13 fascinating historic photos We wish our teachers at school showed us

These images say a thousand words.


Of the photo ofNeil Armstrong Take one's first steps on the moon in the image of aSailor's Steamy Times Square Kiss Celebrating the end of the Second World War, some visuals in the United States history are separated in our brief. But for each image found in our textbooks, there are countless others who remain invisible and unexpected. To give these photos the recognition they deserve, we gathered 13 incredible historical images that should certainly be shown at school.

1
This photo of the statue of liberty is built in the late 1800s

Construction of Statue of Liberty
Commons Wikimedia

This incredible nineteenth-century image in the scene illustrates the construction of the statue of freedom, a phase of freedom and acceptance, and the reference of many immigrants considered on the first entry of New York Harbor. Officially known asFreedom enlightening the worldthe designer of the statue,Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi; engineer in structure,Alexander Gustave Eiffel; And many craftsmen started working on the project in Paris in 1876.

In May of the same year, the filled arm and torch were taken to the Centenary Expo in Philadelphia, creating an excitation buzz for the eventual reception of the gift. Once completed in 1884, the statue has been dismantled and shipped to the United States, where it was collected by a construction crew which included many immigrants.

2
This photo of the alternating current of Nikola Tesla at the end of the 19th century

Dickenson V. Alley Restored Lošmi / CC BY-SA 4.0

Nikola Tesla The visionary engineer and the inventor are responsible for the search for a way to exploit an alternating wireless stream. A poor immigrant who arrived at the US in 1884, Tesla would find work withThomas EdisonBut the divergent views of men (Edison thought the direct current was superior to Tesla's alternating current) quickly ended this arrangement.

With a series of success, Tesla has opened its own laboratory to continue its experimentation. In 1891, he invented the Tesla coil, which is widely used in radios and televisions. A man with a flair for the dramatic, Tesla created this magnificent image of himself and a Tesla coil in his laboratory using a double exposure, according toSmithsonian magazine.

3
This photo of the first flight of Wright brothers at the 20th century turn

Commons Wikimedia

After the success of their Wright glider in 1902, theWilbur and Orville Wright have been determined to take another step and create a motorized plane. In December 1903, they made their goal by conquering the "creation of a propulsion system", according to theSmithsonian National Air and Space Museum.

The Wright brothers took their plane Wright Flyer to Kitty Hawk, the city of Beach North Carolina next to the one where they had completed 1,000 successful points with their glider. After a few false debut, they have always raised crafts in the air four times, as shown here. It was a much more simplistic precursor for sophisticated air trips that we are used to today.

4
This photo of a waiting crowdTitanic Survivors in 1912

Commons Wikimedia

Follow the tragic shipwreck of theTitanic On April 14, 1912, the 706 survivors (on 2,200 on board)have been picked up by theCarpathy. As the rescue vessel headed for New York, he sent radio messages to broadcast news from the tragedy - and therefore started the worry and panic of the dear beings of those who had been on board .

Many family members immediately headed for the White Star Line office in New York Harbor. They hoped that the company's parent company would have information about the survivors. It is estimated that at the time of theCarpathy Drawn in the dock 54, thousands of people impatiently waited in the rain. The tension and impatience in this rarely seen image can certainly be felt, with sorrow to know the terrible news of these people would receive soon.

5
This photo of the World War of Troops back home in the 1910s

Commons Wikimedia

When America entered the First World War in 1917, Hoboken, New Jersey, served as a major port through which more than 2 million troops would go during the conflict. The port was so central to the military path that, "Heaven, Hell or Hoboken" became a slogan for the troops hoping for a home home ", according to theHoboken Historical Museum. A year and a half later, following the official end of the war, ships ended up in Hoboken filled with two the most fortunate people to celebrate the victory (photo here), as well as the circles of soldiers fallen to their Final resting place.

6
This photo of the child worker during the industrial revolution

Commons Wikimedia

It is difficult to imagine today, but the child workers have been accepted and sought during the industrial revolution. Children were a cheap job for employers who could force them to work long hours under dangerous conditions. For families in difficulty, this additional income was often essential for their survival. Although the reformers and the work organizers seek to improve the conditions, it was not a weak task.

Instrumental at their efforts wasLewis Hine, an independent photographer for the National Child Labor Committee. Traveling in the country, Hine access children from factories and coal mines under the pretext of being "an industrial photographer" in search "to record machines", according to theTemple of international renown of photography. It then records information such as the child's age and work and photograph them. These devastating portraits have put pressure on the US government to advance labor reform legislation in 1924.

7
This photo of Jesse Owens at the 1936 Olympics

HI-STORY / ALAMY Photo

With the rise of the Nazi party in Germany, vapor three years earlier, the1936 Olympic Games In Berlin has been inevitably injected with a strong policy dose.Adolf Hitler Eventially planned for the chance to play their plan to welcome and disseminate its ideology to the public around the world.

