1.This is what the Statue of Liberty looked like while it was under construction in France:

Alamy Stock Photo

2.This is the last photograph ever taken of the Titanic:

The Titanic

Alamy Stock Photo

It sunk three days later.

3.This is a picture of one of the last Tasmanian tigers, an animal that went extinct in 1936:

A medium-size animal with stripes on its hind parts

Dave Watts / Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

It lived, obviously, in Tasmania. Recently, there’s been some talk of scientists trying to resurrect the tiger.

4.This is George Hackenschmidt, the man credited with inventing the bench press:

George Hackenschmidt

Pa Images Archive / PA Images via Getty Images

Swole folks all over the world, light a candle for Georgy boy.

5.This is a picture of some of Gandhi’s only earthly possessions when he died:

A wooden table outdoors holds sandals, a hat, a bowl, a round tray with text, and a cup, with a garden and circular path in the background

Dinodia Photos / Alamy Stock Photo

A couple hats, a couple bowls, and some sandals.

6.This is what Gutzon Borglum’s original model for Mount Rushmore looked like:

A model for Mount Rushmore

GL Archive / Alamy Stock Photo

There’s still time to remedy this. We need giant coats on our big giant rock presidents.

7.The very first iteration of Ronald McDonald was created by Willard Scott in 1963:

Man in a clown costume waving and smiling with a McDonald's cup and fries in front of him

Everett Collection Historical / Alamy Stock Photo

Terrifying.

8.Before the invention of RADAR, soldiers used big old Looney Toons-looking contraptions to listen for enemy planes:

A device for radar

/ Alamy Stock Photo

9.This is Selma Burke, the woman who designed the portrait of Franklin Roosevelt that’s still on the dime to this day:

A woman stands beside a large plaque of Franklin D. Roosevelt, showcasing his profile and the Four Freedoms: Want, Fear, Worship, and Speech

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

10.This photo, taken by Louis Botan in 1899, is one of the first photos ever taken underwater:

A person underwater

/ Alamy Stock Photo

The very first picture taken underwater was done some years earlier, but that was done by attaching a camera to a pole and lowering it into the water. This is the first taken by a diver also submerged.

11.Held in 1903, this is what the first ever Tour de France looked like:

The first Tour de France

The Picture Art Collection / Alamy Stock Photo

Bring back the suits, I say.

12.And this is a picture of the first-ever international tennis match at Wimbledon in 1883:

A sparsely attended match on a small court on grass; the men are in long pants

Hulton Archive / Getty Images

William and Ernest Renshaw of England defeated Clarence M. Clark and J.S. Clark of the USA in the match.

13.This is the scene inside a Chicago bar on Dec. 5, 1933, the day Prohibition was repealed:

Smiling bartender with arms raised and a packed bar with smiling men, most holding beer bottles

Alamy Stock Photo

14.This is what New York City looked like from space on 9/11/2001:

A satellite view of a densely populated cityscape surrounded by water, with visible land, rivers, and coastlines

NASA

Captured from the ISS.

15.This is Albert Woolson, the last surviving Civil War veteran:

Albert Woolson playing a drum

Star Tribune Via Getty Images / Star Tribune via Getty Images

Albert fought for the Union army and died in 1956 at the age of 106.

16.This is the USS Langley, the first United States aircraft carrier:

Historic ship docked at a naval base, resembling an aircraft carrier with a flat top deck, viewed from the front

PhotoQuest / Getty Images

The Langley was sunk in World War II after Japanese bombardment.

17.This is what New York City’s Central Park looked like during the Great Depression:

A dirt- and rock-covered area with some small, hut-type houses on it

Bettmann

This picture, captured in 1933, showcases a range of “Hoovervilles,” makeshift settlements created by the unemployed and named after President Herbert Hoover.

18.The Titanic had a full gym on board, complete with a rowing machine. This is what it looked like:

Black-and-white photo of a man in a rowing machine in a large room with a map of the world on the wall

Pictures From History / Pictures from History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

19.This is a picture of the spectators, including alleged mobsters, covering their faces with hats to avoid recognition during Al Capone’s trial in October 1931:

People seated in a courtroom, covering their faces with hats, likely avoiding being seen or photographed

Ullstein Bild Dtl. / ullstein bild via Getty Images

20.This picture, from 1930, shows a plane flying over the old city of Baghdad:

Aerial view of a smallish city surrounded by a sandy-looking, barren landscape

Getty Images

21.This is Stephan Bibrowski, otherwise known as Lionel the Lion-faced Man. Stephan had a condition known as hypertrichosis that caused hair to grow up to eight inches long all over his body including, obviously, his face:

Person with unique facial hair covering most of their face, wearing a suit and tie, resembling an early 20th-century photo style

General Photographic Agency / Getty Images

He performed for years with Barnum & Bailey and spoke five languages.

