The Earliest Born People Photographed

It is important to note that not all birth dates here are validated.
55 Photographs of people born in the 1770s or earlier, taken between 1840 and the 1870s. For reference: George Washington was born in 1732, Napoleon’s father in 1746, and Mozart in 1756.
Updated List of the Earliest Born People Photographed:
docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
ow053psorQ3VS4tfVVpfjWLzXQ5Gvmy1BDe-1ut_-UMRYsxDC1afC_8LmcV6e9GOWi8/pubhtml
Notes:
2:03 - Conrad Heyer was more likely born in 1753
0:43 - John Adams married in 1771 to Joanna Munroe of Lexington, MA. Mary Sanderson (1:39) was born as a Munroe and also came from Lexington. A connection between the earliest-born man and earliest-born woman photographed?
Revised version of “The Earliest Born People Photographed”
The Earliest-Born People Photographed in Color:
• The Earliest Born Peop...
Sources:
www.caskey-family.com/johnowen/
ancestors.familysearch.org/en...
www.findagrave.com/memorial/6...
www.familysearch.org/ark:/619...
www.familysearch.org/ark:/619...
www.geni.com/people/John-Adam...
gerontology.fandom.com/wiki/T...
www.familysearch.org/ark:/619...
www.findagrave.com/memorial/4...
www.gutenberg.org/files/36204...
www.wikitree.com/wiki/Ranney-133
archive.org/details/middletow...
boston1775.blogspot.com/2015/...
books.google.com/books?id=YQM...
www.findagrave.com/memorial/9...
www.cowanauctions.com/lot/six...
www.findagrave.com/memorial/3...
www.geni.com/people/Samuel-Sp...
www.celebrateboston.com/biogra...
www.homeoint.org/photo/hahnema...
www.geni.com/people/Servaas-D...
compagnesdriftmill.blogspot.co...
annawarnerbaileydar.org/pb/wp_...
archive.org/details/historica...
diglib.amphilsoc.org/islandor...
www.europeana.eu/en/item/2058...
www.openarch.nl/sha:5f448301-...
www.nationalgalleries.org/art...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eulalia...
www.europeana.eu/en/item/2058...
www.porsgrunn.folkebibl.no/bo...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
www.loc.gov/item/2004664006/
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
www.europeana.eu/en/item/2058...
collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1...
www.familysearch.org/tree/per...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
www.geni.com/people/Cajetan-O...
talbot.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/sear...
bge-geneve.ch/iconographie/oe...
www.monticello.org/site/resea...
artsandculture.google.com/ass...
goskatalog.ru/portal/#/collec...
www.rct.uk/collection/54306/p...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jo...
benbeck.co.uk/firsts/2_The_Hum...
M. Taylor (2010), The Last Muster: Images of the Revolutionary War Generation
M. Taylor (2013), The Last Muster, Volume 2: Faces of the American Revolution (2013)
Tags: Earliest born person, earliest born person filmed, earliest born person photographed, American revolution, born in the 1700s, life in the 1700s, 1776, French revolution, colorized, upscaled, Radetzky, Hannah Stilley Gorby, Conrad Heyer, historical, history, Beethoven, Dragonetti, first photograph, worlds oldest photographs, oldest generation

Пікірлер: 231

  • @arago8649
    @arago86492 жыл бұрын

    For an Updated List of the Earliest-Born People Photographed see: docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQeSO4Tx18q-ow053psorQ3VS4tfVVpfjWLzXQ5Gvmy1BDe-1ut_-UMRYsxDC1afC_8LmcV6e9GOWi8/pubhtml

  • @BenjaminSBeck

    @BenjaminSBeck

    Жыл бұрын

    Just seen this - very useful, and pretty definitive. Well done!

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BenjaminSBeck Thanks!

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    @Benjamin Beck Incase you're interested, here are my some more lists, about the earliest photographs of people and earliest color portrait photographs: docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vSPDmKN-prgZ00LFPwFH0Ht1RPpRH5eQrYNx_eibVkW6XPegybMgG5JQP_vIV3ZA-pj24HKe0STx56a/pubhtml docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vRm_nsOgNxBhcEhTEwkXFPArymQ-zcVJqdG-eIqrNvvaXL7HOyMFrP04cMxOzEXm7ZOzarvkcAZqE-7/pubhtml

  • @erinshavonne34

    @erinshavonne34

    Жыл бұрын

    All these people look like they live a hard life and they lived almost 100 hundred years.? Narcissist!

