13 Old-Timey Photos You Won't Believe Aren't Photoshopped 3
By Jacopo della Quercia <http://www.cracked.com/members/Jacopo> February
10, 2014 907,731 views

 If you've learned anything from reading Cracked, it's that the past is a
bizarre and confusing place. That's why so many of its photos, when viewed
out of context, are bizarre and/or terrifying. And in many cases, adding
the context just makes them worse.

So let's do that now ...
#13. Pass the Popcorn

National Nuclear Security
Administration<http://www.neh.gov/news/nuclear-nevada>
Don't pop it first. We got that covered.

It looks like somebody cut the bleachers out of a photo of a little league
game and cleverly pasted them onto this pic of a mushroom cloud, maybe for
an awesome album cover or something. But this is in fact an unaltered photo
depicting more or less how they passed the time around the beginning of the
Cold War -- just gathering together to sing songs and share stories around
the nuclear campfire.

Between 1951 and 1992, over 900 nuclear detonations were conducted there in
the Nevada desert, and the mushroom clouds could occasionally be seen from
Las Vegas. And people did see them -- as weird as it is to see military
personnel just hanging out watching the detonation of a doomsday device,
civilians around town would organize viewing
parties<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/lasvegas/peopleevents/e_atomictourism.html>on
rooftops to get a good view of the blast (admit it -- you'd watch a
nuclear explosion if you had the chance).

There's no real word on how many of these folks got leukemia or turned into
Hulks, but let's just say there is a reason this is no longer a popular
pastime.
#12. I Never Actually Passed Flight School

via RAFJever.org <http://www.rafjever.org/118sqnper002.htm>
Luckily, they taught "bail out" on day one.

If you look closely, you might notice something strange about the direction
this plane is flying. Skilled aeronauts should be able to pick it out
fairly easily.

Apparently, a farmer was in the process of snapping a photograph of his
buddy riding a tractor in 1962 when, by a billion-to-one chance, he
accidentally took an interesting photo instead. That's test pilot George
Aird <http://www.rafjever.org/118sqnper002.htm> ejecting from his fighter
jet as it was cruising a little too vertically for his comfort.

Aird survived, but not without injury -- rather than landing on the
pillow-like soft grass of the farmer's field, he crashed Wile E. Coyote
style through the roof of a nearby greenhouse and sustained several
fractures. Here's a picture of the crash site from above -- check out the
second greenhouse from the left. That's where Aird landed. The big smear in
the field is obviously the wreckage of his plane.

via RAFJever.org <http://www.rafjever.org/118sqnper002.htm>
The smear he left on the plane's seat is something else.
#11. Friendship Is Magic

via MessyBeast.com <http://www.messybeast.com/history/horses.htm>
Magic enough to make a three-piece suit and bowler hat look shabby.

Stop scrolling. Take a moment and really let that photo sink in -- it gets
funnier the longer you look at it. In fact, let's all just pause here for,
oh, an hour or so. Have you noticed its tail yet?

Here's another one:

via MessyBeast.com <http://www.messybeast.com/history/horses.htm>
Every time it shits, they cut the tail off and start from scratch.

Seriously, what the fuck? Are they wearing wigs?

The truth is actually stupider -- these were Percheron horses, specifically
bred for the purpose of growing those ludicrous long-ass manes. And yes,
that hair has been braided:

via MessyBeast.com <http://www.messybeast.com/history/horses.htm>
No ribbons, though. That would look a bit showy.

Such princess-pimp rides were known as wonder
horses<http://www.messybeast.com/history/horses.htm>(up there is the
Oregon Wonder Horse and its 18-foot-long mane and
21-foot-long tail). They would take these horses on tour so crowds could
gaze in amazement at this ridiculous achievement in animal husbandry, and
at least one of them became such a moneymaker that its owners had it
stuffed when it died so they could continue to show it off.

So, yeah, maybe we owe today's bronies an apology.
#10. We Honor Our New Spider Overlords

Metropolitan Post Card Club <http://www.metropostcard.com/topicalst.html>
Feed them train meat and they may spare us!

It may look like a vision from some terrifying alternative history in which
giant 
alien<http://www.cracked.com/blog/5-movies-we-hope-any-potential-alien-invaders-have-seen/>spiders
have enslaved the human race, but really these are just old-timey
telephone wires coated in snow. Hundreds and hundreds of wires.

In big cities like Manhattan, telephone wires became a terrifying nuisance
before someone had the good idea to run them underground. That's why
nightmare scenarios like the below photo were a common sight:

Library of Congress <http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2002697630/>
Christmas snows reached the ground on Valentine's Day.

It's difficult to tell from the quality of the photo, but you're looking at
a world that nearly has enough utility wires to blot out the sun. How many
birds were getting stuck in that shit? Did suicide jumpers get caught in
the tangle and have to be rescued by the fire department?

Speaking of which ...
#9. The Human Flytrap

Eugene de Salignac/NYC Municipal
Archives<http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2012/04/historic-photos-from-the-nyc-municipal-archives/100286/#img24>
Four in a row *diagonally*. Pretty sneaky.

