A few of these you may have seen, but probably very few.

Miss America 1924

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Helen Keller Meeting Charlie Chaplin

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Leather gloves worn by Lincoln to Ford's Theater on the night
of his assassination. Blood stains are visible at the cuffs.

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Phoebe Mozee (aka: Annie Oakley). Famed for her marksmanship by
12 years old. When she outshot famed exhibition marksman Frank Butler,
he fell in love with her and they married.

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Very Young Lucy Lucille Ball around 1930.

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Amy Johnson, English aviator 1903-1941 One of the first women to gain a pilot's licence, Johnson won fame when she flew solo from Britain to Australia in 1930. Her dangerous flight took 17 days. Later she flew solo to India and Japan and became the first woman to fly across the Atlantic East to West, she volunteered to fly for The Women's Auxiliary Air Force in WW 2, but her plane was shot down over the River Thames and she was killed.

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Prison Garb 1924. Belva Annan murderess whose trial records became the musical "Chicago."

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Female photojournalist Jessie Tarbox on the street with her camera, 1900's

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Roald Amundsen was the first person to reach the South Pole. At approximately 3pm on December 14, 1911, Amundsen raised the flag of Norway at the South Pole and named the spot Polheim 'Pole Home'.

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The extraordinary life of Maud Allen: Seductive US dancing girl who was sued for being too lewd, outed as a lesbian, and fled London after being branded a German spy who was sleeping with the prime minister's wife.

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John Fitzgerald Kennedy

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Caroline Otero, courtesan, the most sought after woman in all of Europe.
She associated herself with the likes of Prince Albert I of Monaco, King Edward VII of the United Kingdom, Kings of Serbia, and Kings of Spain as well as Russian Grand Dukes Peter and Nicholas, the Duke of Westminster and writer Gabriele D'Annunzio Six men reportedly committed suicide after
their love affairs with Otero ended. Two men fought a duel over her. She was famed for her voluptuous breasts.

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Wedding day photograph of Abraham and Mary taken November 4, 1842 in Springfield, Illinois after three years of a stormy courtship and a broken
engagement. Their love had endured.

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Billie Holiday at two years old, in 1917.

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Washington, D.C., circa 1919. "Walter Reed Hospital flu ward." One of the very few images in Washington-area photo archives documenting the influenza contagion of 1918-1919, which killed over 500,000 Americans and tens of millions around the globe. Most victims succumbed to bacterial pneumonia following influenza virus infection.

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Filming the MGM Logo

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Amelia Earhart

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 Mae Questel ca. 1930's, the voice of Betty Boop and Olive Oyl, Minnie Mouse,
Felix the Cat (for three shorts by the Van Beuren Studios), Little Lulu, Little Audrey and Casper, the Friendly Ghost.

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 Bea Arthur (n'e Bernice Frankel) (1922-2009) SSgt. USMC 1943-45 WW II Enlisted and assigned as typist at Marine HQ in Wash DC, then air stations in VA and NC. Best remembered for her title role in the TV series 'Maude' and as Dorothy in "Golden Girls".

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 In 1911, Bobby Leach survived a plunge over Niagara Falls in a steel barrel. Fourteen years later, in New Zealand, he slipped on an orange peel and died.

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 Emily Todd was Mary Todd Lincoln's half-sister. In 1856 she married Benjamin Helm, a Confederate general. After Helm's death in 1863 Emily Helm passed through Union Lines to visit her sister in the White House. This caused great consternation in the Northern newspapers. Emily Helm
took an oath of loyalty to the Union and was granted amnesty.

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 Three days before his 19th birthday, George H.W. Bush became the youngest aviator in the US Navy.

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 Market Street, San Francisco after the earthquake, 1906.

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 All-American Girls Baseball, 1940's.

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1943 : Breast Protectors for War Workers.

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Mary Ellen Wilson (1864-1956) or sometimes Mary Ellen McCormack was an American whose case of child abuse led to the creation of the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. As an eight-year old, she was severely abused by her foster parents, Francis and Mary Connolly.

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 Sacajawea. Stolen, held captive, sold, eventually reunited the Shoshone Indians. She was an interpreter and guide for Lewis and Clark in 1805-1806 with her husband Toussaint Charbonneau. She navigated carrying her son, Jean Baptiste, on her back. She traveled thousands of miles from the Dakotas to the Pacific Ocean. The explorers, said she was cheerful, never complained, and proved to be invaluable.  She served as an advisor, caretaker, and is legendary for her perseverance and resourcefulness.

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 Zelda Boden, circus performer, ca. 1910.

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 A Confederate and Union soldier shake hands during a celebration at Gettysburg in 1913. Image from the Library of Congress. July 1-3, 2013 marks the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg.

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Geraldine Doyle, who was the inspiration behind the famous Rosie the Riveter poster.

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Vintage Baked Potato Cart. A legitimate fast food lunch option back in the day.

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Black physicians treating in the ER a member of the Ku Kux Klan.

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Sergeant Stubby (1916 or 1917 - April 4, 1926), was the most decorated war dog of World War I and the only dog to be promoted to sergeant through combat America's first war dog, Stubby, served 18 months 'over there' and participated in seventeen battles on the Western Front. He saved his regiment from surprise mustard gas attacks, found and comforted the wounded, and even once caught a German spy by the seat of his pants (holding him there till American Soldiers found him).

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Nightwitches - Female Russian bombers who bombed Germany during WW 2. They had old, noisy planes and the engines used to conk out halfway through their missions, so they had to climb out on the wings mid-flight to restart the props. To stop Germans from hearing them & starting up the anti aircraft guns, they'd climb to a certain height, coast down to German positions, drop their bombs, restart their engines in midair & get the hell out of dodge. Their leader flew 200+ missions & was never captured. 

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Marilyn Monroe meets Queen Elizabeth II, London, in 1956 and both women are 30 years old.

 

 

 

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