  • @nunyabiznez6381
    @nunyabiznez6381 Жыл бұрын

    My great, great, great grandfather went to France in 1840 to study under Louis Daguerre. He returned in 1841 and began his Daguerreotype studio. While it was a couple of years before he operated commercially, he experimented a lot and took photos of family, friends and a lot of scenery and still lifes. Among his earliest photos was one he took in 1841 of his then 105 year old great grandmother, my great, great, great, great, great, great grandmother who was born in 1736 and died a few weeks after the photo was taken. She was a cousin of John Adams born in the same town within weeks of when he was born. She had also met both Benjamin Franklin and George Washington. The photo is in my personal collection along with my ancestor's Civil War photographs and is unpublished. I was unaware anyone would be interested a photograph of that nature so I never had it published. My ancestor took photos of a great many people who visited Massachusetts including Samuel Clemmons, Herman Melville and a number of wealthy people and politicians of the time.

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting. Do you plan on having the photo published any time soon?

  • @Lardenoy

    @Lardenoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Merci ! Passionnant ! From Angoulême, S.W of France

  • @nunyabiznez6381

    @nunyabiznez6381

    Жыл бұрын

    @@arago8649 I am putting together a family history that will include that and photos of all ancestors of mine. I will be publishing it in book form and sending copies to a number of research libraries as well as all interested relatives of mine. Simultaneously I will be publishing it in E-book form on multiple genealogy platforms. The original photo itself will be willed to a local history museum where my ancestor in question lived. Her family was prominent in that town at the time and that museum has artifacts on display that she and her family owned. The only other image of her known to exist is a painting down when she was younger and that is on display there. The curator said they would display the photo next to the painting as a comparison. I expect to complete the above book sometime in the next five years.

  • @MetaBlooper

    @MetaBlooper

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nunyabiznez6381 When will the photo be released?

  • @nunyabiznez6381

    @nunyabiznez6381

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MetaBlooper I have not yet determined a date because I'm still working on the book. It really isn't intended to be published publicly so no ISBN number most likely, but rather to be placed in a handful of archives on the internet and certain family history research libraries but since there is an interest I will probably send the original to a museum. There is actually more than one photo but only one that is in my opinion clear enough to deserve being included in a book. The rest are mostly blurry as she trembled a lot. I believe I have seven total. They are currently locked in a climate controlled fire proof container. If someone can suggest a museum I might consider one related to the history of photography. But before I go that route I want to find an artist that specializes in original photographic techniques and have them make duplicates for distribution to my family. Old photos like that are very light sensitive and can fade if exposed to too much light. They have been in acid free containers for over 40 years and have not seen the light of day save for a half an hour 20 years ago. As you can imagine they are quite fragile as are the rest of the collection, especially the Civil War battlefield material.

  • @JCement
    @JCement2 жыл бұрын

    John Owen’s father, Aaron Owen, was born in 1696. We are looking at a photograph of someone who was once floating around in the balls of somebody from the 1600’s. I’m mindblown

  • @puurrrr

    @puurrrr

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lmao 😂

  • @madamebutterfly851

    @madamebutterfly851

    2 жыл бұрын

    He was the twinkle of a 17th century eye

  • @ozchaeu8667

    @ozchaeu8667

    Жыл бұрын

    damn if that's true then his father was born when the holy league war was still going on between 1683 to 1699.

  • @WandaISmith

    @WandaISmith

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, men’s testicles do not produce sperm until they’re 10-13, and it regenerates every 64 days, so we may conclude that part of John Owen’s skin tissue photographed was once stored in his mother’s, Miriam Wright, ovaries in 1711, when she was born.

  • @leonmarkarian7641

    @leonmarkarian7641

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ozchaeu8667 is that old that war imagine that he probably never even knew North America existed

  • @HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks.
    @HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks. Жыл бұрын

    A relative of mine lived for almost 109 years. The mind blogging thing is that she saw three centuries: late 1800s, all 1900s and early 2000s. She lost her house during WW2, destroyed by bombers. But it wasn’t enough to stop her smiling, she said. Pretty impressive.

  • @logiccubing4646

    @logiccubing4646

    10 ай бұрын

    Imagine being a little child seeing a paper of the new year 1900 And living that ENTIRE century

  • @annetteglass2006
    @annetteglass2006 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for not having cheesy music in the background! It made the video much more interesting.

