909.
A woman plays a piano designed for people undergoing bedrest, 1935.
A photo by Berenice Abbot of a woman wiring an IBM computer, 1948.
A man repairs the antenna on the World Trade Center, NYC, 1979. Photo by Peter Kaplan.
Bottling ketchup at the Heinz factory, Pittsburgh, 1897
A meeting of the Mickey Mouse Club, California, c. 1930.
The Great Blizzard of 1888, New York City
A WWI-era German submarine washed ashore in Hasting, England, in 1919.
The intact seal on Tutankhamun’s Tomb, 1922. It went untouched for 3,424 years.
Lumberjacks take a photo with a Douglas fir tree, Washington, 1899.
A woman is ticketed for wearing a bikini, 1957.
The employee cafeteria at Disneyland, 1961.
An unknown soldier, Vietnam, 1965
An Austrian child gets new shoes during WWI
Painting the Eiffel tower, 1932.
A girl tries to get a reaction from a royal guard. Stockholm, Sweden, 1970s.
Audrey Hepburn with her pet deer, 1958.
A hippie sells flowers on the road, Oklahoma, 1973.
An East German soldier sneaks a little boy across the Berlin Wall, 1961.
Wojtek the bear, who fought in WW2.
“No dog biscuits today,” London, 1940s
Mom contains her baby with a trashcan while she crochets, 1969.
Mobsters hide from the camera during Al Capone’s trial, 1931.
Protesting against low pay for teachers, 1930
People stop to watch the “Seinfeld” finale in Times Square in 1998. Photo by Ken Murray.
Samurai pose in front of the Sphinx, 1864.
Monet with his wife Alice, 1908
Protesting in Miami Beach, Florida, 1980s.
Archaeologists dine in the tomb of Pharaoh Ramses XI, 1923
Selling lemonade with a portable dispenser, Berlin, 1931.
A young Elvis with his parents, 1937.
Louis Armstrong plays for his wife in front of the Great Sphinx, 1961.
Loggers pose with a massive redwood, 1892.
Blackfoot tribein Glacier National Park, 1913
The Titanic docked at Southampton, 1912.
Collecting golf balls, 1920s
Teaching the physics of surfing, California, 1970s.
Young German soldier after being captured, 1945. Getty Images
Lenin giving a speech in Moscow, 1920
Samurai in full armor and sword, c. 1860.
Photo of an ironworker during construction of the Columbia Tower, Seattle, 1984.
After Randall Champion touched a high-voltage line, electrocuting himself and stopping his heart, J.D. Thompson gave him CPR until help arrived, allowing Champion to survive. “The Kiss of Life.” (1967) by Rocco Morabito.
Three-year-old Robert Quigley smoking a cigar, 1928. Photo by Henry Miller
A father searches for his two sons who went missing during the Kosovo war in 1999.
Windows on the World. Restaurant on the top of the North Tower of the World Trade Center, 1976. Photo by Ezra Stoller
Disco Granny, a regular fixture at Studio 54.
A 17-year-old Fidel Castro playing basketball, 1943.
A baby cage, initially named a “health cage”, was essentially a bed encased in wire, dangling from the windows of city apartments.
During World War II, Steinway & Sons air-dropped pianos with large parachutes and complete tuning instructions into the battle for the American troops.
Anne Frank photographed with her sister Margot at the beach in Zandvoort, Netherlands, in 1940.
This photo from 1902 shows French knife grinders. They would work on their stomachs in order to save their backs from being hunched all day.
Japanese soldier Shoichi Yokoi (1915 – 1997) is emotionally overcome on his return to Tokyo on February 2nd, 1972.
The photo, taken by Irving Penn in 1947, shows Peter Freuchen, a Danish adventurer, writer, and scientist.
Captain Lewis Nixon of Easy Company, suffering a hangover after celebrating V-E Day in 1945.
The Statue of Liberty as seen from the torch.
Three soldiers who lost their left leg in the New Georgia Campaign exercise the stump of their legs in preparation for using artificial limbs. McCloskey General Hospital, Texas, January 1944.
A young man unphased by his arrest for growing marijuana, 1970s.
This is the first image captured of Chernobyl, taken 14 hours after the explosion on April 26, 1986.
The old Cincinnati library before it was demolished.
Two Maori Women. New Zealand, 1902.
Cats drinking milk straight from the source. 1954.
Joe Biden withdraws from the 1988 presidential election
Father and son take silly photos, 1910s.
Flattening hills to build Seattle
Robert McGee, who was scalped as a child. 1890.
Anita Bryant after receiving a pie to the face, 1977.
A man records a concert in Poland, 1980s.
Princeton students after a snowball fight, 1893.
Gerald Ford plays Soccer with Pele, 1975.
The Endurance trapped in ice, 1915.
Prototype spacesuit for the Apollo mission. 1962.
Soviet Cosmonaut, Sergei Krikalev, who was stuck in space for 311 days, 1991
The Twin Towers from a wheat field in Manhattan.
Workers lay wooden pipes in Lewsiton, Idaho. 1891.
Working at the top of the New York skyline, 1925.
Niagara Falls frozen over, 1911.
Massive organ pipe cactus. Baja California, 1895.
A NYC trolley rolls in a snowstorm, 1910.
A Zebra drawn carriage, Buckingham Palace, 1900.
Wife of a coal miner and their three of their children, 1938.
Device to detect aircraft before radar.
Children saluting the flag at school, c. 1890.
Leo Tolstoy tells a story to his grandchildren, 1909.
Flappers pose with a car, 1920s.
Portrait of a young girl, 1863.
A young girl rides her tricycle, 1927.
Two sisters pose for a photo, 1950s.
Los Angeles drive-in, 1932.
Taking a joyride in the 1920s.
Posing for a photo with a car, c. 1920.
Jack’s Saloon in Arkansas, 1935
New Year’s Eve 1904
Beach day, 1930s
A boy’s first television experience, 1948.
A mom and her daughter, c. 1905.
An old school band
A young couple, 1920s
Two best friends c. 1925.
High school girls in auto mechanics class, 1927.
A family has a picnic on the side of the road, c. 1915.
Friends pose for a photo, 1920s
1920s New York
Iconic 1970s haircuts
A young boy and his cat.
Georgia Holt, Cher’s mother, c.1950s
Sorority sisters, University of Texas, 1944
Bob Marley’s wedding day, 1966.
Hippies hitchhiking.
1900s military bicycle with spring wheels.
A teenager attends an Elvis Presley concert 1957.

