Many years ago I decided to combine WW2 then & now photos as part of research I was doing.
It caught on and I made more.
History is all around us.
The ghosts of history.
Cherbourg, avenue de Paris, ancien Poste de Police, jardin Public.
Soldiers crossing under fire, 1944.
Captain WH Hooper, who commands the Company of the 314th IR of the 79th IUS D and some of his men surround a column of German prisoners.
Column takes a southerly direction, it will join the POW camps located on the plateau of the Mountain Roule, near the farm of Fieffe.
American soldiers at the Place Marie Ravenel à Cherbourg.
Rue Dom Pedro, civilians and American soldiers tear down the sign indicating the headquarters of the Todt organization in Cherbourg.
Graphic.
26 June 1944, German soldier lying dead on a sidewalk in front of the old café Etasse, Rue Armand Levéel to Cherbourg.
Graphic.
American soldier looking at the body of a German soldier killed after a fierce fight.
Rue Armand Levéel à Cherbourg, 1944.
I wonder if the people who live there today know about this.
British troops, 1943, Acireale, Sicily.
The new order looking around the Binnenhof in The Hague, the seat of government in the Netherlands.
Nazi occupation, German Ortskommandantur at the Lange Voorhout, The Hague.
Secretly made photo by resistance member on bicycle.
Today the building is the Spanish Embassy.
Dam Square, Amsterdam.
Where today tourists mingle once the SS tried to recruit volunteers.
The one that started it all.
I found hundreds of never before published war photos at a flea market, trying to trace where the people in this photo worked I wandered the streets of Amsterdam till I finally found these steps and eventually their work.
More in another thread soon.
Dam Square in Amsterdam moments after the shooting of May 7th 1945.
Just after the German capitulation, for uncertain reasons, (perhaps a firefight) Germans opened fire on the crowds waiting for their liberators.
More than 30 people were killed.
Finally my uncle Dirk.
Portrait of him young & old combined, once a young man with PTSD who just returned from the Battle of the Java Sea and years of being a POW and forced labourer on the Burma Railway.
It never let him go.
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I'd love a real scientific ghost hunting show where, for once, cameras film every corner, the equipment was properly tested, there are independent observers... yes I know that means probably nothing will happen but I'm fine with that.
Here's 2 hours of CCTV of a spooky room.
Cool
When I was a kid I spend a few weekends at a castle, I'd grab a video camera and walk around the place at night, hoping to find some ghosts.
Alas, no luck.
I should see if I can find the video somewhere.
Would be something if I suddenly saw something in the shadows...
Mind you such a show would only have to film a dog or cat respond to something we can't see and half the tv audience would scream.
I've seen that happen and it's freaky seeing a dog bark at something invisible in the room and then suddenly start wagging her tail...
Sigh, another book claiming to have the source for Elizabeth I bathing monthly and saying "need it or no" that turns out to just quote another book that quoted another book that turns out to not have a historical source at all.
The quest continues.
Little bit of background;
It has been taught in schools and mentioned in books, museums & documentaries for decades that Queen Elizabeth I bathed very rarely and once said she had a monthly/annual bath whether she "need it or no", or something similar.
This is so generally accepted and well known I didn't think it was suspicious but still wanted to find out more.
To my surprise it turned out very difficult to find out where this story came from.
Some books suggested it was in a Venetian ambassador's letter, but where is it?
Remember fellow time travellers, make sure no pottery painting artist spots you when you're working on your laptop back in the past!
Disclaimer; he's writing on a wax tablet with a stylus, ye eejit.
Douris cup, c.480BC. Berlin, Antikenmuseen
Here's a replica, they're a lot of fun to use, I got one somewhere in the attic, you can write, draw and easily erase your work again.
If you're a teacher, work in a museum or are just an ambitious and/or desperate parent, these are relatively easy to make and kids love them, also great excuse to teach them about literacy perhaps being more common than was long thought and about... ONFIM!!
Sometime in 1930s Germany someone thought that they should make a little booklet about the dangers of electricity.
I bet that anyone who saw these illustrations never even got near electricity again.
They're terrifying.
Roman skeletons found in the Belgian town of Tongeren have been reconstructed.
One grave contained a man and two children, the children were brother and sister but not related to the man, the girl had her arms wrapped around the man's legs. vrt.be/vrtnws/nl/2021…
The article writes about how DNA shows the children were related, it also told scientists the colour of their skin, hair, eyes.
Man and boy were on their backs, girl on her side clutching the man's legs.
Researchers assumed the 3 were related, but the man was not their dad.