  • @MatLujan
    @MatLujan7 ай бұрын

    I’m 37. My dad is 60. His mom (my nana) is 78. Her dad was born in 1898. My nana who’s still alive today personally knew someone born in the 1800’s. That fact just astounds me.

  • @seanodwyer4322

    @seanodwyer4322

    3 ай бұрын

    my nana had a french name- Anne Challannor- She came too new zealand as a teen but ahh wish ahh knew all the other french surnames in her history.

  • @ChaimkeProductions
    @ChaimkeProductions Жыл бұрын

    the amazing thing about these born in the 1740s is as a youth they would definatly have met people who had been born in the 1600s! that is absolutly mind boggling!

  • @aloysiusdevanderabercrombi470

    @aloysiusdevanderabercrombi470

    Жыл бұрын

    * definitely

  • @danielmart7940

    @danielmart7940

    Жыл бұрын

    How about the fact that many lived to be 100 years old? What was there secret? Simple living?

  • @ermannododaro

    @ermannododaro

    Жыл бұрын

    That's amazing...

  • @Speedofsound9

    @Speedofsound9

    Жыл бұрын

    And those people probably met somebody from the 1500s!

  • @squirrelz6117

    @squirrelz6117

    Жыл бұрын

    My dad mowed the lawn of someone who was born as the civil war concluded. he was probably in his early 90s in the 1970s. Not many can even contemplate the logic without evidence, but actually 100 years apart in the middle of a century literally spans all the way into the prior century.

  • @jaffa3717
    @jaffa3717 Жыл бұрын

    Historical photography is so creepy, in an interesting way. The fact that we can look at the face of someone who was born 250 years prior, like a time machine with a one-way window. It's crazy really

  • @tracesprite6078

    @tracesprite6078

    Жыл бұрын

    Some scientists are suggesting that the past, present and future may all exist simultaneously so are we looking at the photos of people who are happening now???? kzread.info/dash/bejne/Z6qu28-aecTIh6w.html

  • @roadrules3671
    @roadrules3671 Жыл бұрын

    People back then lived a HARD Life. You can see it. Literally. It's etched in their faces.

  • @ottocarson
    @ottocarson Жыл бұрын

    I've seen a photograph of Mozart's wife, Constanze, during my visit to Mozart's house. Mind-blowing!

  • @queenuru

    @queenuru

    Жыл бұрын

    👍👍👍

  • @user-bn7bk5mw4s

    @user-bn7bk5mw4s

    3 ай бұрын

    Well rock me Anadeus !!!

  • @king_fresh27
    @king_fresh27 Жыл бұрын

    this is absolutely fascinating to me the people photographed here are old enough to have interacted with people who lived in the 1600s, and the people who photographed them were born recent enough that they could have been interviewed on film in the 1920s, which is recent enough that the oldest people of today could have remembered possibly speaking to them/interviewing them

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    Many of the people shown here (such as the shoemaker John Adams or Ezra Green) had their grandparents live long enough so that they could have met and remembered them in the mid 19th-century. The father of Mary Munroe Sanderson (at 1:41) was born in the year 1700 (1699 in the Julian calendar). There are several color photographs of people born in the mid-1800s, going as far back as the 1820s. For example, Sir George Higginson who was photographed in Autochrome aged 100 in 1926. When he was 3 years old, he met King George IV, who died in 1830. He may have been the last person to recall King George V. Or Albert Bierstadt, known for his mid-1800s paintings of the old west, was photographed in color in the 1890s. I've seen Kodachrome film of civil war veterans speaking into a microphone at the 1938 Gettysburg reunion. If the recording from the microphone is still around, you would see and hear people born 180+ years ago in full color. And these veterans may have known American revolution veterans when they were young.

  • @BarryB.Benson
    @BarryB.Benson2 жыл бұрын

    Imagine being the graduate class of 1765 lol 1:16

  • @deborahrobertson8606
    @deborahrobertson8606 Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather was born in 1865 - the year that Lincoln was assassinated and Our Mutual Friend was published. My father was born in 1928 when his father was 62. My half brother was born in 1989, when our father was 62. So Rosman, my brother, has a grandfather who is 124 years older than him.

  • @marci.5597

    @marci.5597

    Жыл бұрын

    President John Tyler was born in 1790. His grandson is still alive today! No kidding - look it up.