Wyatt Earp poses for a photo at his home in Los Angeles, 1927.
Two Boys in London, c. 1902.
Opening ceremonies of the Moscow Olympics 1980.
Train in Syracuse, NY, 1936.
Cats wait for the fisherman to return, Istanbul, 1970s
Drinking a glass of Belgian beer, 1971
An Inuit girl with her dog, 1949.
Riding a rocket scooter. 1931
Jean Bugatti poses with his Bugatti Royale, one of seven built, 1932.
A young couple in 1955.
Electric bathtub, 1910.
Nellie and Annie Lyons
Albert Einstein as a boy, 1884.
B-17 gunner.
Learning to swim, 1920s.
Miners in Brazil, 1980s
Taking a phone call.
1895 Crescent haircut.
Boeing 747 – Economy seats in 1970.
The future Beatles in 1957. George is 14, John is 16 and Paul is 15.
The shark from Jaws.
The last four couple of a Chicago dance marathon, 1930s.
One of the last known photos of the RMS Titanic, 1912.
A farmer’s son plays on one of the large soil drifts of the “Dust Bowl,” 1936.
A young woman operates a compressed-air grinder during WW2
A ghostly image of a boat from 1900.
A man poses on the first cables during construction of the Golden Gate Bridge, 1935
The Los Angeles Public Library Bookmobile program for the sick, 1928.
A mailman delivers Christmas mail. Chicago, USA, 1929.
Women drink coffee at a cafe, Paris, 1925.
Women have tea, New Zealand, 1890.
The first known documented wheelie, 1936.
America’s first female traffic cop, 1918
Talking on a hand crank telephone, 1900s.
A miners’ boardinghouse, California, 1860s.
Former coal miner, now blind, and his son. Washington County, Missouri, 1939.
A family and their newly-built log cabin, Kentucky, 1914.
Drunk women fighting on a rooftop. London, 1902.
Combine driver threshing oats, 1940.
A Native American man sends smoke signals in Montana, June 1909.
A Barbershop, 1869.
A couple with their Buick, California, 1930.
James and Amelia, Texas, 1867.
Portrait of a man in a wheelchair taken in front of Western Hotel, California, July 4, 1889.
Two young women delivering ice, 1918.
Kids share a laugh in Nebraska, 1910.
A Coke delivery truck, Knoxville, 1909.
A Chippewa Indian named John Smith who lived in the woods near Cass Lake, Minnesota claimed to be 137 years old before he died in 1922. Photo taken in 1915
A man changes a Model T Coupe’s flat tire, 1927.
Two men from the early 1900s. Lincoln Nebraska
Two kids go fishing, texas, 1925.
A bike club, 1885.
Facade of department store with five floors covered in coats.
Check out the ingredients of a cough syrup manufactured in Baltimore back in 1888
A saloon that gave children their own child-size beers, Wisconsin, 1890.
Portrait of a young grumpy girl, 1850s
Easter, 1926
Cow shoes used by Moonshiners during Prohibition.
Willard Scott, the original Ronald McDonald, 1963.
Kids posing with largest log cabin in Portland, Oregon, USA, 1938. It was built in 1905 and later burned down In 1964.
The Great Blizzard of 1888, New York City
Photo of the train wreck at Montparnasse Station in Paris, France, 1895.
Brighton Beach life guard, New York, 1906.
A French man tries Coca-Cola for the first time in 1950.
Giant snowman, Aberdeen, Scotland, 1963.
A Lithuanian book smuggler, 1800s.
A napping kitty, 1930. Photo by Alton Blackington.
Anne Frank outside her father’s company, 1935.
Inuit mother and her child, Alaska, 1927.
Marilyn Monroe performs onstage during the Korean War, 1954.
Tourists have tea on top of the Great Pyramid of Giza, 1938.
A young Kim Jung-Un, 1990s.
Lacemakers in France, 1920.
Jimmy Carter with his sons on his peanut farm, 1960.
Kids play on piled-up mattresses, England, 1981.
Young Stalin in Prison, 1910.
Children forced to pray at a residential school, Canada.
A British blacksmith takes the leg irons off a slave, 1907.
A young Serbian soldier naps with his visiting father at the front line, 1914/1915.
The “Happiest Man in China,” 1901.
The wreck of U-118, a German U-boat , 1919.
A Japanese battleship serving as one of the target ships during atomic testing at Bikini Atoll in 1946.
Alfred Hitchcock and MGM’s Leo the Lion, 1958.
Franco and Kissinger, 1973.
Babies sleep outside in Moscow, 1958. This practice is thought to boost their immune system.
A woman cuts her birthday cake in Iran, 1973
Into the Jaws of Death, 6th of June, 1944
New Yorkers stop to watch Seinfeld’s finale, Times Square, 1998 

50+ Must-See Moments In History Read More

35 amazing photos from behind the scenes of Star Wars

Last updated on May 18th, 2024 at 04:10 pm

Step behind the scenes of the legendary Star Wars universe and discover the magic that brought our favorite characters to the silver screen.

From the creation of epic battles to the crafting of unforgettable characters, these photos reveal the dedication, creativity, and passion of the talented individuals who made Star Wars a timeless classic.

Carrie Fisher and her stunt double with Harrison Ford’s stunt double at the beach, 1982
Massive model of the Death Star
Mark Hamill hanging out on the Cloud City set
Mark Hamill on the Dagobah set for the Empire Strikes Back.
Behind the scenes on Desert Skiff in Return of the Jedi
Mark Hamill and Peter Cushing on set
The Ewok actors
Jawas walk towards the practical portion of the Sandcrawler
Mark Hamill, George Lucas and Gary Kurtz toast Sir Alec Guinness on his birthday
George Lucas poses with the cast and Return of the Jedi director Richard Marquand at Elstree Studios.
Filming the throne room scene of A New Hope
In Empire Strikes Back (1980) Boba Fett was originally supposed to have an all white costume. Here’s some test shots of it.
Shooting the “scum and villainy” scene, episode IV
Making adjustments to R2 units in Tunisia
Millenium Falcon under construction in the Hoth rebel base set
Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford in a deleted sandstorm scene from Return of the Jedi.
Warwick Davis on set of ‘Return of the Jedi’
George Lucas and an early R2-D2 prototype.
Greedo wearing pumps behind the scenes
The surface of the Death Star being blown up in A New Hope
Harrison Ford and Mark Hamill going over the script.
Yoda and his creator
Using mirrors to hide the sand speeder wheels.
On set with director Richard Marquand and Ian McDiarmid as the Emperor (Return of the Jedi, 1983)
Treat Williams poses with friend Carrie Fisher on the set of Empire Strikes Back
Yoda and Frank Oz on the set
Carrie Fisher asleep on the set of “The Empire Strikes Back”, 1979.
Building the Falcon at Pinewood for Empire Strikes Back, 1979.
Carrie Fisher having fun on the Hoth set
Building the Rebel Blockade Runner-model, 1976
Richard Edlund prepares to shoot the opening crawl for the original film.
Carrie Fisher on the set of Return of the Jedi, 1983
Kenny Baker and Anthony Daniels take a brake.
Carrie Fisher, Harrison Ford, and Mark Hamill on location in Norway for filming of The Empire Strikes Back.
Stunt coordinator Peter Diamond
35 amazing photos from behind the scenes of Star Wars Read More

10 Strange Professions That No Longer Exist

There was a time when certain professions were in high demand, but as our society evolved and advanced, some of these professions became obsolete. 

Moreover, with the aspect of ever-changing technology, many jobs that exist today are vastly different – or nonexistent – from those 10, 20, or 30 years ago. 

So, what happened to all those old careers? 

This list will discuss some of the strangest but back-then-necessary jobs that have disappeared.

You can mainly attribute the disappearance of many of these ways to make money to technological advances. 

For example, modern bowling alleys have elaborate systems that collect balls and pins, so pinsetters are no longer necessary. 

Likewise, with the spread of proper refrigeration, the cool job of ice cutters became a thing of the past. 

This article will discuss ten strange professions that no longer exist. 

Who knows, maybe you’ll learn about a job that you’re ancestors did before you were born.

The Human Alarm Clock

In the days before alarm clocks, people used to hire others to wake them up in the morning. 

It may not seem complicated, but it was quite an essential job in the 1800s. 

The “Human Alarm Clocks” or “Knocker Uppers” would often use long poles to tap on the windows of their employers or even shoot peas at the glass of their windows. 

Mary Smith uses a peashooter to wake people up.

It may seem like an unnecessary job, but think about it, didn’t people back then need to wake up at certain times too? 

After all, you could miss an important meeting or appointment if you oversleep. 

Can you imagine having to pay someone to wake you up every morning?

Pinsetter

If you’ve ever been bowling, you’re aware that machines reset the pins after each turn. 

But before these automatic pinsetters, there was a whole profession devoted to manually setting the pins back up. 

The “employees” of these jobs were often children. 

Pinsetters work in NYC

This was a tedious job. The introduction of automatic pinsetters in 1956 by the Brunswick Company was revolutionary for the industry – and put many manual laborers out of a job. 

In addition, the job could be dangerous for the children as flying pins or bowling balls could hit them. 

Of course, a job like this violates child labor laws today, but it was a different time back then.

Ice Cutter

Did you know that before modern refrigeration, people used to cut ice from lakes and rivers to store food? 

Ice cutting was an actual profession in the 1800s, and it was a dangerous job. 

Ice cutters at Glen Lake, circa 1920.

The ice cutters would use large saws to cut the ice blocks, which they would then transport to homes and businesses. 

This profession quickly became obsolete with the advent of modern refrigeration by the 1920s. 

