Historical images - Images that made history

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While on the subject, the Coconaut Grove is only the second-deadliest structure fire, in terms of loss of life, in US history.

The grim record holder was the fire at the Iroquois Theater in Chicago, December 30th, 1903.

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The final death toll, a staggering 602.

An electrical fire started backstage during a standing-room-only performance that afternoon and quickly grew into a conflagration as it rapidly consumed the cloth backdrops and stage drapery. While standard practice was to have a fireproof asbestos curtain lowered to protect the audience, the curtain in this case got hung up halfway.

When one of the performers in a panic to escape opened a rear door behind the stage the rush of air blew a wall of flame into the audience. The wooden seats and flammable decorations then all caught, becoming an unstoppable inferno.

Everything that could go wrong, then did go wrong. Many of the exit doors had been locked to prevent people sneaking in without a ticket, those that had not either opened inwards or had non-standard "bascule" latches, not knobs or crash bars. In the dark and panic, these proved impossible to open. Firemen later tasked with removing the bodies said they were ten deep against the doors in places.

A group that managed to get one door high above the third balcony to open found that it opened into.... thin air. The building's fire escape had never been installed, leaving them to plummet three stories to their deaths in the alley below as the crush of the crowd pushed them off the ledge.

Sprinklers and fire buckets were nonexistent as well, the only "firefighting" apparatus were a few small hand-held dry chemical extinguishers meant for putting out a burning trash can at best and utterly useless. There wasn't even a fire alarm on-site, someone had to run down the outside sidewalk to a nearby fire box to call in the disaster.

An investigation discovered that the supposedly "fireproof" asbestos curtain was really made from cotton and other combustible materials. It would have never saved anyone at all. In addition to not having any fire alarms in the building, the owners had decided that sprinklers were too unsightly and too costly and had never had them installed.

To make matters worse, the management also established a policy to keep non-paying customers from slipping into the theater during a performance -- they had quietly padlocked accordion-style gates at the top of the interior stairways. And just as tragic was the idea they came up with to keep the audience from being distracted during a show. They ordered all of the exit lights to be turned off.

The investigation led to a cover-up by officials from the city and the fire department, who denied all knowledge of fire code violations. They blamed the inspectors, who had overlooked the problems in exchange for free theater passes. A grand jury indicted a number of individuals, including the theater owners, fire officials and even the mayor. No one was ever charged with a criminal act. Families of the dead filed nearly 275 civil lawsuits against the theater but no money was ever collected.
children. the majority of those attending that night were children.

plenty of them died in crushes rather than flames. so grim.

Foy, who was preparing to go on stage at the time, ran out and attempted to calm the crowd, first making sure that his young son was in the care of a stagehand. He later wrote, "It struck me as I looked out over the crowd during the first act that I had never before seen so many women and children in the audience. Even the gallery was full of mothers and children."[14] Foy was widely seen as a hero after the fire for his courage in remaining on stage and pleading with patrons not to panic even as large chunks of burning scenery landed around him
 
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Brian Wilson directs from the control room while recording the album Pet Sounds in 1966 in Los Angeles.

Pet Sounds was known as the band's most widely known and influential album in their career.
 
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Messenger pigeon being send away by an english tank during the battle of Passchendaele 1917.

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German Soldier carrying pigeons in a special rack.

Somehow, seeing images of soldiers using pigeons during WW1 is kind of weird. It does highlight how WW1 combined old and modern stuff.
 
US Marines raising the stars and stripes on Iwo Jima
 

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Goran Jelisic A.K.A, "Serb Hitler", gunned down kebab in Brcko in 1992.
 
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Vojislav Šešelj receiving his PhD in law at the tender age of 25 from the University of Sarajevo. 1979

Vojislav Šešelj is currently the leader of the Serb Radical Party, Chetnik commander, commander of Serb volunteer units during the wars in Croatia and Bosnia and possibly the biggest edgelord in modern history. The TL;DR on Šešelj would be if malevolent autism manifested itself in human flesh. Alternatively you could imagine him as Corey Barnhill if he was a Serb ultranationalist and Chetnik commander who had a PhD in law instead of being a pedophile NEET.

