Historical images - Images that made history

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More old gun advertisements:

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The last one is the advertisement in American Rifleman magazine that Lee Harvey Oswald ordered his 6.5mm Carcano rifle from, it's third from the top on the left.
 
A hugging couple in Beijing, 1985
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Traffic in Beijing, 1985 (taken by the same photographer, Yann Layma)
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Back then, it was far more common for people to take the bicycle than the car but bicycle culture has slowly been declining in China (or at least in the big cities) since the 90s.
 
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Not sure why I like these vintage crime scene photos, maybe because I am into CJ and criminal profiling. But I like them.
 
It's kind of weird when you look at something this iconic and realize the whole thing can be summed up as "A bunch of people got into an argument and shot each other up."

The interesting thing to me is the video Justin Scarred did in Tombstone where he mentioned how that fight is still scandalous to this day. Apparently family members of the McLaury's are angry about Wyatt Earp and his family.
 
Another story related to Tombstone.

The murder of Morgan Earp.


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The history:


At 10:50 p.m. on Saturday, March 18, 1882, after returning from a musical at Schieffelin Hall, Morgan was ambushed. He was playing a late round of billiards at the Campbell & Hatch Billiard Parlor against owner Bob Hatch. Dan Tipton, Sherman McMaster, and Wyatt watched, having received threats that same day.
The assailant shot Morgan through the upper half of a four-pane windowed door. The bottom two windows had been painted over. The door opened onto a dark alley that ran through the block between Allen and Fremont Streets. Morgan, about 10 feet (3.0 m) from the door, was struck by a bullet in the back which injured his spine then exited his front and entered the thigh of mining foreman George A. B. Berry. Another bullet lodged in the wall near the ceiling over Wyatt's head. Several men rushed into the alley but found the shooter had fled.
After Morgan was shot, his brothers tried to help him stand, but Morgan said "Don't, I can't stand it. This is the last game of pool I'll ever play." They moved him to the floor near the card room door. Dr. William Miller arrived first, followed by Drs. Matthews and George Goodfellow. They all examined Morgan. Goodfellow, who would earn recognition in the United States as the nation's leading expert at treating abdominal gunshot wounds, concluded that Morgan's wounds were fatal.
Goodfellow described Morgan's wounds:

He was in a state of collapse resulting from a gunshot, or pistol wound, entering the body just to the left of the spinal column in the region of the left kidney emerging on the right side of the body in the region of the gall bladder. It certainly injured the great vessels of the body causing hemorrhage which, undoubtedly, causes death. It also involved the spinal column. It passed through the left kidney and also through the loin.

In the book Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal, author Stuart Lake wrote that Wyatt said that Morgan, before dying, whispered to Wyatt, "I can't see a damned thing." Wyatt said that they had promised each other to report visions of the next world when at the point of death. They moved him to a lounge and Morgan's family—Wyatt, Virgil, and James, along with Allie and Bessie—gathered around him. Morgan's wife Louisa was in Colton with his parents, and Warren Earp was out of town. Morgan died less than an hour after he was shot.

Articles and excerpts on Morgan Earp's death:

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Morgan Earp's grave in Colton, California.

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Russian serial killer Aleksandr Pichushkin pacing in his holding cell in the courtroom where he would later be found guilty of 48 murders. He was suspected of killing as many as 60.
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The Ju-52 I managed to spot at the extreme limit of my lens, while taking photos of ruins near Koblenz. I heard it coming from a long ways off, and knew it was something old, slow, and German. Almost missed him, but got the shot.

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This toppled headstone was almost completely illegible, until I tried some IR & negative filters.

Near Chesaning, MI.
 
women's history:
Annie Oakley
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an internet legend
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Amelia.
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Grace Jones and a guy.
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"true freedom"
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another internet legend. becoming the lich queen
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more true freedom.

warning: horrors ahead
the work I do- it can be alarming to see the results of violence.
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Bundy's car.

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and a victim.
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we all know black Dahlia.
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the lipstick killer.
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Silvia likens, on whom the movie and book "girl next door" and "an American crime" were based.
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overview of jonestown

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poor Mary.

racism and such
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hightower.
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classic reactionary pose.
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Trump supporters.
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happy, back in the "good old days"
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American pride.

random important images
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Tom of Finland -many years before there was a movie about this
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Teddy doing the necessary.
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tsar bomba.
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i think it's a a carny gaffe, but it's the rat king irl

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buster's contract did not allow him to smile.
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goes without saying.
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depressing.
 