It’s hard to believe that people used to do this for a living, but it shows how much our society has changed in such a short period.

Leech Collectors

In the days before modern medicine, leeches were used for bloodletting, a medical practice in which doctors extracted blood from a patient to treat various diseases. 

You might view this as a strange and barbaric practice, but leeches were actually in high demand by doctors. 

So much so that there were people who collected them for a living. 

These “leech collectors” often went into swamps and marshes to find the leeches. 

They would use old horses, which the leeches attached themselves to, or the collector would use their own bodies to attract the leeches. 

Can you imagine having to do this for a living?

Lamplighter

It was the duty of a lamplighter to light the streets at night, just as it is with today’s electric streetlights. 

Lamplighters used a long pole with a wick on one end to light the oil or candles in streetlamps, then returned to snuff them in the morning. 

A lamplighter at work

It’s challenging to locate a full-time lamplight, particularly in the United States, but they may hang out in tourist attractions in other countries. 

Lamp lighting started to decline with the invention of gas lamps in 1814 in Europe and possibly even faster because of the incandescent light bulb by Thomas Edison in 1879. 

The profession was obsolete and all but extinct by the early 1900s.

Rat Catcher

Rat catching was once a common profession, particularly in Europe, especially during the Black Plague, as rats were a significant problem in cities. 

Rat catchers would trap or shoot the rats and turn them over to the authorities. 

Rat catcher works in a sewer

In some cases, they would also be responsible for disposing of the rats. 

However, the job exposed them to sickness as rats could spread diseases. 

With the advent of modern pest control methods, like rodenticides, this profession has disappeared.

The Human Computer

No, it’s not a science fiction movie; there was a time when organizations hired people to perform calculations now handled by computers. 

These “human computers” were often women, as many believed them more capable of performing these repetitive tasks. 

Human computers working

However, this profession became obsolete with the invention of the electronic computer in the 1970s. 

Can you imagine having to do complex calculations by hand? 

It’s hard to believe that this was once a real job.

Resurrectionists

Before modern medicine, people believed dissecting cadavers was the best way to study anatomy. 

However, there was a problem with this, as legal cadavers were very rare.

So, people who needed cadavers for their studies would hire “resurrectionists” to steal corpses from graveyards. 

Resurrectionists

Universities had to hire “resurrectionists” to keep up with the demand for cadavers. Grave robbing was popular in Britain. 

Even though “resurrectionists weren’t well-liked by the community for obvious reasons, this profession became obsolete with the passing of the Anatomy Act in 1832, which made it illegal. 

Resurrectionists would often get caught and charged with grave robbing. With the development of modern medical schools, this profession is no longer needed.

Cigarette Girl

Cigarette girls were once ordinary in America, particularly in the early 1900s. 

They would walk around smoking establishments, like bars and clubs, selling cigarettes to customers. 

Cigarette girls usually wore revealing outfits and were a sort of eye candy, selling cigarettes from a box around their neck. 

Cigarette girls, 1956

However, this profession started to decline in the mid-1900s with the advent of self-service cigarette machines. 

By the late 1900s, the trade was a thing of the past.

Groom of The Stool

This job may be one of the strangest thus far, but someone had to do it. 

The Groom of the Stool was responsible for speaking with the King and providing them with the essentials they needed to go to the bathroom. 

In addition, they would supply the monarch with towels, water, and a washbowl to finish his business. 

It’s still debatable whether the Groom of the Stool wiped the King’s butt, but there is no definitive proof on this one.

The Groom of the Stool would also empty the chamber pot. 

Going to the bathroom was extremely private, and the position was necessary since the Groom also acted as a confidante to the leader.

Under Henry VIII, The Groom even monitored the King’s bowel movements to ensure he was in good health and, if not, spoke to doctors to remedy the situation. 

Eventually, this position evolved but never lost value; most could attribute a financial advisor to a Groom of the Stool.

Job Evolution And Loss Are Natural

While it may have been upsetting for those who lost their jobs to new technology, it’s important to remember that this is a natural part of evolution. 

As our world changes, so do the professions that we have. 

It’s fascinating to look back and see all the different jobs that have come and gone throughout history. 

With the invention of new technology, there will likely be even more strange and unique jobs that will disappear in the future. 

Who knows what professions will become obsolete in the years to come? Only time will tell.

Potential Job Disappearance in The Future

As we discussed, jobs have come and gone throughout history. 

With the invention of new technology, professions will continue to disappear. 

Many workers are worried about the disappearance of their jobs. 

With driverless cars on the horizon, taxi companies and Uber drivers are concerned about losing their jobs. 

Artificial Intelligence could replace many jobs humans do.

According to the World Economic Forum, approximately 40% of workers believe their jobs will be obsolete in the next five years. 

Furthermore, about 6 out of 10 people are concerned that automation is putting many jobs at risk, and almost the same percentage of people believe it’s true. 

Unfortunately, no one has a crystal ball, but if history indicates, many jobs will likely disappear in the years to come.

5 Jobs That May Disappear in The Next 5 Years

While it’s impossible to definitively say which jobs will disappear in the next five years, there are maybe some professions that are more at risk than others. 

Here are five jobs that may not exist in the next five years:

Cashier

In recent years, more talk has been about the likelihood of a cashless society. 

With advances in contactless payments, Apple Pay, and even cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin becoming mainstream, this idea doesn’t seem so far-fetched anymore. 

While some people still prefer cash to manage their spending better, one thing is for sure: self-service tills and stations are eliminating the need for human tellers. 

With self-checkout already a common sight in supermarket chains and even fast-food restaurants, it’s only a matter of time before all stores do away with traditional checkouts.

Bank Teller

Local bank branches will gradually close as online, and telephone banking becomes increasingly popular. 

People find these methods more convenient and user-friendly, allowing them to manage their accounts from home without any hassle. 

Banks will remain open since people will always need to consult with financial advisors from time to time.

Taxi Drivers

While Uber sold its self-driving car division in late 2020, many believed that Uber drivers would be out of work as the company reworked millions of dollars worth of fares into its driverless vehicle projects. 

However, while issues plagued Uber’s autonomous cars, it’s only a matter of time before the kinks are all ironed out and these cars become mainstream. Not to mention, Tesla driverless cars continue to improve. 

When these vehicles eventually make their way onto roads, it will spell trouble for taxi and Uber drivers. 

If you run a taxi company, it’s lunacy to pay someone money to drive a vehicle for you when you have one that can drive itself! 

Demand for human-driven cabs may drop as automation improves, but they will struggle to compete as costs decline.

Travel Agent

In the past, to book a summer vacation, you would have needed to go into a travel agency and speak with a sales representative. 

However, nowadays, anybody can easily compare prices and put together their holiday using various comparison websites. 

These days, all you need to plan a trip is your bank card and some free time. 

Websites like Trivago and Opodo make it easy to find flights and hotels that fit your budget and schedule. 

This shift has caused many travel operators to close their brick-and-mortar locations in favor of online offerings.

Mail Carrier

While The delivery industry will still need couriers to transport packages; however, the future of traditional mail carriers appears bleak. 

Mail carriers’ positions may be in jeopardy mainly because bills and statements will be online in the next 20 years, junk mail will move from your letterbox to your email inbox, and writing letters will no longer be viable. 

Not to mention that the drone delivery trend is taking off (pardon the pun). 

According to McKinsey, at least 2,000 drone deliveries are occurring each day worldwide in 2022, leading up to 1.5 million overall. 

Furthermore, these numbers are only increasing as technology improves.

Job Loss Also Brings About More Opportunities

While automation and digitalization may put some people out of work, they will also open up new opportunities. 

We’ve already seen this happen with the rise of social media influencers, YouTubers, and podcasters. 

With the technological advances of the next few years, there will be even more opportunities for people to start their businesses and forge their own paths. 

Jobs like Tradesmen, Personal Assistants, Lawyers, and Event Planners will always be in demand. So, don’t worry too much about the future!

It’s also possible for people to retool and reskill themselves for the jobs of tomorrow. 

For example, if you’re a taxi driver worried about autonomous vehicles putting you out of a job, why not learn to code? 