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    @@marci.5597 I heard about the story a few years ago, back then 2 of his grandsons were alive

  • @kalel311superman9
    @kalel311superman910 ай бұрын

    incredible, i met both of my great grandmothers, one of them was born in 1889 and the other in 1900, the one born in 1889 was my grandpa's mom, i never knew my great grandfathers i have only seen a photograph of him, my mom told me he died when she was 10

  • @tracesprite6078
    @tracesprite6078 Жыл бұрын

    With each photo, I'm sending a feeling of love to them. Can it travel back through time to comfort and encourage them back then?

  • @drunkenskeptic6633
    @drunkenskeptic6633 Жыл бұрын

    The first guy shown was born just 36 years after the 1600s. The freaking 1600s! That is just insane. He spoke to people who were walking around living life in the 1600s... wow

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    Some of the older people here had grandparents born in the 1670s/80s which lived long enough so that they could have met and remembered them

  • @anjadyrting3206
    @anjadyrting3206 Жыл бұрын

    Mozart was born in 1756. So many of them are his generation.

  • @Lardenoy

    @Lardenoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Oui, ainsi la reine Marie- Antoinette, née en 1755 et décédée 2 ans après Mozart. Sa fille, Marie-Thérèse, seule survivante de la famille mourut en 1851.

  • @anjadyrting3206

    @anjadyrting3206

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Lardenoy Oui certenment!

  • @Annie1962
    @Annie19622 жыл бұрын

    funny to think that none of these people knew of a telephone, airplane, car ... imagine how they'd freak to see a mobile phone or a SpaceX rocket take off

  • @mikejameson7678

    @mikejameson7678

    2 жыл бұрын

    To be fair, seeing a SpaceX rocket take off is not necessarily a daily accurance.

  • @pierrepellerin249

    @pierrepellerin249

    2 жыл бұрын

    Funny to think that some people born in the 1860s saw a live moon landing while anyone born after 1972 has never seen one.

  • @metaknight115

    @metaknight115

    2 жыл бұрын

    Imagine if they saw an Iowa class battleship, or a fighter jet.

  • @aprowse2525

    @aprowse2525

    Жыл бұрын

    Or to think that people would be viewing their image on the internet nearly 200 years later! Amazing

  • @riverstone9005

    @riverstone9005

    Жыл бұрын

    Imagine what they would think about our endless list of pronouns available to pick from.

  • @jrhawk574
    @jrhawk574 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for recording and putting this up for us to watch. Never been on the Gulf when a Hurricane blew in, but have gone through several hellacious storms on Lake Texoma It was always safer anchored up in the deep coves on the south shore. Still heavy enough to drag the anchor and keep the Bilge Pumps running. Had to lower the RT Antenna to avoid lightning and Static discharges. Hat is off to you guys for staying with your Boat. It's a real tragedy all over the State . Prayers and hope for the best.

  • @Chanticlair47
    @Chanticlair4710 ай бұрын

    The Iriqouois Chief was quite a handsome fellow as an older gentleman. He must have been striking as a young man.

  • @umiaygul2525
    @umiaygul25252 ай бұрын

    my father in law is 85. He was raised by his grandfather who was born in 1860s. It's always mind boggling when my father in law who lived with someone from the 1800s is playing with my children born in 2020

  • @Urlocallordandsavior
    @Urlocallordandsavior2 жыл бұрын

    You should do earliest-born voice recordings!

  • @t-rizzy208

    @t-rizzy208

    2 жыл бұрын

    i agree

  • @ozchaeu8667

    @ozchaeu8667

    Жыл бұрын

    phonograph or voice recorder was invented in the middle of 19th Century, meybe 1850s by Edward Leon Scott from France. but for earliest born voice records meybe Pope Leo XIII who born in 1810, you can find his voice on yt or something.

  • @queenuru

    @queenuru

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes I gree

  • @barrymoore4470

    @barrymoore4470

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ozchaeu8667 Alfred, Lord Tennyson and William Ewart Gladstone, both born in 1809, are the earliest-born individuals I have been able to determine to have had their voices recorded (these recordings still exist, and have been variously uploaded onto KZread). Pope Leo XIII was born in 1810, though he does have the distinction of being the earliest-born person certain to have been recorded by the cinematograph.