OK, this one *really* looks like a giant spider made a web for catching
humans. Dapper, strangely unperturbed humans.

These are actually just some superhumanly badass painters goofing around
during construction of the Brooklyn Bridge (you just know that one of these
guys decided to be a jackass and bounce on the cables while they all
dangled precariously, waiting for the slow-ass camera to do its work).

Also, we're pretty sure the only workplace safety precautions they had was
a big sign that said, "IF YOU FALL, PLEASE AIM TOWARD THE WATER AS NOT TO
MAR THE PAINT. YOUR WIDOW WILL BE BILLED FOR ANY DAMAGE."
#8. *Saving Private Ryan* -- ON ICE!

Netherlands General News Agency <http://www.anp-archief.nl/page/86687/nl>
Absurd! They should be wearing shin guards.

We want you to picture, in your head, a serious, gritty war movie. The kind
that wins Oscars and really focuses on the human suffering warfare inflicts
on its brave young victims. Then we want you to imagine a harrowing climax
in which our heroes have to escape across a border marked by a river. A
frozen one.

Now imagine everyone is on ice skates.

Because that exact thing totally happened, over and over. These particular
soldiers were from the
Netherlands<http://www.retronaut.com/2013/08/dutch-soldiers-ice-skates/>.
And yes, the Dutch absolutely employed ice skates in order to pursue
retreating enemies across frozen surfaces, so whoever these guys are
fighting, they're already running away. Consider that before you think
about how ridiculous they look.

WhaleOil/The Firearm
Blog<http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2013/08/06/vuurwapen-ice/>
Also consider the graceful photographer who skated in *reverse*.

Now imagine that guy on the left stopping and firing his bazooka and the
recoil sending him sliding backward out of frame. "OH, SHIIIIIIIII-"
#7. Early Submarines Were Easy to Spot

The Gibsons of 
Scilly<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturepicturegalleries/10397734/Shipwreck-photograph-collection.html>
Damn tree huggers and their insistence on wind power!

Either this is a rare photo of the Flying Dutchman emerging from the depths
to drag sailors to their doom, or someone's efforts to perfect the
hull-less boat have been met with yet another failure.

Actually, it's a ship captured on film mid-sink in 1912, just a few days
before the Titanic
<http://cheatsheets.cracked.com/movies/titanic-42406/>disaster.
Strangely, the vessel went gently down into the deep, perfectly
upright, its sails still neatly unfurled. The crew of this embarrassingly
ill-fated ship, the
Mildred<http://www.retronaut.com/2012/10/the-wreck-of-the-mildred-1912/>,
couldn't say they hit an iceberg to save face when it came to explaining
the mishap to friends -- fog was the cause of this maritime disaster.
Specifically, the sailors' inability to navigate in it (the ship went off
course and ran aground <http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?139773>). We'll
just assume for their sake that the fog was way worse than that photo makes
it look.


#6. *Iron Man: Origins*

via 
TheRebreatherSite<http://www.therebreathersite.nl/12_Atmospheric%20Diving%20Suits/1911%20Macduffee/1911_Chester_E_Macduffee.htm>
Right down to the bitchin' facial
hair<http://www.nerdist.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/im3-5.jpg>
.

This is another one you need to really stop and look at. Are you seeing its
Captain Hook hand? How about its huge, hexagonal robo-nipples? WHY DID IT
NEED NIPPLES?!?

While we would love to pretend that this is Tony Stark's grandfather Sir
Augustus Leopold Stark and that this was his utterly terrifying
crime-fighting suit, it is instead a man named Chester MacDuffee standing
beside a diving
suit<http://www.therebreathersite.nl/12_Atmospheric%20Diving%20Suits/1911%20Macduffee/1911_Chester_E_Macduffee.htm>he
invented. It weighed about 550 pounds and wasn't completely
watertight,
which meant that it came equipped with a pump to suck the water out as you
struggled not to drown. Shit, what did you expect from pre-World War I
diving gear?

And if you think that 1911 model looks cool, check out its subsequent
spawn, which inspired the Big Daddies we all learned to fear in *BioShock*.

NOAA Photo 
Library<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tritonia_Lusitania_1935_1.jpg>
Piloted by Steampunk-Bane.

It's hard to believe you could actually fit someone into their own
underwater Iron Man suit so goddamn long ago, but the
photos<http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/htmls/nur06017.htm>come from a
1935 attempt to examine the wreck of the Lusitania. Which was
to be preceded by a wedding, apparently:

NOAA Photo 
Library<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tritonia_Lusitania_1935.jpg>
The wedding night featured two minutes of sex after three hours of
strenuous undressing.
#5. *Back to the Future Part II*, Circa 1947

Ben Ross <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:ConvairCar_Model_118.jpg>
Where we're going, we don't need logic.