In 2003 Vojo voluntarily and under a great spectacle surrendered himself to the International Crime Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) to stand trial for the war crimes he's been accused of while defending himself. Šešelj's trial was such an unbelievable shitshow that it is cited as one of the reasons why the ICTY is such a joke. First he raised a massive stink and even went on a hunger strike because the court wanted to appoint him a defense attorney while Šešelj insisted on defending himself. In the end the court gave in. The trial itself (which by the way was pure kino) can be summarized as 13 years (!) without a sentence (minus the sentences he got for contempt of court) as following:



The most egregious thing, for which he was convicted for contempt of court, was him doxing protected witnesses in his memoirs. He was in addition to that disrespectful as fuck towards the judges and always made sure to let them know that he considers them as his lesser as both human beings and lawyers. Not to mention, he was shittalking and outright bullying witnesses from the prosecution almost to tears. To be fair to Šešelj on this one though, I couldn't feel bad for prosecution's so-called "experts" when they legitimately knew fuck-all about their own subjects.

The funniest part of his trial: He won! Šešelj's health has over the years deteriorated from stress, age and autism. He had to get a pace maker and was recovering from liver cancer. In 2014 the ICTY welcomed this development used it as an excuse to deport him to Serbia where he would stay for "health reasons" and be tried in abstinentia, even though Šešelj wanted to stay to torment them more. In other words: The court had enough of his autism and just wanted to get rid of him without having to deal with another dead Serb in the Hague. The trial concluded in 2016 with him being acquitted of all charges. Last year, in 2018, the sentence was revised and Šešelj got a prison sentence of 10 years for inciting violence against Croats and other non-Serbs in northern Serbia. The sentence of 10 years became meaningless because Šešelj had already spent 12 years there standing trial.

Šešelj is an interesting figure who in my opinion is both a lolcow and an anti-cow at the same time. He's such a terrible, terrible human being (I called him an edgelord for a reason) that he comes full circle and becomes funny again.

(Did some edits because Šešelj is something to behold, an exceptional individual in every possible sense of the word...)
 
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Salvage tugs attempt to free battleship USS Missouri (BB-63), January 21st, 1950. She ran aground on Thimble Shoal, only a few miles outside of Norfolk, Virginia, having gone off-course while outbound for Guantanamo Bay.

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The attempt was unsuccessful, but a second attempt on February 1st, when tides were more favorable, got her free. The fiasco, literally happening in the USN's own backyard, cost a handful of officers their careers. It also inadvertently spelled the end of the battleship USS Kentucky.

Ordered as an Iowa-class fast battleship, Kentucky had been laid down in 1944, but, a shortage of steel and higher-priority given to carrier production meant WW2 had ended with only the hull having been constructed.

Several proposals had been put forth for either completing her as-designed or possibly converting her into a guided-missile ship, but the rapidly changing political and technological atmosphere of the early Cold War meant nothing had advanced beyond design studies as the incomplete hull languished in dry dock.

With Missouri damaged, Kentucky's fate was sealed, the immediate need for both an open dry dock large enough to fit a battleship, and the need for replacement hull plates meant Kentucky was floated out and stripped for spares. Her boilers were taken out and went on to power several other Navy ships, and eventually her entire bow was removed wholesale to replace the one of USS Wisconsin after that ship had accidentally collided with a destroyer during maneuvers.



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Kentucky being moved from dry dock, 1950. Note the protective structures over the empty turret barbettes. Since the main guns were never fitted, the open holes in the deck would have otherwise filled with rainwater.




By 1956, all salvageable parts had been removed, and Kentucky was just a barren hulk floating in a disused portion of the Delaware River, whereupon she was finally struck from the Naval record and sold for scrap.

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Kentucky's last remaining bits under tow to the scrapyard, 1959
 
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Indianapolis Motor Speedway, 1964. An enormous fireball engulfs seven cars in a horrific 2nd lap crash as drivers Eddie Sachs and Dave MacDonald collide. Both would die from the combination of injury and burns. The race itself would continue after a lengthy red flag and indy car legend A.J. Foyt would be the eventual winner, but the mood at the track was anything but celebratory following the announcement of the two fatalities.