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    The earliest born whose recording survives is Helmuth von Moltke the Elder, the Prussian field marshal, who was born in the last year of the 18th century in the Holy Roman Empire. See: benbeck.co.uk/firsts/2_The_Human_Subject/sound1h.htm

  • @morsecode980
    @morsecode9809 ай бұрын

    My favorite thing is to see photographs of famous people we’re used to only seeing paintings or statues of. For example, photos of U.S. Presidents John Quincy Adams or Andrew Jackson; French King Louis-Philippe; Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I, etc

  • @blockmasterscott
    @blockmasterscott5 ай бұрын

    Can you imagine getting to old age, and seeing yourself for real in a new fangled product called a photograph?

  • @maureencurryhbhgg6202
    @maureencurryhbhgg6202 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely brilliant to see these photos of elderly people from so long ago More Please

  • @sonorex
    @sonorex Жыл бұрын

    The image of the guy named "Caesar" is very impressive and haunting. Is there any further information i.e. where he was born? Was there significant human trafficking / "slave trade" from West Africa already in the 1730's so it's possible he was born in the colonies? Or was he born as a free human being becoming a "1st person" victim genuinely brought into slavery?

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    He was born into slavery on the property of Van Rensselaer Nicoll in Bethlehem, NY. There's an unpublished biography of Caesar written by one of his owners descendants, but it isn't available online

  • @STho205

    @STho205

    Жыл бұрын

    New York's first slave laws were passed in 1702. There were slaves prior to that under both the English and Dutch (Dutch slavers introduced slavery to the colony of Virginia on the James). Slave revolts in the 1720s in NY colony brought even more severe laws. By the mid 1700s, New York had more people in chattle bondage than NC, SC and Georgia combined. By 1800 they still surpassed NC and GA.

  • @squirrelz6117

    @squirrelz6117

    Жыл бұрын

    @@STho205 fun fact, or should i not say that? The north held onto slavery about as long as the south, they couldn't follow through with the tariffs on the south and so they kept slaves in certain states way past the abolition date. This was likely to keep people alive and businesses supplied until the age was fully ended. We know politically speaking the north voted against slavery, but there was no doubt more than enough pushback at least until it was completely unnecessary, i can retrieve some data on this perhaps if anyone is wondering. Schools lied, and used state propaganda to simplify a pro federal government reaction out of students. History is multifaceted, much is not recorded, much is covered up. And the history simply turns into folklore and theoreticals. I just about can't take Hollywood's recreations of the civil war seriously anymore, because its kind of ignorant of what was really going on at the time. They just blame everything on a minority issue between the North and the South when it was literally a philosophical difference on the pecking order of state legislature and federal legislature. A confederate would argue that it was a breach of the US Constitution in the first place to overthrow the states, a layman wouldn't understand the significance that has for corruption, and would listen to union propaganda and think the abolition of slavery is why a federal government was formed. The confederacy and the federal government was formed so that the future would be in the hands of (enlightened visionaries) Illuminized Freemasons of the time period, who were secret frontmen or businessmen for England and Rothschild. That is why our corrupt government today teaches everything based around the civil war with racial tension in mind. Don't challenge their version of history, let them remain corrupt until the states turn destitute like they are now, handing federal power to foreign banks and globalists. America never actually happened because of this, we have freedom as long as the Illuminati Bankers says it is okay. That today is like the fake Federal Reserve which is as federal as General Lee's left nut. The IRS are practically illegal and are unconstitutional. But federal power makes this circus go round and round. One day George Orwells dreams of dystopia will be our reality, thanks to the illusion of the republic and democracy. And btw, Socialism and Communism were also the same strategies by these Globalists. It forced a NWO in all of Europe, similar to how the climate experts and migrant crisis is doing it today. Shitty WEF stooges running all kinds of countries, always European, always hates the white skinned people, because the base philosophy of Freemasons is quite Zionist, not Christian. Knowing how prophecy collides between the two religions, it becomes obvious why Europeans and Westerners are being poisoned with every possible tool in their arsenal. They want us all dead.