You can make yourself invaluable in the ever-changing business world with a little effort. 

While the future may be uncertain, there’s no need to panic. 

The world is constantly changing, and people have always found a way to adapt. 

So don’t be too disheartened if a machine replaces your job in the next few years. 

Remember, with hard work, you can always find a way to stay ahead of the curve.

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50+ Must-See Moments In History

Last updated on May 22nd, 2024 at 04:54 pm

No one can predict the future, but we can better understand the present by looking back at history. 

Here are 100 must-see historical moments – significant events that have shaped our world. From wars and revolutions to scientific discoveries and technological innovations, these are some of the most important moments in human progress. 

Whether you’re a history buff or want to learn more about our fascinating past, check out this list!

A protestant husband and his catholic wife were not allowed to be buried together. Here are their headstones reaching across the two cemeteries in 1888.
Demonstrating how bulletproof vests work, 1923.
A family poses with their covered wagon in Kansas, 1908.
Building the hand and torch of the Statue of Liberty, Paris, 1876.
The tallest man to ever live, Robert Wadlow, poses with his family in 1935.
Workers building theEmpire State building, c. 1930s
Two women, minutes after voting, London, 1929.
Mother and son pose for a photo, Ireland, 1890.
Henry Ford in the first car he ever built, 1896.
Two newsies, New York, 1896.
The absolutely massive chain for the Titanic’s anchor, c. 1909.
A woman plays a piano designed for people undergoing bedrest, 1935.
A photo by Berenice Abbot of a woman wiring an IBM computer, 1948.
A man repairs the antenna on the World Trade Center, NYC, 1979. Photo by Peter Kaplan.
Bottling ketchup at the Heinz factory, Pittsburgh, 1897
A meeting of the Mickey Mouse Club, California, c. 1930.
The Great Blizzard of 1888, New York City
A WWI-era German submarine washed ashore in Hasting, England, in 1919.
The intact seal on Tutankhamun’s Tomb, 1922. It went untouched for 3,424 years.
Lumberjacks take a photo with a Douglas fir tree, Washington, 1899.
A woman is ticketed for wearing a bikini, 1957.
The employee cafeteria at Disneyland, 1961.
An unknown soldier, Vietnam, 1965
An Austrian child gets new shoes during WWI
Painting the Eiffel tower, 1932.
A girl tries to get a reaction from a royal guard. Stockholm, Sweden, 1970s.
Audrey Hepburn with her pet deer, 1958.
A hippie sells flowers on the road, Oklahoma, 1973.
An East German soldier sneaks a little boy across the Berlin Wall, 1961.
Wojtek the bear, who fought in WW2.
“No dog biscuits today,” London, 1940s
Mom contains her baby with a trashcan while she crochets, 1969.
Mobsters hide from the camera during Al Capone’s trial, 1931.
Protesting against low pay for teachers, 1930
People stop to watch the “Seinfeld” finale in Times Square in 1998. Photo by Ken Murray.
Samurai pose in front of the Sphinx, 1864.
Monet with his wife Alice, 1908
Protesting in Miami Beach, Florida, 1980s.
Archaeologists dine in the tomb of Pharaoh Ramses XI, 1923
Selling lemonade with a portable dispenser, Berlin, 1931.
A young Elvis with his parents, 1937.
Louis Armstrong plays for his wife in front of the Great Sphinx, 1961.
Loggers pose with a massive redwood, 1892.
Blackfoot tribein Glacier National Park, 1913
The Titanic docked at Southampton, 1912.
Collecting golf balls, 1920s
Teaching the physics of surfing, California, 1970s.
Young German soldier after being captured, 1945. Getty Images
Lenin giving a speech in Moscow, 1920
Samurai in full armor and sword, c. 1860.
Photo of an ironworker during construction of the Columbia Tower, Seattle, 1984.
After Randall Champion touched a high-voltage line, electrocuting himself and stopping his heart, J.D. Thompson gave him CPR until help arrived, allowing Champion to survive. “The Kiss of Life.” (1967) by Rocco Morabito.
Three-year-old Robert Quigley smoking a cigar, 1928. Photo by Henry Miller
A father searches for his two sons who went missing during the Kosovo war in 1999.
Windows on the World. Restaurant on the top of the North Tower of the World Trade Center, 1976. Photo by Ezra Stoller
Disco Granny, a regular fixture at Studio 54.
A 17-year-old Fidel Castro playing basketball, 1943.
A baby cage, initially named a “health cage”, was essentially a bed encased in wire, dangling from the windows of city apartments.
During World War II, Steinway & Sons air-dropped pianos with large parachutes and complete tuning instructions into the battle for the American troops.
Anne Frank photographed with her sister Margot at the beach in Zandvoort, Netherlands, in 1940.
This photo from 1902 shows French knife grinders. They would work on their stomachs in order to save their backs from being hunched all day.
Japanese soldier Shoichi Yokoi (1915 – 1997) is emotionally overcome on his return to Tokyo on February 2nd, 1972.
The photo, taken by Irving Penn in 1947, shows Peter Freuchen, a Danish adventurer, writer, and scientist.
Captain Lewis Nixon of Easy Company, suffering a hangover after celebrating V-E Day in 1945.
The Statue of Liberty as seen from the torch.
Three soldiers who lost their left leg in the New Georgia Campaign exercise the stump of their legs in preparation for using artificial limbs. McCloskey General Hospital, Texas, January 1944.
A young man unphased by his arrest for growing marijuana, 1970s.
This is the first image captured of Chernobyl, taken 14 hours after the explosion on April 26, 1986.
The old Cincinnati library before it was demolished.
Two Maori Women. New Zealand, 1902.
Cats drinking milk straight from the source. 1954.
Joe Biden withdraws from the 1988 presidential election
Father and son take silly photos, 1910s.
Flattening hills to build Seattle
Robert McGee, who was scalped as a child. 1890.
Anita Bryant after receiving a pie to the face, 1977.
A man records a concert in Poland, 1980s.
Princeton students after a snowball fight, 1893.
Gerald Ford plays Soccer with Pele, 1975.
The Endurance trapped in ice, 1915.
Prototype spacesuit for the Apollo mission. 1962.
Soviet Cosmonaut, Sergei Krikalev, who was stuck in space for 311 days, 1991
The Twin Towers from a wheat field in Manhattan.
Workers lay wooden pipes in Lewsiton, Idaho. 1891.
Working at the top of the New York skyline, 1925.
Niagara Falls frozen over, 1911.
Massive organ pipe cactus. Baja California, 1895.
A NYC trolley rolls in a snowstorm, 1910.
A Zebra drawn carriage, Buckingham Palace, 1900.
Wife of a coal miner and their three of their children, 1938.
Device to detect aircraft before radar.
Children saluting the flag at school, c. 1890.
Leo Tolstoy tells a story to his grandchildren, 1909.
Flappers pose with a car, 1920s.
Portrait of a young girl, 1863.
A young girl rides her tricycle, 1927.
Two sisters pose for a photo, 1950s.
Los Angeles drive-in, 1932.
Taking a joyride in the 1920s.
Posing for a photo with a car, c. 1920.
Jack’s Saloon in Arkansas, 1935
New Year’s Eve 1904
Beach day, 1930s
A boy’s first television experience, 1948.
A mom and her daughter, c. 1905.
An old school band
A young couple, 1920s
Two best friends c. 1925.
High school girls in auto mechanics class, 1927.
A family has a picnic on the side of the road, c. 1915.
Friends pose for a photo, 1920s
1920s New York
Iconic 1970s haircuts
A young boy and his cat.
Georgia Holt, Cher’s mother, c.1950s
Sorority sisters, University of Texas, 1944
Bob Marley’s wedding day, 1966.
Hippies hitchhiking.
1900s military bicycle with spring wheels.
A teenager attends an Elvis Presley concert 1957.