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Racing technology was progressing rapidly in the late 50's/early 60's, and the starting grid that day featured both old "roadster" style cars with the engine up front as well as "formula" model cars with rear-mounted engines. That is the standard today, but it was new at the time. There also were no limits on the amount of fuel a car could carry, so car builders stuck fuel tank space in wherever they could find it to limit the need for pit stops. On race day, MacDonald's car would have a whopping 45 gallons of gas on-board. (A modern economy car holds about 12-13, by comparison)

Speeds were also rising. Jim Clark had won the pole with a fastest single lap of 159.3 mph, and a four-lap average of 158.8 mph, both track records. All this extra speed meant aerodynamics began to play a factor for the first time, and many say MacDonald's car had been poorly-designed in that regard and other drivers during practice sessions had noted he looked very loose and on the verge of a spin in the turns. A few reportedly urged him to take it easy, but MacDonald was a rookie out to prove himself and as soon as the green flag dropped, he went on the offensive, passing five other cars on the first lap. It was when he tried to pass a sixth that disaster struck.

Exiting turn 4, he lost control and spun backwards into the inside retaining wall. The impact split the car's fuel tank open, and it's full load of gasoline instantly ignited.

The car drifted back across the track and slammed up against the outside wall, stopping directly in front of oncoming traffic, racing flat out.

With no time to react and nowhere to go, Eddie Sachs crashed headlong into the burning wreckage, his car also ruptured it's fuel tank and even more gas was added to the inferno, sending a huge black smoky plume hundreds of feet above the track and into the sky, a miniature mushroom cloud.

Sachs had died instantly. MacDonald was still alive when extracted from his car, but would pass away later at hospital, his lungs fatally scorched by breathing in the flames.

The accident would lead to sweeping safety regulations for the following races, including mandating maximum fuel loads, puncture-proof fuel cells and a switch to less-volatile methanol instead of gasoline.

Indy would continue to claim driver lives, and still does to this day, but none have ever been as terrifying or as long-lasting in the psyche of American open-wheel motorsport than the fiery demise of both Sachs and MacDonald.
 
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András Arató, more commonly known as the guy from the Hide the pain Harold meme, working as an electrical engineer in the 70s

It's always odd when some meme turns out to be an actual person and often pretty cool in their own right.
 
One of the iconic photos of the 1990s in Russia. "A Date with America", October 1993:

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The burned out building behind the L&M billboard is the old seat of the Russian parliament - the Moscow's White House. During the violent confrontation between President Boris Yeltsin and the old Russian parliament, the Supreme Soviet of Russia, it was shelled by tanks on live television to force the Supreme Soviet to surrender. It happened on 4 October, 1993.

The conflict was the culmination of a conflict between neoliberal, pro-Western political forces (Yeltsin, Gaidar & Co.) and the unholy alliance of anti-liberal Russian political forces led by Russia's Vice President Alexander Rutskoy and Supreme Soviet's Chairman Ruslan Khasbulatov. It featured nationalists, communists, socialists, monarchists and neo-Nazis, all united by their opposition to "shock therapy" reforms advocated by America and the West, which left tens of millions of Russians in absolute destitution and poverty in just one year and brought down the already lethargic Russian economy.
After months of tensions and political violence, on 21 September, Yeltsin issued an executive order dissolving the Russian parliament, in direct violation of Russia's constitution. In response, the Supreme Soviet impeached Yeltsin, while Yeltsin's forces blockaded the parliament building. The stand-off continued until 3 October 1993, when Supreme Soviet launched an open revolt against Yeltsin.
The Parliament supporters easily scattered disorganized riot police and interior troops blockading the White House:

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Then, Moscow's municipal administration was seized:

In the evening, Parliament forces besieged Ostankino Television Centre, the place major Russian television channels are broadcast from. All television channels based there went off-air. Channel Two (RTR) continued broadcasting from a reserve broadcasting station, transmitting pro-Yeltsin programming.

"Dear television viewers! Due to the armed siege of the Ostankino television station, we are forced to interrupt our broadcast!"