  • @francescofilippi2824

    @francescofilippi2824

    Жыл бұрын

    Power has always been like this, for millennia, nothing new under the sun

  • @SpankyPants5009

    @SpankyPants5009

    3 ай бұрын

    @@squirrelz6117 Such an odd place to leave such a long complicated response. You’re frustrated that most Civil War scholars or educators put too much emphasis on the “minority issue” , am I missing something there is that like minority speaker of the house or some kind of political chamber ? Because what I think you mean is we talk too much about slavery and blackness first whiteness, if you’re gonna talk about something controversial like that just come out and say I don’t know maybe that’s just me, but I thought it kind of stuck out in a weird way. Listen, there is all sorts of bullshit online that says the Civil War was not really about slavery. Maybe you have other sources I don’t know, but I like to get my information about the Civil War and the justifications behind it by reading the written statements of politicians, soldiers, and regular citizens of the south. You can see all sorts of old writings in old newspapers and old government documents they database online. And there are a shit ton of statements from these people, stating the war that they were fighting was specifically about seceding from the union for the preservation of slavery . Without it, they thought it would destroy their economy and their way of life. And these are not that hard to look up … and since you consider yourself educated in this part of history , I think it’s time you hit the books son.

  • @joannastergiou145
    @joannastergiou1455 ай бұрын

    These pictures are amazing!!

  • @idegteke
    @idegteke Жыл бұрын

    Facebook: The latest born people never photographed

  • @maureencurryhbhgg6202
    @maureencurryhbhgg6202 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely brilliant to see these photos of very elderly people from so long ago More Please 👍👍👍

  • @puurrrr
    @puurrrr2 жыл бұрын

    9:30 wow i just looked him up and he has so many pictures of him and his family

  • @tomaszkiryk556
    @tomaszkiryk556 Жыл бұрын

    These pictures are just one reason to live fast, die young.

  • @cherylpurdue888
    @cherylpurdue8884 ай бұрын

    Amazing photos😊

  • @puurrrr
    @puurrrr2 жыл бұрын

    9:55 he was born in 1775 and his father in 1760. What?? I just Googled him. He's father was 15 when he got him apparently

  • @IdkANiceName999

    @IdkANiceName999

    Жыл бұрын

    shit was wild

  • @peterdolinek2042

    @peterdolinek2042

    Жыл бұрын

    Not even born in the year

  • @elijahriser
    @elijahriser Жыл бұрын

    The fact this beautiful amazing video has only 43k views and its literally taking us back in time! But videos of people fighting and women being lude has millions of views is absolutely terrible and sums up how awful this Era is smh

  • @yokiryuchan7655
    @yokiryuchan76556 ай бұрын

    We are looking into the eyes of human beings that were born over 250-280 years ago. These are people who knew and lived among people born in the 1600s. Photographs are the closest things we will ever get to a time machine.

  • @albertoiuliano4920
    @albertoiuliano49202 жыл бұрын

    awesome and very interesting video, thanks!

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you too!

  • @STho205
    @STho205 Жыл бұрын

    Omar Said was among the very last people transported legally before the Anglo-American abolition of the Transatlantic trade was abolished at the end of that year in the UK and US by acts and signed law.

  • @JimPigProductions
    @JimPigProductions2 жыл бұрын

    Really cool photos

  • @mariahenrich9602
    @mariahenrich96029 ай бұрын

    Simply amazing

  • @Urlocallordandsavior
    @Urlocallordandsavior2 жыл бұрын

    You should've included Albert Galatin, first US secretary of the treasury (born in 1761).

  • @edgarzekkesalumbides2503

    @edgarzekkesalumbides2503

    Жыл бұрын

    Lmao I was gonna comment about him

  • @alphanumeric1529
    @alphanumeric15292 жыл бұрын

    I think it is very important for everyone, and in particular, Americans to understand that photos of people who fought in the American Revolution exist. This is important because it collapses, what appears to us speedy contemporaries, as a vast gulf of time, an actually distant, unknowable time, a state of human being that is so distant, there might as well have been neanderthals walking around. A similar fact, that caused the same effect for me many years ago, is that a man who met Stravinsky, produced Michael Jackson's records. That from Stravinsky to Michael Jackson was one man's productive lifetime. That just blows me away. Billy Jean and Thriller were so NEW! But, they're firmly within a brief modulation of a culture. But, I digress, unsurprisingly... it is important that this false concept collapses, that of the great span of time collapses, so we can more clearly understand, or even understand at all, that the evil plotted for the American Colonies and the subsequent United States of American still remains in operation today. The same evil. The same organizations, families... That America's persistent and central conflict was banking/finance, until certain groups were publicly declared too big to fail, and were accepted by the American population as too big to fail, meaning that America literally could not exist as a nation without these organizations. That these organizations must first be preserved, so the nation itself could then be preserved, albeit with fewer of the last legal protections of fundamental human rights, and the largest wealth transfer (from the lower and then remaining middle classes, to an extreme minority of numerable super-rich individuals), and a basically transformed character. Collapsing that time, and understanding that the conflict of the American Revolution, the War of 1812, Andrew Jackson's Presidency, the Civil War, a few well produced financial/economic bubbles, the creation of the Federal Reserve system, the institution of legally baseless taxation of labor, the First World War, the Second World War, the minor mop up operations of the last national holdouts afterwards, to this very minute...that it is all linked, but not linked in mere organic causal chains produced by several different societies or collective bodies of truly multitudinous semi-rational self-interested individuals over three centuries of time, but linked in that ALL OF THESE EVENTS were set in place like dominoes, and were tipped over, not just in perfect succession, but in perfect time. This may seem like a paranoid notion predicated on phantom causality, but when the time scale of this succession of events is understood in its true dimension, these seemingly unconnected historically distant events collapse into the most precise, finest clockwork, a "great work" you could call it. Who stands to suggest that a simple grandfather clock might be the creation by the self-interested, unconnected, thoughts and actions of many unrelated individuals over several centuries? None rational will stand.

