
Gertrude Käsebier :: “Lollipops.” Mina Turner and her cousin Elizabeth in Waban, Massachusetts. 1910. Dry plate glass negative. / src: Shorpy
images that haunt us

Gertrude Käsebier :: “Lollipops.” Mina Turner and her cousin Elizabeth in Waban, Massachusetts. 1910. Dry plate glass negative. / src: Shorpy

Christopher Helin ::
Keyless Entry
or what seems to be a demonstration of the paparazzi-proof Mitchell sedan,
San Francisco, circa 1918, glass negative. / src and hi-res: shorpy

Christopher Helin
:: “Briscoe auto at Lands End.”, glass negative, San Francisco ca. 1919 / source and hi-res: shorpy

Anonymous photographer. Fance, ca. 1914
/ src: Lumière des Roses

Aside from a few stars like Constance Markievicz [in this photograph], who was second in
command at the rebels’ St. Stephen’s Green outpost in Dublin, or the
schoolteacher turned sniper Margaret Skinnider, most of the estimated
260 women who took part in the 1916 insurrection never found their way
into the history books. Eight women in the Easter Rising, here (source: NYTimes)

One of the first airplanes seen in Holland. The Netherlands, about 1911 / source: Nationaal Archief






Hikers on Little Baldy near Spokane, Washington, April 6th, 1913
/ source: William Creswell on Flickr