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The following is an "in a nutshell" telling of the story of Staff Sergeant Reckless, a Korean War horse. I have it in spoilers so it won't be too long.

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This is Staff Sgt. Reckless (c. 1948 - May 13, 1968), photographed in her retirement following the war. Reckless was a chestnut (light red) mare of Mongolian and race horse ancestry, who was purchased in 1952 by members of the United States Marine Corps to serve as a pack animal Recoilless Rifle Platoon, Anti-Tank Company, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division. Reports indicate she was purchased for $250 from a Seoul racetrack stableboy who needed the money to buy an artificial leg for his sister. The boy, named Moon, was reluctant to sell Reckless, who was then named "Ah Chim Hai" (Flame of the Morning), and cried when she left.

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Sgt. Reckless gets promoted to "Staff Sergeant" c. 1959
After her purchase, Reckless integrated into her unit quickly and was allowed to roam freely throughout the camp, often wandering into tents to say hello. On colder nights she was allowed to sleep with soldiers inside the camp. Reckless was known for her willingness to eat everything, including scrambled eggs, Coca-Cola, beer, bacon, chocolate, and once, $30 worth of poker chips. Food could not be left alone around her. She really was the "GOAT".

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Sgt. Reckless under gunfire, c. 1950s.
Sgt. Reckless served in numerous combat actions in Korea, carrying supplies and ammunition. She was also used to evacuate the dead and wounded. Often, she traveled with her supplies alone, having memorized the routes to take to camps and battlefields (she also learned to run for cover when hearing "Incoming!"). The highlight of her nine-month military career came in late March 1953, during the Battle for Outpost Vegas when, in a single day, she made 51 solo trips to resupply multiple front line units. She was wounded in combat twice, given the battlefield rank of corporal in 1953, and then a battlefield promotion to sergeant in 1954, several months after the war ended.

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Sgt. Reckless at the Marine Corps birthday party, c. 1954.
Sgt. Reckless received two Purple Hearts (for the Battle of Outpost Vegas), a Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal, Presidential Unit Citation with bronze star, the National Defense Service Medal, a Korean Service Medal, the United Nations Korea Medal, a Navy Unit Commendation, and a Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation.[2] She would wear these awards on her horse blanket, plus a French Fourragere that the 5th Marines earned in World War I.

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Sgt. Reckless with her firstborn, Fearless, c. 1957.
After retirement, Sgt. Reckless lived at Camp Pendleton in Southern California. The day she arrived in the United States happened to be the birthday of the Marine Corps; she got to attend a birthday party, riding an elevator and eating cake and flower decorations. She lived it up. Sgt. Reckless made many public appearances and including Art Linkletter's show House Party. She was set to appear on the Ed Sullivan show twice, but both times were cancelled due to outside reasons. While she was very popular and saw many visitors, the Marines were careful to not exploit her. Reckless had four foals in retirement: three sons, Fearless (1957), Dauntless (1959), and Chesty (1964), and a daughter who died a few months after her birth and was never named (her last foal).

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Sgt. Reckless developed arthritis in her back as she aged. She injured herself after falling over a barbed wire fence in 1968, and she died under sedation while her wounds were being treated. She was estimated to be around 20 years old at the time of her death. She received a full military funeral and her passing was front page news. The first race at Aqueduct racetrack, New York, was designated "The Sgt Reckless Stakes" on November 10, 1989, in her honor. In 1997, LIFE Magazine named her one of America's 100 all-time heroes.

A statue by sculptor Jocelyn Russell of Reckless carrying ammunition shells and other combat equipment was unveiled on July 26, 2013, in Semper Fidelis Memorial Park at the National Museum of the Marine Corps, one day before the 60th anniversary of the Korean War. There is a lock of her tail hair in the base of the statue. The statue's plaque includes a quote from Sergeant Harold Wadley, who served in battle alongside Sergeant Reckless: "The spirit of her loneliness and her loyalty, in spite of the danger, was something else to behold. Hurting. Determined. And alone. That's the image I have imprinted in my head and heart forever." A similar monument has since been erected at Camp Pendleton.
 
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US Army soldier Private Michael Swinkin geared up for an assault across the Ruhr River, Kreuzau, Germany. February 5, 1945. Note the D-ration chocolate bar cover used as a muzzle protector on his M1.

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PFC Michael Swkinin survived the war and passed away in Colorado in 1988.
 
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