1. The 'Iter Avto', the 1930's version of a GPS. Developed by Touring Club Italiano, this device was more like a “map guidance tool” and came with a set of paper maps. It was tethered to the car’s speedometer that kept the scrolling of the map in proportion to the speed of the car.
2. A 'Tasmanian tiger' in captivity circa 1930. Also known as the thylacine, this carnivorous marsupial was native to the Australian mainland and went extinct in 1936.
3. Airline reservations before computers, 1945
4. The 1950's '3-in-1 Kitchen Combination.' It came with a stove, a sink, and a fridge - all in one!
5. American photographer James Ricalton posing with two extra tall men, fondly remembered as the 'Giants of Kashmir,' in 1903.
The photograph was taken in Delhi during 'The Durbar,' a celebration of the British monarch Edward VII’s (the great-grandfather of the current British monarch, Queen Elizabeth II) succession as the Emperor of India.
6. Television shopping in 1974.
7. A gas station on Brovarsky Prospect in Kyiv, Ukraine, 1979.
8. A woman standing in the doorway of an RV Camper at an exhibition in London, 1927. It was also called the "Road Yacht."
9. Draft beer being served during a Lufthansa flight in the 1960's.
10. The Esso Hibernia tanker under construction, Wallsend, UK, 1970.
11. Niagara Falls without water, 1969. (I looked this one up. The US built a damn)
12. An Empire State builder hanging on a crane above New York City, 1930.
13. An elementary piano class in progress in 1947.
14. Military bomber planes fly past Mount
Vesuvius in Italy as lava and ash spurts from the top of the volcano.
The devastating eruption
ravaged the village of San Sebastiano and San Giorg
in March 1944 and killed 57 people. Meanwhile, the Allied forces were battling for supremacy in
the skies.
15. The original Moulin Rouge, Paris, 1914.
16. A Phillips fridge from 1956 with a built-in radio.
17. A horse being rescued from a canal that it fell in - Amsterdam, 1929.
18. Control Room of the German UB-11 Submarine (First World War).
19. Swedish Warship 'Vasa' being recovered from the seafloor in Stockholm, Sweden, on the 24th of April, 1961. It stayed underwater for 333 years and was still astonishingly well-preserved.
20. A young woman of the Ouled Nail tribe, Algeria, circa 1905.
21. Philadelphia Electric Co. street light maintenance vehicle, 1910.
22. A tree house of the Koiari people, east of Port Moresby, Papua, New Guinea, 1886.
23. A woman using a vacuum cleaner in 1906.
24. The 1958 'Sir Vival.' Designed by Walter C. Jerome of Worcester. A unique two-section vehicle made to protect its driver and three passengers from death or injury on the road. The designer believed that, in case of a collision, the engine compartment would take most of the brunt and leave the passengers safe.
Its standout features included a two-piece engine and
cab, along with a driver turret. Unfortunately, only one Sir Vival was ever made, and
it remains in the care of Bellingham Auto Sales in Bellingham, Massachusetts,
even today.
25. A Native American chief at the Canadian Rockies, 1938.