22.This picture, taken in 1925, is the last known photo of a Barbary lion in the wild:

A Barbary lion in the wild

Vintage_Space / Alamy Stock Photo

Once prevalent across Northern Africa, the lion went extinct because of, you guessed it, humans.

23.This picture, taken in 1838 by Louis Daguerre, is the first-ever photo to have a person in it:

A street scene with at least one people visible, as seen from a higher vantage point

Alamy Stock Photo

Can you spot the person?

24.And this is the first picture of Earth from the moon, taken in 1966 by Lunar Orbiter 1:

Grainy image of part of the earth

Encyclopaedia Britannica / Universal Images Group via Getty Images

25.And, while we’re at it, this picture of a human hand captured in 1895 is the oldest surviving X-ray of the human body:

Blurry X-ray of a skeletal hand

Science & Society Picture Library / SSPL via Getty Images

26.Okay, one more. This is the first aerial photo ever taken, captured by James Wallace Black from a hot-air balloon high above Boston:

Overhead shot of many low-rise buildings

Alamy Stock Photo

This picture, from 1860, is called “Boston, as the Eagle and the Wild Goose See It.”

27.During the Battle of Britain during World War II, cows were painted with bright white paint to stop cars from hitting them during the nightly blackouts:

A woman painting a cow white

Imperial War Museums / Imperial War Museums via Getty Images

Thank you for your service, cow.

28.This is Daniel Lambert, a British man who was known as the world’s heaviest person in the 18th century:

Portrait of Daniel Lambert

Robert Alexander / Getty Images

He weighed over 700 pounds. Legend has it he once fought off a bear single-handedly. I’m serious.

29.This is one of the few known photos of Vincent van Gogh, shown here at age 20:

A man in a suit and tie

Alamy Stock Photo

30.This, from 1896, is what one of Pablo Picasso’s first-ever self-portraits looks like:

Pablo Picasso self-portrait, with facial features

Alamy Stock Photo

31.And this, from 1972, is what one of Picasso’s last self-portraits looks like:

Pablo Picasso self-portrait cubist-style line drawing, with no lifelike facial features

Alamy Stock Photo

32.This is the safety net that was installed under the Golden Gate Bridge during its construction in the 1930s. The net saved 19 people through the duration of the work:

Spirals of net on the bridge

Underwood Archives / Getty Images

The 19 men who were saved by the net became known as the “Halfway to Hell Club.”

33.This photo is one of only two photos in existence of the US Supreme Court in session:

The court in session, with me sitting in high-back chairs

Alamy Stock Photo

The court has never allowed cameras. In 1937, photographer Erich Salomon pretended that his arm was broken and put the camera inside a sling he wore into the court and snapped this pic.

34.The Great San Francisco Earthquake of 1906 was the deadliest earthquake in US history, resulting in the deaths of over 3,000 people. In the aftermath of the disaster, you could literally see where the Earth split along the San Andreas Fault:

A cobblestone street with a long gap in the. middle

Underwood Archives / Getty Images

35.This is the Willamette meteorite, the largest meteorite that’s ever been found in the United States:

Children climbing on a meteor on display

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

It is the sixth largest in the world and weighs 15.5 tons.

36.This is what the world’s largest gold nugget, named the Welcome Stranger nugget, looked like. It was found in Australia in 1869:

A man with a giant gold nugget

/ Alamy Stock Photo

This is actually a model of the nugget. It weighed almost 160 pounds and was sold pretty much immediately for £9,534, which is about £970,000 today.

37.This is Norma Smallwood, the winner of the 1926 Miss America pageant:

A woman with updo pigtails

George Rinhart / Corbis via Getty Images

Try as he might, old Calvin Coolidge couldn’t rig the contest for his wife, Grace.

38.This 17th-century painting by Giovanni Stanchi shows what the inside of a watermelon looked like in the 1600s, before selective breeding:

A painting by Giovanni Stanchi

/ Alamy Stock Photo

Look at that old fruit.