  • @madamebutterfly851

    @madamebutterfly851

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is too deep for a KZread comment . My mind is blown..

  • @MagnakaiWarrior

    @MagnakaiWarrior

    Жыл бұрын

    You should elaborate on this further on a platform more conducive to readers than the recesses of yt comments.

  • @bpcgos

    @bpcgos

    Жыл бұрын

    And there will always be someone somehwere would said that human being created in this world coincidentally out of nothingness, so we are just a mere creature like animal that only eat, sleep, have sex and giving birth then die... But nope, we are so much more than that, each of us created in this for a purpose that collapsing each other creating many wonderful events that not coincident at all, it was planned meticolously by God without even human realised until our dead and back to God to answer Him how our life being used all this time.

  • @04straw
    @04straw11 ай бұрын

    It blows my mind that these are photos of real people who lived 250 (+ or -) years ago. 🤯

  • @StormRaid417
    @StormRaid417 Жыл бұрын

    I would have loved to live back then. It would have been an honor to live amongst our great great great grandparents. People back then had standards that worked 1000's times better than today's society. When those standards were broken, we became more divided than ever before.

  • @barrymoore4470

    @barrymoore4470

    Жыл бұрын

    People and society still had their problems. Untold numbers of black people were enslaved in the United States and in Brazil (emancipation did not occur until 1863 and 1888, respectively), women were universally disenfranchised and enjoyed few rights under the law, and the Industrial Revolution in the West, for all its ultimate benefits, caused massive displacement and exploitation among the poor and working poor. And even poverty could be a crime, with debtor's prisons and forced workhouses. Human life has never been easy at any time in history.

  • @KD400_

    @KD400_

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@barrymoore4470oh enough about the womens rights. The high status women enjoyed everything with their husbands. What about the men who had to suffer. Don't make this about gender inequality because that is a myth. Jordan Peterson explains it very well

  • @barrymoore4470

    @barrymoore4470

    11 ай бұрын

    @@KD400_ That's a total lie that women in the past enjoyed parity with men. That's not even true today, despite the considerable advances women have made in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

  • @f4gsforpele

    @f4gsforpele

    9 ай бұрын

    Oh yeah the slavery, horrible hygiene, and inability of anyone who wasn’t a white male landowner to vote or have more than basic rights in general was so wonderful 😍 bffr 💀💀💀

  • @illinoismotionpicturestudi5065
    @illinoismotionpicturestudi50655 ай бұрын

    9:17 'I'm Tired Boss'

  • @sidewalkrocker1304
    @sidewalkrocker1304 Жыл бұрын

    Great collection, but one photo made me curious; Dr. Joseph Souberbielle. There is an older painting (1819) of him showing a different character. Head, nose, hair. Souberbielle was bald. The painting is made by Francois Gerard. And Souberbielle died in Paris 1846. Don't know whether he was able to across the atlantic ocean making a photography. Your photo shown here seems to be an image of an old american war veteran.