Wyatt Earp poses for a photo at his home in Los Angeles, 1927.
Two Boys in London, c. 1902.
Opening ceremonies of the Moscow Olympics 1980.
Train in Syracuse, NY, 1936.
Cats wait for the fisherman to return, Istanbul, 1970s
Drinking a glass of Belgian beer, 1971
An Inuit girl with her dog, 1949.
Riding a rocket scooter. 1931
Jean Bugatti poses with his Bugatti Royale, one of seven built, 1932.
A young couple in 1955.
Electric bathtub, 1910.
Nellie and Annie Lyons
Albert Einstein as a boy, 1884.
B-17 gunner.
Learning to swim, 1920s.
Miners in Brazil, 1980s
Taking a phone call.
1895 Crescent haircut.
Boeing 747 – Economy seats in 1970.
The future Beatles in 1957. George is 14, John is 16 and Paul is 15.
The shark from Jaws.
The last four couple of a Chicago dance marathon, 1930s.
One of the last known photos of the RMS Titanic, 1912.
A farmer’s son plays on one of the large soil drifts of the “Dust Bowl,” 1936.
A young woman operates a compressed-air grinder during WW2
A ghostly image of a boat from 1900.
A man poses on the first cables during construction of the Golden Gate Bridge, 1935
The Los Angeles Public Library Bookmobile program for the sick, 1928.
A mailman delivers Christmas mail. Chicago, USA, 1929.
Women drink coffee at a cafe, Paris, 1925.
Women have tea, New Zealand, 1890.
The first known documented wheelie, 1936.
America’s first female traffic cop, 1918
Talking on a hand crank telephone, 1900s.
A miners’ boardinghouse, California, 1860s.
Former coal miner, now blind, and his son. Washington County, Missouri, 1939.
A family and their newly-built log cabin, Kentucky, 1914.
Drunk women fighting on a rooftop. London, 1902.
Combine driver threshing oats, 1940.
A Native American man sends smoke signals in Montana, June 1909.
A Barbershop, 1869.
A couple with their Buick, California, 1930.
James and Amelia, Texas, 1867.
Portrait of a man in a wheelchair taken in front of Western Hotel, California, July 4, 1889.
Two young women delivering ice, 1918.
Kids share a laugh in Nebraska, 1910.
A Coke delivery truck, Knoxville, 1909.
A Chippewa Indian named John Smith who lived in the woods near Cass Lake, Minnesota claimed to be 137 years old before he died in 1922. Photo taken in 1915
A man changes a Model T Coupe’s flat tire, 1927.
Two men from the early 1900s. Lincoln Nebraska
Two kids go fishing, texas, 1925.
A bike club, 1885.
Facade of department store with five floors covered in coats.
Check out the ingredients of a cough syrup manufactured in Baltimore back in 1888
A saloon that gave children their own child-size beers, Wisconsin, 1890.
Portrait of a young grumpy girl, 1850s
Easter, 1926
Cow shoes used by Moonshiners during Prohibition.
Willard Scott, the original Ronald McDonald, 1963.
Kids posing with largest log cabin in Portland, Oregon, USA, 1938. It was built in 1905 and later burned down In 1964.
The Great Blizzard of 1888, New York City
Photo of the train wreck at Montparnasse Station in Paris, France, 1895.
Brighton Beach life guard, New York, 1906.
A French man tries Coca-Cola for the first time in 1950.
Giant snowman, Aberdeen, Scotland, 1963.
A Lithuanian book smuggler, 1800s.
A napping kitty, 1930. Photo by Alton Blackington.
Anne Frank outside her father’s company, 1935.
Inuit mother and her child, Alaska, 1927.
Marilyn Monroe performs onstage during the Korean War, 1954.
Tourists have tea on top of the Great Pyramid of Giza, 1938.
A young Kim Jung-Un, 1990s.
Lacemakers in France, 1920.
Jimmy Carter with his sons on his peanut farm, 1960.
Kids play on piled-up mattresses, England, 1981.
Young Stalin in Prison, 1910.
Children forced to pray at a residential school, Canada.
A British blacksmith takes the leg irons off a slave, 1907.
A young Serbian soldier naps with his visiting father at the front line, 1914/1915.
The “Happiest Man in China,” 1901.
The wreck of U-118, a German U-boat , 1919.
A Japanese battleship serving as one of the target ships during atomic testing at Bikini Atoll in 1946.
Alfred Hitchcock and MGM’s Leo the Lion, 1958.
Franco and Kissinger, 1973.
Babies sleep outside in Moscow, 1958. This practice is thought to boost their immune system.
A woman cuts her birthday cake in Iran, 1973
Into the Jaws of Death, 6th of June, 1944
New Yorkers stop to watch Seinfeld’s finale, Times Square, 1998 
50+ Must-See Moments In History Read More

A saloon in Wyoming in the late 1800s.

Last updated on April 6th, 2023 at 10:17 pm

In the 1800s, the Wild West was a lawless land where bands of outlaws roamed free. It was a time of heroes and villains, adventure, and danger.

Surprisingly, some photos from this era still exist, offering a unique glimpse into an often romanticized period of American history. Look at some of these amazing photos from the old Wild West and see if they change some of your preconceived notions.

Annie Oakley

Annie Oakley was one of the most famous sharpshooters of the Wild West. Born in rural Ohio in 1860, she first gained notoriety for her shooting skills at a local marksmanship contest.

Oakley soon joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show, where she performed for sold-out crowds across the country and even Europe.

Alamy Stock Photo

In addition to her impressive shooting abilities, Oakley was also known for her sharp wit and fearless spirit. She quickly became one of the most popular attractions in the country, and her legend only grew after she passed in 1926.

Today, Annie Oakley is considered one of the most iconic figures in American history.

Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show

The Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show was one of the most popular attractions of the late 19th century. Founded by William Cody in 1883, the show featured a cast of cowboys, Native Americans, and horses performing tricks and reenactments of famous battles.

At a time when the American West was still largely unexplored, the show gave people a glimpse into the lives of its rugged inhabitants. In addition to its entertainment value, the Wild West Show also helped to foster a sense of national pride.

As one newspaper reported, “The success of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show is a tribute to American ingenuity and enterprise.”

Olive Ann Oatman

Olive Ann Oatman was born in Illinois in 1837. In 1851, at 14, she was kidnapped by a group of Tolkepayas while traveling with her family to California. The Tolkepayas traded her to the Mohave people, who she lived with for the next four years before being released.

She eventually married and had children, but the facial tattoos she received during this time marked her as an outsider for the rest of her life.

Yet, despite her difficult early years, Oatman went on to live a long and productive life, serving as an inspiration to others who have faced adversity.

Jesse James

Jesse James was an American outlaw who became famous for his string of robberies in the late 1800s. James was born in Missouri in 1847, and he grew up in a region that was split between the Union and Confederate states.

His family supported the Confederacy, and James became a bushwhacker, engaging in guerrilla warfare against Union forces.

In 1865, James allegedly took part in the slaying of a former slaveholder, and he soon became a target of Union vigilantes. He fled to Texas but eventually returned to Missouri and turned to robbing banks and stagecoaches.

James gained notoriety for his bold robberies, becoming one of America’s most wanted men. In 1882, he was shot by a fellow outlaw who hoped to collect the hefty reward that had been offered for James’ capture.

Though he was only active for a few years, Jesse James left a lasting impression on American folklore around the Wild West.

Belle Starr

Belle Starr was a notorious outlaw in the American West who was known for her sharpshooting and her fiery temper. She rode sidesaddle and was said to be able to shoot a coin in the air and hit it with another bullet.

Born in Missouri in 1848, Belle was raised in a family of staunch Confederates. She became involved with a gang of outlaws led by the notorious Cole Younger. The gang committed a string of robberies and slayings across the Midwest.

She evaded the law until 1889, when she was shot in the back by an unknown assailant. Belle Starr remained a controversial figure.

Some saw her as a romantic figure, while others saw her as nothing more than a common criminal. Either way, her legacy continues to fascinate people to this day.

Ogallala

The town of Ogallala was in the heart of the wild west and was a haven for cowboys and outlaws. Founded in 1885, the town was named after Chief Ogallala Sioux, known for his kindness and fairness.

The town’s original layout was designed to resemble a wagon wheel, with the main street serving as the hub.