39.This is one of the only pictures of President Andrew Jackson, taken shortly before his death in 1845:

Andrew Jackson

/ Alamy Stock Photo

40.On September 3, 1967, Sweden made a shift from driving on the left side of the road to driving on the right. This is a picture from the first day after the big change:

A chaotic-looking street scene with cars and people all over the street

/ Alamy Stock Photo

Looks like a chill, relaxing day.

41.This picture, taken by Robert Cornelius in 1839, is generally accepted as the first “selfie”:

Blurry image of a serious-looking man with an Eddie Muenster bang

Robert Cornelius / Getty Images

Basically, he probably took the first self-portrait ever. Bob had to sit for 15 minutes to get this picture.

42.Tourists used to be able to freely climb up the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt to sunbathe and have tea parties:

Black-and-white photo of people sitting in chairs around a small table on rocks with a pyramid behind them

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

Fortunately, that is not the case anymore.

43.This is what the inside of the White House looked like when it was being reconstructed in the late 1940s:

A construction/excavation area with mounds of dirt, a bulldozer, and scaffolding

Abbie Rowe / National Park Service

44.During World War II, Walt Disney developed a Mickey Mouse gas mask, designed to help children get comfortable and relaxed while wearing the mask:

Walt Disney and a design of a Mickey Mouse gas mask

Alamy Stock Photo

45.Here’s a totally not frightening closeup:

Mickey Mouse gas mask

Alamy Stock Photo

46.This right here is a photo from President Abraham Lincoln’s first inauguration in 1861:

Large crowd gathered in front of a historical government building with columns for a significant event or speech, likely in past decades

Education Images / Contributor

Can you spot Honest Abe?

47.Here’s one from his second inauguration in 1865:

Large crowd gathered at a historical inauguration event, emphasizing a significant moment in political history

Universal History Archive / Universal Images Group via Getty Images

48.This is Herman the Cat, a cat who was given the title of expert mouser aboard a US Coast Guard ship during World War II:

An ID card, issued 1/12/43, for Herman the Cat, born in Baltimore, with a photo of the cat — described as 8 months old, 15 inches high, weighing 11 pounds, with green eyes and gray hair — and a paw print

Sherman Grinberg Library

Herman, in addition to other cats aboard ships, was there to catch pests. It was a thing.

49.This is the iconic log cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born in 1809:

Drawing of a small log cabin

Mpi / Getty Images

This would sell for $19 million in Lake Tahoe today.

50.John Quincy Adams was the first US president ever photographed. Here he is in 1840, more than a decade after his presidency:

A balding, stone-faced John Quincy Adams sitting in a wooden chair with his legs crossed and his hands clasped

Henry Guttmann Collection / Getty Images

51.This is the world’s first skyscraper, the 10-story Home Insurance Building, which was located in Chicago:

The Home Insurance Building

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

The absolutely gargantuan skyscraper was built in 1885 and torn down in 1931.

52.This is Ahmet Ali Çelikten, a man who is generally considered to be one of the first Black pilots — and perhaps the very first:

A man with high boots and in a uniform and aviator glasses stands in front of an early plane

Aclosund Historic / Alamy Stock Photo

He first flew for the Ottoman Empire in World War I. His contemporaries included Eugene Bullard, the first Black military pilot from the United States.

53.Fiat once had a car factory with a working test track on the roof:

A test track on the roof of a building with very old-timey cars being driven on it

/ Alamy Stock Photo

The building and the track are still there; you just can’t perform the incredibly safe act of driving cars on a roof anymore. Bummer.

54.This is the oldest picture of the White House ever taken:

The White House

Alamy Stock Photo

It was taken in 1846.

55.This is what the face of the Statue of Liberty looked like before it was installed onto the monument:

The Statue of Liberty's face

NPS Photo / Alamy Stock Photo

56.This is what economy class on a commercial plane looked like in the 1960s:

A very wide plane interior with two aisles and rows of four comfy-looking seats in the center and two or three seats on the side

– / AFP via Getty Images

57.This is Charlotte and Marjorie Collyer, a mother and daughter who survived the wreck of the Titanic in 1912:

Charlotte and Majorie Collyer

Charlotte’s husband and Marjorie’s dad Harvey Collyer died in the wreck. Also lost in the tragedy was the family’s life savings of £5,000 cash.