Every New Year's, jokers on Facebook pose the same question -- why don't we
have flying cars yet? What the hell are you waiting for, *science?* Well,
you can all shut up, because it turns out we had flying cars as far back as
1947.

via Diseno 
Art<http://www.diseno-art.com/encyclopedia/strange_vehicles/convaircar.html>
The plane's not behind the car. You're thinking three-dimensionally.

This is the Convair Model
118<http://1000aircraftphotos.com/Contributions/Visschedijk/2722.htm>.
Although it looks like a shitty Photoshop job where somebody copy-pasted an
old-timey plane onto a picture of a car, this is a legitimate thing that
really worked as advertised.

via Diseno 
Art<http://www.diseno-art.com/encyclopedia/strange_vehicles/convaircar.html>
The hugely successful advertisement read, "Flying car. 'Nuff said."

So why aren't we zipping around space highways and getting caught in
atmospheric traffic jams like in *The Fifth Element*? Despite two
successful test flights, nobody wanted to invest in the damn thing, and so
the company cancelled the program by 1948. Come on, guys! We can't think of
a single problem that thing would cause driving down a busy street. Not a
single one.
#4. That's No Moon ...

via NavSource.org <http://www.navsource.org/archives/02/99/029905.htm>
What's with the delay?"
"Some crazy chick with weird hair stole the blueprints."

What, you thought zeppelins were just blown up like gigantic balloons?
Those badass mothers were actually enormous, rigid structures the size of
the Death Star. And back in those days, there was only one way to build a
frame of this magnitude: a ladder and a hammer. Are you seeing the tiny
workers waaaaay at the top of those ladders?

Yeah, these photographs of the construction of the USS
Macon<http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/ac-usn22/z-types/zrs5-o.htm>should
serve as testament to what a magnificently hardcore process it was
to give birth to the largest aircraft in human history.

NASA <http://atomictoasters.com/2011/10/hangar-one/>
And a hangar that inspired Darth Vader's helmet.

Speaking of the insanity of zeppelins ...
#3. Wheeeeee!

US Navy <http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/ac-usn22/z-types/zr3-k.htm>
As though ordinary zeppelins weren't phallic enough.

If you think that's a little bit of stunt flying by a daredevil zeppelin
pilot, think again -- that shit is not intentional. That is what happens
when you dock a zeppelin and it gets hit by a huge gust of wind.

That pic is from August 25, 1927, when the USS Los
Angeles<http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/ac-usn22/z-types/zr3-k.htm>had
a serious problem with wind gusts while it was moored at a New Jersey
docking station. Before it could correct its orientation, the airship was
picked up tail-first and wound up balancing vertically on the tip of the
station. On the inside, it probably felt like *The Poseidon Adventure*.

US Navy <http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/ac-usn22/z-types/zr3-k.htm>
"Someday, gentlemen, we're going to set one of these fuckers on fire."

Miraculously, the airship suffered only modest damage and was back in use
the next day. After all its walls and floors were hosed down for vomit, of
course.
#2. The Paris Eye of Sauron

via Boston College<http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/1900fair.html>
If you remember Lite-Brite, your childhood was magnifique.

Oh come on, it looks like someone just sketched an outline of the Eiffel
Tower onto this photograph. At best, it's some gaudy Paris replica in Las
Vegas or 
Disney<http://www.cracked.com/article_18511_6-true-stories-about-disneyland-they-dont-want-you-to-know.html>World.

In reality, this is what the Tower looked like during the 1900 World's
Fair<http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/1900fair.html>in
Paris, complete with a beacon on top that looks like Sauron's eye
gazing
over Mordor. The frame is so dark that it's nearly invisible in
old-fashioned photography, so the lights just make it look fake, even in
the color version:

via 
io9.com<http://io9.com/how-the-paris-worlds-fair-brought-art-nouveau-to-the-w-1462151212>
It flashed and thumped the city with techno music 24 hours a day.
#1. Mark Twain, Topless

via 
OpenCulture<http://www.openculture.com/2013/02/mark_twain_shirtless_in_1883_photo.html>

We leave you with this image, and no further comment.

Seriously, there are no further words in this article. Not just because
there's nothing more that needs to be said (are you looking at it?), but
also because nobody actually
knows<http://www.openculture.com/2013/02/mark_twain_shirtless_in_1883_photo.html>why
Mark Twain sat for a naked photograph. And he is nude; don't try to
tell yourself he's not. "What? He could be wearing pants, Cracked!" Really?
Look at his facial expression. Yeah, he's naked, and fully erect.

There is speculation that Twain was asked to take the photo as a model for
a bust that was being made. If so, we like to think that nudity was nowhere
in the instructions.



 __._,_.___
               
<[email protected]?subject=Re%3A%2013%20Old-Timey%20Photos%20You%20Won%27t%20Believe%20Aren%27t%20Photoshopped>
            
<[email protected]?subject=Re%3A%2013%20Old-Timey%20Photos%20You%20Won%27t%20Believe%20Aren%27t%20Photoshopped>

   -

-- 
-- 
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"PoliticalForum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to