However, his dreams of a powerful disassembly of the strength and superiority of the Aryan race have been not advanced by an African-American athlete namedJesse Owens. The 23-year-old rider burned the runway and field events at the US for years and has already held three world records. At the 1936 Olympics, it became theFirst American always to win four gold medals: the dash of 100 meters, the long term jump (beating German championLutz), the dash of 200 meters (fixes an Olympic recording) and the 4 × 100 relay breed. This photo shows Owens proudly saluting his country while Lutz salutes the Nazi party below him.

8
This photo of Mount Rushmore being carved in 1935

History of Science Pictures / Alamy Stock Photo

After 14 years of work, the Monument of Mount Rushmore was completed in 1941. Although 90% of the sculpture was carried out using dynamite, the final surface was formed by drillers and sculptors. Every day, the workers - illustrated here in 1935, would be lowered on the front of the face of 500 feet of the mountain on chairs for steel waiting to form and remove the granite by hand and smashed later the surface, according toNational Park Service. Some 400 workers removed450,000 tons of rock, who always stays at the foot of the mountain. Although the work is extremely dangerous, there was no lost life in the creation of the monument.

9
This photo of a real Rosie rivet it in 1943

Commons Wikimedia

During the Second World War, Rosie Rivate has become an emblematic image of women entering the defense industry to replace men who had been deployed. Their efforts were extremely essential to the success of the war effort and "by 1945, nearly four out of four married women were working outside the house", according to theHistorical chain. These women have completed positions between the factories and shipyards at the national level, producing war supplies sent to those of front lines.

Although the image of Rosie was based on an ammunition worker, it was theaviation industryThis has seen the largest increase in women workers, including this true life "Rosie" working on a bombardie A-31 revenge in Nashville in 1943.

10
This photo of a Japanese American internment camp in the 1940s

Ansel Adams / Wikimedia Commons

PhotographerAnsel Adams Can be known for its magnificent landscapes, but in 1943 he turned his eye on a pressing injustice: theRelocation center of the Manzanar War in California, where Americans-Americans were confined during the Second World War. Adams felt it was important to document and disseminate the lives of these citizens after being stripped of their home and their professions. This image of a school recreation is only one of the captured Adams photos that have the strong community and the resolution of those who have been captive.

11
This photo of Dorothy counts in a recently deceived school in 1954

NC Collections / Alamy Photo

Following the decision of the Supreme Court of 1954Brown c. Educational advice, in which the segregation of public schools was judged unconstitutional, African-American students began to request inscriptions in old secondary schools. Fifteen years oldDorothy counts Has the first African American student been difficult to attend North Haulina, but after four days of intense taunts, aggression and threats of violence, she withdrew for her safety.

In an interview with 2016 withHuffPost, Counts reminded adults bearing the silent witness of harassment and police said his family, they could not guarantee his safety. Although his mandate at high harding was brief, his fight for dedirregation continued. However, in 70 years, has remained vocal count in the fight against racism in the classroom. "I want to make sure that I do in life, that kind of thing do not happen to other children," she says.

12
This photo of children in Berlin East and West in the middle of the 20th century

Commons Wikimedia

Following the defeat of Germany in the Second World War, the country of the country has been divided between the Communist German Democratic Republic (RDA or East Germany), occupied by the Soviet Union and Germany of the West, occupied by the United States, Great Britain and France. The fate of the German citizens would completely rest on where they lived when this agreement was concluded in 1945. Then, in 1961, the GDR built the Berlin Wall between East and West Germany in a two weeks case as a means of controlling the mass numbers of citizens who had been defection from east to west, according to theHistorical chain.

Until the fall of the wall in November 1989, all those who wish the east of travel west had to go through checkpoints, although citizens have rarely been able to do so. This means that many families and friends ended up torn in 1961, a tearing test they would have to bear the wall for the 28-year-old closed foot.

13
This photo of Melba de la Nasa Roy in the 1960s

Nasa

The movie 2017Hidden figures braces earned to highlight the essential contribution of African-American women who have helped to make space race of the 50s and 60 successes for the United States and Althugharmstrong,Buzz aldrin, andJohn Glenn are familiar names, the indefatigable work of the so-called "computers" mathematicians, such asKatherine Johnson, Which was presented in the film, andMelba roy, Represented here, makes their missions possible. Roy joined NASA in 1959 with a master's degree in mathematics. According toNasa"The Calculations of Roy helped produce the schedules of the orbital elements by which millions could see the [echo] satellite of the earth as passed above. And for more on women like Johnson and Roy, here is the25 most inspiring ladies leading in the history of the film.

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Categories: Culture
Tags: Facts / history
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