Billy the Kid

The wild west was a time of adventure and danger, and no one personified this spirit more than Billy the Kid. Born in New York in 1859, Billy quickly developed a reputation as a troublemaker.

He first came to national attention during the Lincoln County War, when he aligned himself with a group of ranchers known as the Regulators. The Regulators engaged in a bloody feud with their rivals, the House faction, leading to dozens of shootings and slayings.

When the conflict finally ended, Billy was arrested and sentenced to hang. However, he escaped from jail and went on the run, slaying several more people in the process.

In July 1881, he was finally tracked down by Sheriff Pat Garrett and took his life. Nevertheless, Billy the Kid remains one of the most notorious figures of the wild west, and his legend continues to capture the imaginations of people around the world.

James Marshall

James Marshall was an American gold prospector who is best known for his discovery of gold at Sutter’s Mill in 1848, which sparked the California Gold Rush.

Marshall was born in New Jersey in 1810, and he moved to California in 1845. He initially worked as a carpenter for John Sutter, who owned a large ranch in the Sacramento Valley.

In 1848, Marshall was inspecting the construction of a sawmill on the American River when he found some gold flakes in the water.

Although he initially tried to keep it a secret, word soon got out, and thousands of people came to California in search of gold.

The resulting Gold Rush had a profound impact on the state’s economy and population. Marshall continued to mine for gold until he passed away in 1885.

Bass Reeves

Bass Reeves was a lawman who became a legend in his own time. Born into slavery in Arkansas, he eventually made his way to Oklahoma, where he worked as a U.S. Marshal.

During his long career, Reeves arrested more than 3,000 outlaws and earned a reputation as one of the most effective law enforcement officers in the Old West.

He was also known for his fairness and even-handedness, earning the respect of both whites and Indians alike. In addition to his law enforcement work, Reeves also served as a judge and jury during his years as a marshal.

After retirement, he continued to work for the Territorial Court as an adviser and investigator. Bass Reeves was a true pioneer of frontier justice, and his legacy continues to inspire those who strive for justice today.

The Pony Express

The Pony Express was a mail delivery service that operated in the United States from 1860 to 1861. The service was created to deliver mail between Missouri and California in ten days or less.

Pony riders would carry letters and packages on horseback from one station to the next, covering a distance of up to 10 miles.

Despite the challenges, the Pony Express was a successful operation, delivering over 35,000 pieces of mail during its brief existence. Today, the Pony Express is remembered as one of the most daring feats of the American frontier.

“Wild” Bill Hickok

“Wild” Bill Hickok was one of the most famous gunmen of the American Wild West. He was born in 1837 in Illinois and began his career as a stagecoach driver. He later became a lawman, and it was during this time that he earned his reputation as a skilled marksman.

Hickok famously wore two pistols, which he kept holstered with the hammers cocked. He was slain in 1876 while playing poker in Deadwood, South Dakota.

A man sitting behind him shot him in the back of the head, instantly taking his life. To this day, “Wild” Bill Hickok remains one of the most iconic figures of the American frontier.

Butch Cassidy

There are few figures in the American West more iconic than Butch Cassidy. Born to a Mormon family in Utah, Cassidy began his criminal career as a small-time horse thief before graduating to bank robbery and train robbery.

He was eventually caught and sent to prison, but he escaped and resumed his life of crime. Along with his partner Sundance Kid, Cassidy formed the “Wild Bunch,” a notorious gang of outlaws who committed some of the most daring robberies in history.

After years on the run, Cassidy and Sundance supposedly perished in a shootout in Bolivia. But their legend lives on, and their story has been the subject of numerous books and films.

Whether you love him or hate him, there’s no denying that Butch Cassidy was one of the fascinating characters of the Old West.

Mary Fields

Mary Fields was born a slave in Davidson County, Tennessee, in 1832. She worked in the cotton fields until she was freed in 1863.

After the Civil War, she moved west to work on a ranch in Montana. Mary was an excellent horsewoman and soon became well-known for her skill in driving stagecoaches.

In 1895, she was the first woman to work as a mail carrier in the United States. Mary was a strong, independent woman who wasn’t afraid of hard work.

She was also known for her kind heart – she often took in stray animals, and she was always ready to assist a neighbor in need. Mary Fields was a trailblazer who overcame many obstacles in her life. She is an inspiration to us all.

Life as a Cowboy

It was lonely out there on the range. You’d wake up before dawn, start a fire and make some coffee. Then you’d saddle up your horse and ride all day, moving the cattle from one pasture to another.

There were no roads, so you had to find your way by following the sun and using the stars at night. And if you got lost, well, you might not be found until spring.

The weather could be brutal, too – hot in the summer, cold in the winter. You had to be tough to make it as a cowboy.

But it wasn’t all work and no play. There were plenty of opportunities for fun – like competitions like bronco riding and steer wrestling at the local rodeo. Or a game of poker after a long day on the trail. And when you finally rode into town after weeks on the range, you definitely deserved a cold beer (or three).

So yes, life as a cowboy could be tough. But it could also be exciting, adventurous, and downright fun.

Battle of Little Bighorn

In June of 1876, a group of Lakota and Cheyenne warriors led by Chiefs Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse soundly defeated the 7th Cavalry Regiment of the United States Army.

The Battle of Little Bighorn, or Custer’s Last Stand, was a pivotal moment in the history of the American West. Although the Lakota and Cheyenne were ultimately forced to surrender, the Battle of Little Bighorn was a significant victory for Native Americans.

It showcased the skill and courage of the Lakota and Cheyenne warriors, and it dealt a crushing blow to the reputation of the US Army. The Battle of Little Bighorn is remembered as one of the most famous battles in American history.

Big Nose Kate

Big Nose Kate was a famous character in the American West. She was born in Ireland in 1846 and moved to the United States as a young woman.

Kate became a well-known dance hall girl and later a prostitute. She is best remembered for her relationship with Doc Holliday, whom she met in Tombstone, Arizona.

The two had a tumultuous relationship, but they remained close until Holliday passed away in 1887. Kate outlived Holliday for many years and passed away in 1940 at the age of 94.

Throughout her long life, she was known for her quick wit and sharp tongue. Kate was one of the most colorful characters in the history of the American West.

Fannie Porter

Fannie Porter was a 19th-century American madam who ran a brothel in San Antonio, Texas. Born in New Orleans, she eventually moved to San Antonio and opened her brothel there in 1881.

She quickly gained a reputation for being one of the most successful madams in the city, and her brothel became a popular destination for wealthy men from all over Texas.

Porter was known for her lavish parties and expensive gifts, and she even attracted the attention of famous politicians and celebrities.

In 1896, she was arrested and charged with running a prostitution ring, but she was ultimately acquitted. Despite her legal troubles, Porter remained one of the most popular figures in San Antonio.

Shootout at the O.K. Corral

On October 26, 1881, a gunfight erupted in Tombstone, Arizona, that would go down in history as the Shootout at the O.K. Corral.

The conflict began when Ike and Billy Clanton, along with several other men, refused to give up their guns when ordered to do so by the town marshal. Words were exchanged, and tempers flared until, finally, the marshal opened fire.

The Clantons and their allies returned fire, and within seconds, three men were slain and three more wounded. The gunfight lasted only about 30 seconds, but its impact would be felt for decades to come.

The Shootout at the O.K. Corral is now considered one of the most famous incidents of the American Old West.

Wild Bunch

The Wild Bunch was a group of American outlaws who operated in the American West in the late 1800s. The group was led by Robert Leroy Parker, better known as Butch Cassidy.

The Wild Bunch was known for robbing banks and trains and became famous for their bold and brazen crimes. The group eventually disbanded, but their legend lives on.

The Wild Bunch has been featured in numerous books and movies, and their story fascinates people today.

Cole Younger

Cole Younger was a famous American outlaw who was born in Missouri in 1844. He became involved in the criminal underworld at a young age and soon developed a reputation as a fearless outlaw.

In 1865, he joined forces with Jesse James and participated in a number of high-profile robberies, including the notorious robbing of the First National Bank of Northfield, Minnesota. After a decade on the run, Younger was finally captured by Pinkerton detectives in 1876.