58.In 1903, Edward Llewellen (left) made history by breaking the world record and catching the biggest sea bass ever caught off the coast of Catalina Island:

Edward Llewellen

Niday Picture Library / Alamy Stock Photo

It weighed 425 pounds.

59.In 1969, Niagara Falls was “drained” in order to remove a large number of boulders that had accumulated at the foot of the falls:

The falls with minimal water falling

colaimages / Alamy Stock Photo

Apparently, two bodies were found at the bottom of the drained waterfall.

60.This is what the view of downtown Manhattan looked like from the Empire State Building the year it opened in 1931…

New York in 1931

Everett Collection Inc / Alamy Stock Photo

And this is what that same view looks like today:

New York now

IndustryAndTravel / Alamy Stock Photo

I spy a couple more buildings.

61.This is what one college student’s dorm room looked like in the 1910s:

A man in his dorm room

Hum Images / Alamy Stock Photo

Some absolutely scandalous wall decorations.

62.This right here is a once state-of-the-art piece of armor that used to be worn by golf course workers sent out to retrieve range balls:

Person wearing a wire cage suit, holding a small bird cage and a pole. The setting appears to be outdoors

Library Of Congress / Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

63.For its 50th anniversary, over 300,000 people walked across the Golden Gate Bridge:

People on the Golden Gate Bridge

Ed Perlstein / Redferns

Here’s another angle of the very packed celebration:

People on the Golden Gate Bridge

San Francisco Chronicle / Hearst Newspapers via Getty Images

64.This is what Times Square looked like in 1921:

Times Square in 1921

Edwin Levick / Getty Images

65.Speaking of other things that didn’t catch on, this was a proposed firefighting suit designed to drench the wearer in water:

A water-filled firefighter suit

Smith Archive / Alamy Stock Photo

66.This is Emma Lilian Todd, the first woman to design an airplane:

Emma Lilian Todd

Science History Images / Alamy Stock Photo

That is some contraption.

67.This is a picture of the opening of the very first New York City subway back in 1904:

Men in top hats sitting in an open carriage and standing on the tracks and the platform

Photoquest / Getty Images

68.This is William Hutchings, one of the last surviving American Revolutionary War veterans:

He's 100 in the portrait and looks very old, with some white, longish hair and wearing a suit, vest, and bow tie, with caption "William Hutchings, aged 100, one of the survivors of the revolution; entered according to act of Congress in the year 1864"

FAY 2018 / Alamy Stock Photo

He was 100 in this picture.

69.This is how many barrels of wine the French army supplied for its troops for the Battle of Gallipoli during World War I:

Historic photo of a WWI military camp with rows of supply barrels, tents, and huts. People are walking and performing various tasks in the camp area

Historical / Corbis via Getty Images

70.After World War I, sculptor Anna Coleman Ladd led a team that crafted realistic masks to restore the faces of injured soldiers:

Two photos of the same man: one shows facial disfigurement, the other with a facial prosthetic mustache and glasses. He's wearing a uniform

Science History Images / Alamy Stock Photo

71.This is Louisa Ann Swain, the first American woman to ever vote in a general election:

An elderly woman in a historical outfit and lace bonnet sits holding a book. She wears a shawl draped over her shoulders

Alamy Stock Photo

The vote happened in 1870, five decades before the 19th Amendment granted voting rights to all American women.

72.This is the check for $7.2 million, issued Aug. 1, 1868, that the US sent to Russia for the purchase of Alaska:

An old check with very ornate cursive handwriting, dated August 1, 1868

Three Lions / Getty Images

73.This picture, from the 1980 Moscow Olympics, shows a number of performers making a human torch:

A large human torch of many levels, each one made up of male and female athletes; the base has three levels of people standing and sitting

NCAA Photos / NCAA Photos via Getty Images

74.This is the Brewster armor suit, one of the first fully functional suits of body armor designed for World War I combat:

"Brewster body armor, 1917-1918," looking clumsy and heavy, with a boxy helmet that covers the entire head and extends into a chest shield

75.And, finally, this is Jack the baboon, a South African baboon who worked as a signalman at a railway station in the 1800s. During his almost decade of railway work, Jack never made a single mistake:

A baboon standing next to a man in a uniform and pushing a handle down

Getty

He was paid “20 cents a day and half a bottle of beer weekly.” RIP, Jack.

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