In response, Yeltsin's troops opened fire into the crowd:
46 people were killed. Among them were foreign journalists: Rory Peck, cameraman of ARD (Germany) and Yvan Scopan, cameraman of TF-1 France.
Additional footage of the events at Ostankino:

At midnight, Yeltsin declared a state of emergency and sent tanks into central Moscow next morning. Western television channels like CNN broadcast the fighting in Moscow's streets live:

The White House was shelled by tanks around 9:00 local time. After several more hours of fighting, the outnumbered and outgunned Parliament forces surrendered.

To put these events into perspective, imagine a conflict between, say, US President Trump and the US Congress over an economic crisis plaguing the nation. Trump dissolves the US Congress by executive order, shitting all over the American constitution in process, the Congress immediately impeaches him, and the president's opponents try to take over government buildings and are shot dead outside CNN headquarters. Then Trump moves tanks into Washington D.C., and the US military shell the Capitol Building until the Congress surrenders. And all foreign powers unanimously back Trump, because fuck the Congress - they are all communist bastards, right?
This is what happened in Russia in October 1993. Western countries gave their full backing to Yeltsin, completely ignoring his blatant anti-constitutional power grab, because they approved his policy course.


Total casualty number: 137 dead, 437 wounded (government estimates).
 
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Frankly, nothing compared to what a return to full Soviet style Communism would have entailed.

There was no way to actually return to Soviet-style Communism: planned economy has already discredited itself several years before. Probably there'd be populist economic policies like halting privatisation and trying to bail out major state enterprises - Alexander Lukashenko did that in Belarus in 1990s. Also, because anti-Yeltsin opposition was an unholy alliance of incompatible political ideologies, the defeat of Yeltsin in 1993 would guarantee political instability down the line - far-left and far-right would definitely get at each others' throats without a common enemy.

The big problem, however, was this - by violating the Russian Constitution because fuck commies, Yeltsin created a big precedent - if there's a need, the rule of law can be discarded, period. It would happen again in 1996, when Yeltsin with the support of the United States of America carried out an incredibly dirty campaign against the communist candidate Gennady Zyuganov, monopolising control of the seemingly free and impartial mass media... It is widely assumed that Yeltsin rigged the 1996 election.

All of that discredited democracy in Russia and the idea of a truly liberal, democratic, pro-Western Russian state. As a result, the West now has to deal with Putin's regime trying to screw them over, and the West sowed the seeds of that, because by supporting Yeltsin, they destroyed Russian democracy in the name of democracy. All of today's shit: Crimea, the war in Ukraine, foreign electoral interference, the second Cold War - just because Clinton and his buddies didn't want to see commies in power in Russia again in the 1990s.
 
Tbh most of American international history is dealing with the long-term fallout of the shit we did 20 years ago for short-term benefits.
 
Brooklyn Supreme, who is the disputed - but generally accepted - record holder for the largest (not tallest) horse. He was also designated as the world's heaviest horse at one time. Before he grew to his large size he was named as champion in many state fairs and horse shows.

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He was 19.2 hands high (6 ft 6 in at his shoulder) and weighed 3,200 lb. He also had a girth of 10 ft 2 in. His horseshoes required about 30 inches of steel.

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Brooklyn Supreme was of course a "gentle giant", although he had a tendency to steal candy and ice cream from oblivious kids who would visit him at the fair.
s-l1000.jpg

In awe at the size of this lad. ABSOLUTE UNIT.
 
Brooklyn Supreme, who is the disputed - but generally accepted - record holder for the largest (not tallest) horse. He was also designated as the world's heaviest horse at one time. Before he grew to his large size he was named as champion in many state fairs and horse shows.

5deo9-worlds-largest-horse.jpg


He was 19.2 hands high (6 ft 6 in at his shoulder) and weighed 3,200 lb. He also had a girth of 10 ft 2 in. His horseshoes required about 30 inches of steel.

e9c4x-largest-horse-2.jpg


Brooklyn Supreme was of course a "gentle giant", although he had a tendency to steal candy and ice cream from oblivious kids who would visit him at the fair.
s-l1000.jpg

In awe at the size of this lad. ABSOLUTE UNIT.

I thought the first and third photos were the same and I kept going back and forth between them. They are extremely similar.
 
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