He was sentenced to life in prison but was released on parole after 20 years. Younger passed in 1916 at the age of 72.

Although he led a life of crime, Younger was also known for his compassion and his sense of humor. He was regarded by many as one of the most colorful figures of the Old West.

John Wesley Hardin

In 1853, John Wesley Hardin was born in Bonham, Texas. The second of eight children, Hardin grew up in a strict Methodist household. His father was a Circuit rider preacher, and his mother was a schoolteacher.

Hardin’s upbringing instilled in him a strong sense of right and wrong. As he grew older, Hardin began to chafe under the constraints of his religious upbringing.

He began to drink and gamble and got into fights with other boys his age. In 1868, at the age of 15, Hardin took his first man’s life in a fight. He was tried as an adult and sentenced to five years in prison.

Upon his release, he moved to Florida, where he worked as a cowboy and became involved in the cattle rustling business. In 1874, he slew another man in a fight and fled to Texas.

There, he met and married Jane Bowen, with whom he would have three children.

Over the next few years, Hardin took several more lives in shootings and duels. In 1877, he was arrested for the slaying of a deputy sheriff and sentenced to 25 years in prison.

He was paroled after serving 17 years of his sentence. Upon his release from prison, Hardin moved to El Paso, where he worked as a lawyer and rancher. He passed away of natural causes in 1895 at the age of42.

San Francisco During the Goldrush

San Francisco is a city that has always been defined by change. In the early 1800s, it was a sleepy backwater, but the discovery of gold in 1848 transformed it into a booming metropolis.

Thousands of people flocked to the city in search of wealth, and over the next few years, San Francisco rapidly grew and changed.

By 1852, it was the largest city in California, with a population of over 20,000. The gold rush also brought new people and cultures to San Francisco, resulting in a diverse and vibrant city. Even today, the spirit of the gold rush can still be seen in San Francisco’s dynamism and energy.

Central City, Colorado

Central City, Colorado, is a small town with a long history. Founded in 1859, it was once a wild west frontier town full of saloons and gambling halls.

Ezra Meeker

Ezra Meeker was a man of the old west. A pioneer who helped to tame the wild west, he was a trailblazer who helped to open up new frontiers. He was also a man of great resourcefulness and courage who faced many challenges in his life.

Born in Ohio in 1830, Meeker was just a young man when he headed west to Oregon in 1852. He settled in Puget Sound, where he built a successful farm and became one of the area’s leading citizens.

In 1864, Meeker embarked on a new adventure, becoming one of the first settlers in what is now Washington state. He later served as the mayor of Tacoma and as a member of the Washington State Legislature.

In his later years, Meeker became known as an advocate for the preservation of the Oregon Trail.

He traveled across the country several times to raise awareness of its importance and even erected monuments along the trail to mark its history.

Meeker’s tireless efforts helped preserve the old west’s legacy, and his story is an enduring reminder of America’s pioneering spirit.

Homesteaders in the Wild West

The Old West was a time of exploration and adventure, and homesteaders played a vital role in opening up the frontier. Although homesteading was difficult and often dangerous, it offered families the chance to own their land and build a new life.

For many homesteaders, the journey west began with a long overland trail. These intrepid pioneers faced many challenges along the way, including harsh weather conditions and scarce resources.

Once they reached their destination, homesteaders had to contend with building homes and fences, planting crops, and dealing with pests and predators.

It was a tough life, but one that many families were willing to take on in order to realize their dream of owning their own piece of the American West.

Calamity Jane

Calamity Jane was one of the most famous figures of the American Wild West. She was known for her unconventional lifestyle, sharpshooting skills, and close friendship with the famed folk hero, Wild Bill Hickok.

Born in Missouri in 1852, Jane moved west as a young woman in search of adventure. She soon found work as a stagecoach driver and eventually became a scout for the United States Army.

During her time as a scout, Jane first gained notoriety, as she was often involved in skirmishes with Native Americans.

In 1876, she met Hickok in Deadwood, South Dakota, and the two became fast friends. Hickok was gunned down just a few months later, an event that deeply affected Jane. She continued to live an adventurous life but never forgot her friend Wild Bill.

Tombstone, Arizona

Tombstone, Arizona, is best known as a wild west town, and for a good reason. It was one of the most lawless towns in the old west, attracting all sorts of outlaws, gunslingers, and adventurers.

The town was also the site of the infamous Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, which only added to its reputation. Today, Tombstone is a popular tourist destination, and visitors can still get a taste of the wild west.

The town has preserved many of its original buildings, including the O.K. Corral, and there are plenty of opportunities to learn about its storied past.

Geronimo

Geronimo was a Native American warrior who fought against the Mexican Army and later the United States Army. He was born in what is now Arizona, and he belonged to the Bedonkohe tribe of the Apache people.

Geronimo became a warrior at a young age, and he quickly gained a reputation for his skill in battle. He led his people in several successful raids against both Mexican and American targets.

However, he eventually came into conflict with the US government, which was trying to move all Native Americans onto reservations.

After years of war, Geronimo finally surrendered in 1886. He was sent to prison, but he was eventually released and allowed to return to the reservation. Geronimo passed away in 1909, but he remains an iconic figure in American history.

The Anti-Saloon League

The Anti-Saloon League was an American political organization that advocated for the prohibition of alcohol. The League was founded in 1893, and it quickly became a powerful force in politics.

The League was particularly active in the Midwest, where it helped to secure the passage of several state prohibition laws. However, the League’s ultimate goal was to secure a nationwide ban on alcohol.

To this end, the League campaigned tirelessly for the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment.

While the Amendment was initially met with resistance, the League’s persistent lobbying eventually led to its ratification in 1919.

As a result of the League’s efforts, prohibition became the law of the land, and alcoholic beverages were effectively outlawed in the United States.

Poker in the Wild West

In the late 1800s, poker was the primary form of gambling in the American West. Outlaws and lawmen alike often gathered in saloons to play cards, and many a hand was won or lost on a turn of the cards.

However, poker was more than just a way to pass the time; it was also a form of entertainment.

In an era when there were few forms of entertainment available, poker provided an opportunity for people to socialize and show off their skills. In addition, because poker is a game of chance, it allowed people to take risks and test their luck.

For many people living in the western United States, poker was an essential part of life.

Today, poker is still a popular form of gambling, but it has lost some of its luster. With so many other forms of entertainment available, poker has become just one option among many.

Nevertheless, it still remains a popular pastime for those who enjoy taking risks and testing their luck.

The California Gold Rush

The California Gold Rush was one of the most important events in American history. It began in 1848 when gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill and quickly spread as news of the discovery spread throughout the country.

Thousands of people from all over the world converged on California in search of gold, and the resulting population boom profoundly impacted the state.

The Gold Rush also led to a dramatic increase in trade and commerce and a sharp spike in inflation.

By 1850, California’s population had exploded to over 200,000, making it one of the fastest-growing states in the nation. The Gold Rush continued until 1855 when gold production began to decline.

Although it lasted for only a few years, the Gold Rush impacted California and the American West.

Rufus Buck Gang

From 1896 to 1897, the Rufus Buck Gang terrorized Indian Territory, now Oklahoma. The gang, which was made up of both Native Americans and African Americans, committed a series of robberies and slayings.

They were finally captured after a shootout with law enforcement in which two officers were slain. The gang’s leader, Rufus Buck, was hanged in July 1897.

The Rufus Buck Gang was one of the most notorious outlaw gangs in the American West. Their story is a reminder of the violence and disorder that existed in the frontier territories during the late 19th century.

Crazy Horse

​In the late 1800s, a Lakota warrior named Crazy Horse became one of the most respected leaders of his people. He was known for his courage and fighting skills and led his tribe in many successful battles against the US Army.

However, Crazy Horse’s greatest victory came in the Battle of the Little Bighorn, where he and his warriors defeated General George Custer and his troops.

After this victory, Crazy Horse became a symbol of hope for Native Americans who were struggling to keep their land and their way of life.

Alleged Photo of Crazy Horse

Unfortunately, Crazy Horse’s success made him a target for the US government, and soldiers slew him in 1877 while he was trying to escape from captivity.

Crazy Horse remains an important figure in Native American history despite his tragic end.

Black Canyon, Colorado

Colorado’s Black Canyon is a steep and wild place. The canyon walls are mostly made of Precambrian gneiss and schist, rocks that are more than 2 billion years old.

The canyon is about 1,000 feet deep and two miles wide at its widest point. It was carved by the Gunnison River, which flows through the center of the canyon.

The Black Canyon has a long and colorful history. Native Americans lived in the canyon for centuries before Europeans arrived. The first Europeans to see the canyon were probably Spanish explorers in the 1500s. But it wasn’t until 1806 that the canyon was truly “discovered” by American settlers.

In that year, Lt. Zebulon Pike led an expedition into the area in search of the legendary lost city of Quivira. Pike didn’t find any lost cities, but he did become the first recorded person to descend into the Black Canyon.

Since then, the canyon has been a popular destination for explorers, settlers, and tourists alike. Inkowski Day Use Area, located near the south rim of the canyon, is named for John C. Ingersoll, who ran a stagecoach station there in the late 1800s. Today, visitors can enjoy hiking, camping, fishing, and bird watching in Black Canyon National Park.

The Wheeler Survey Group

The Wheeler Survey Group was an exploration and mapping expedition funded by the United States government in 1869. The group was led by Captain George M. Wheeler and consisted of topographical engineers, naturalists, and photographers.

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Their mission was to survey the western United States and create accurate maps of the region. Over the course of three years, the group traveled more than 8,000 miles and made detailed observations of the geography, geology, flora, and fauna of the American West.

The resulting maps and reports were essential in opening up the West to settlement and development. Today, the Wheeler Survey Group is considered one of the most important scientific expeditions in American history.

Doc Holliday

Doc Holliday is best known for his role in the gunfight at the O.K. Corral, but there is much more to his story than that. Holliday was born in Georgia in 1851 and grew up in a wealthy family. He was educated in the finest schools and showed great promise as a student.

However, his life took a turn when his mother passed away from tuberculosis when he was just 15 years old. His father remarried soon after, and Doc didn’t get along with his new stepmother.

As a result, he left home and headed west. He eventually ended up in Dodge City, where he met Wyatt Earp.

The two men became friends, and when Earp was appointed marshal of Tombstone, he asked Holliday to come to help him keep the peace. It was there that Holliday made his name as a gambler and a gunfighter.

On October 26, 1881, the famous gunfight at the O.K. Corral took place. Holliday was on Earp’s side, and though they were outnumbered, they emerged victorious.

However, the fight led to a vendetta against the Earps by the Cowboys, a group of outlaws who supported the McLaury brothers (who had been slain in the gunfight).

Over the next few months, several members of both groups were massacred in shootouts. Finally, Wyatt Earp tracked down the leaders of the Cowboys and slew them all.

Doc Holliday played a key role in this final showdown, and after it was over, he left Tombstone for good.

He headed south to Texas, where he lived out the rest of his days. Doc Holliday passed away from tuberculosis in 1887 at the age of 36. Though his life was short, he left behind a legend that has endured for over a century.

Buffalo Soldier

The Buffalo Soldiers were a group of African American soldiers who served in the United States Army during the Indian Wars. The term “Buffalo Soldier” was first used by the Cheyenne warriors, who were impressed by the soldiers’ courage and tenacity in battle.

The Buffalo Soldiers went on to distinguish themselves in a number of conflicts, including the Spanish-American War and the Philippine insurrection. Today, the legacy of the Buffalo Soldiers is honored by a number of military units, including an active-duty cavalry regiment.

Deadwood

Nestled in the heart of the Black Hills, Deadwood is a small town with a big history.

Founded in 1876, the town was a booming gold-mining town during the 19th century. However, it was also known for its lawlessness, and infamous outlaws such as Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane made their home here.

Alfred A. Hart

Alfred A. Hart (1816-1913) was an American photographer best known for his work documenting the construction of the transcontinental railroad.

Born in England, Hart emigrated to the United States with his family as a child. He began his career as a portrait painter but soon turned to photography, opening a studio in Sacramento, California.

In 1865, Hart was hired by the Central Pacific Railroad to document the construction of the western section of the transcontinental railroad.

Over the next few years, he took hundreds of photographs of the railroad’s progress, from the laying of tracks to the completion of the first transcontinental train journey.

Hart’s photographs provide a unique record of one of America’s most ambitious engineering projects and have been featured in numerous exhibitions and publications.

Today, Alfred A. Hart is considered one of the foremost American photographers of the 19th century.

Building the Transcontinental Railroad

On May 10, 1869, the Central Pacific and Union Pacific Railroads met in Promontory, Utah, marking the completion of the first transcontinental railroad in the United States. The accomplishment was a testament to the vision and determination of the men who had built it.

The project had begun six years earlier, with two railroads working from opposite ends of the country. Overcoming numerous challenges, including rugged terrain, severe weather, and hostile Native Americans, the crews managed to lay more than 1,700 miles of track.

When the last spike was driven into place, it was a momentous achievement not only for the nation but for the world. The transcontinental railroad would change the way people lived and traveled, opening up new opportunities for trade and commerce. It was truly a feat of engineering that had transformed America.

Cowboy Fashion

When you think of a cowboy, what do you see? A rugged figure on a horse, galloping across the plains? Someone herding cattle or rounding up stray sheep? Whatever image comes to mind, one thing is for sure: cowboys are an iconic part of American history. But what did they actually look like?

For starters, cowboys were typically outfitted in practical clothing that could stand up to long days in the saddle. This typically included a button-down shirt, denim jeans, and a wide-brimmed hat to protect from the sun.

Boots were also essential, both for comfort and function – they needed to be able to grip the stirrups while riding and withstand being caked in mud and manure.

Many cowboys also sported bandannas around their necks, which could be used for everything from wiping sweat to binding a wound.

When it came to their horses, cowboys didn’t mess around. They needed an animal that was strong enough to carry them all day but also agile enough to avoid getting caught in stampedes or navigating rough terrain.

As a result, many cowboys favored breeds like the Quarter Horse or the Appaloosa. And, of course, every cowboy worth his salt had a trusty lasso by his side – just in case he needed to wrangle a runaway calf or steer a wayward steer back onto the trail.

So there you have it: the typical cowboy look. Whether you’re seeing them in movies or in real life, these men (and sometimes women) are truly a part of American legend.

The Old Mission Church

The Old Mission Church was a church in New Mexico that was built in the 17th century. It was one of the first churches in the area and played a big role in the wild west. The church was a place where people could go to worship, and it also served as a school and a hospital.

The church was an important part of the community, and it helped to establish law and order in the wild west. The church is no longer standing, but its legacy continues to live on in the hearts of those who knew it.

Louisa Earp

It’s not every day that you meet a woman as tough and independent as Louisa Houston Earp. Born into a wealthy family, Louisa could have easily settled into a life of luxury and ease.

But she had other plans. When she met Morgan Earp, a wild and rugged gunfighter, she knew she had found her match.

The two of them were married in secret, much to the disapproval of Louisa’s family. But they didn’t care. They were in love. From that day forward, Louisa stood by Morgan’s side through thick and thin.

She was his partner in every sense of the word. And when Morgan tragically lost his life, she refused to let his memory fade. She spent the rest of her life fighting for justice for her husband.

Johnny Ringo

Johnny Ringo was one of the most notorious outlaws of the Old West. A skilled gunman was said to be able to draw and fire his pistol with lightning speed. He was also a cold-blooded bandit responsible for taking numerous men’s lives, both innocent and guilty.

Despite his reputation, Johnny Ringo was not a man who thrived on violence. He was said to be well-educated and well-spoken, and he had a true love for books and learning.

In many ways, he was a complex and contradictory figure, a man who could be both cruel and kind, violent and gentle. Ultimately, though, he was a product of his environment, a man who lived by violence.

A saloon in Wyoming in the late 1800s. Read More