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    While I was writing a response to your comment I stumbled upon a post on tumblr ( www.tumgir.com/tag/Bally%20paris ) debunking this claim. It seems that the man is *François-Victor Bally (1775 - 1866)* , a French surgeon. 1. A photograph of the same man said to be Souberbielle is captioned "Mr. Bally" ( pbs.twimg.com/media/FTHkba4XEAA9dL2?format=png&name=small ) 2. Bally has much more facial similarities to the man photographed than Souberbielle 3. The medals the man is wearing match those of François-Victor Bally (1775 - 1866), and not Joseph Souberbielle. Going to cut him from the video now. (Original debunking twitter post in French: mobile.twitter.com/albanperes/status/1527206906263134209 )

  • @sidewalkrocker1304

    @sidewalkrocker1304

    Жыл бұрын

    @@arago8649 great research!

  • @MetaBlooper
    @MetaBlooper Жыл бұрын

    Hey, I was looking through your doc and I found “Jacques Charles’ Students”image. Could you provide more information?

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    Professor Charles is said to have taken silhouette pictures of his students sometime between 1780 and 1823. This story has often been dismissed because there is no evidence that these experiments ever took place. The most detailed summary of this story can be read here: archive.org/details/tomwedgwoodfirst00litcrich/page/228/mode/2up Here is an illustration of what it may have looked like when Charles took the silhouettes of his students: www.cameramuseum.ch/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/charles-tissandier-bd-1024x645.jpg

  • @stephenannese8228
    @stephenannese822811 ай бұрын

    Love the photos,....I saw online a book out there with photographed/bios of American Revolution Veterans,.... Today it's rare to meet somebody who's parents were born in the 1800's,....my uncle will be 89 in August and his father was born in 1885....he was 49 when my uncle was born/1934.,...Not sure if there are any children fathered by US Civil war veterans still alive today..?

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    11 ай бұрын

    According to Wikipedia, the last child was Irene Triplett, born in 1930 to an 83 year old civil war veteran who fought on both sides and his 34 year old wife. She passed away in 2020 and was the last recipient of a civil war pension.

  • @alphanumeric1529
    @alphanumeric15292 жыл бұрын

    Photographs of people who were ~about~ 50 when the American Colonies became a nation. WTF! A photograph of someone who participated in the Boston Tea Party... WTF! Blowing my mind, I haven't researched the veracity of these claims... Photographs of American Civil War soldiers blow me away... but PHOTOS of people who fought in the American Revolution? WOW!

  • @corygriffiths4394

    @corygriffiths4394

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s definitely not uncommon I have two pictures of some of my ancestors that were born in the 1780s and 1790s.

  • @artman40
    @artman40 Жыл бұрын

    And many of those photographed people probably had interacted with people born in the late 1600s!

  • @mixterz1
    @mixterz1 Жыл бұрын

    1700s fascinate me of all the centuries. Just seeing these images are mind blowing.

  • @puurrrr
    @puurrrr2 жыл бұрын

    I wish they were all restored

  • @rileyprice6831
    @rileyprice6831 Жыл бұрын

    It’s crazy to think that many of these people were in their late teens to early 20’s when America declared independence

  • @ErinIsReal
    @ErinIsReal Жыл бұрын

    John Quincy Adams is my great great grandfather.

  • @OSextoChakra
    @OSextoChakraАй бұрын

    Essas pessoas que nasceram na década de 1740, quando tinham 15 anos em 1755, conheceram idosos de 90 anos que nasceram em 1665. E esses idosos, contavam histórias para seus netos, sobre seus avós que nasceram em 1595.

  • @shelayashawn8790
    @shelayashawn87905 ай бұрын

    😮 1753..amazing!their dress and fashion so very different from now

  • @Miki_big_red_machine
    @Miki_big_red_machine Жыл бұрын

    The first camera was in 1905…

  • @franklinpierce-ue2yb

    @franklinpierce-ue2yb

    Ай бұрын

    *1826*

  • @Lardenoy
    @Lardenoy Жыл бұрын

    Je me demandais si on trouverait des daguerréotypes français de personnes ayant déjà atteint 30 voire 40 ans pendant la Révolution et y ayant pris part : je note Jean-Jacques Fockedey, à 4'14, membre de la Convention Nationale ! Il est assez méconnu en France mais sa ville natale lui a attribué une rue. Thomas Paine , Americain venu à Paris à cette époque, est évoqué dans " La Nuit de Varennes" d'Ettore Scola, film de 1982 : se sont-ils rencontrés ?

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    L'historien Antoine Boulant a publié sur sa page twitter des photos de personnes âgées ayant participé à la Révolution française. L'un d'entre eux est Greinbülher, né en 1761, un fonctionnaire du vin de Ribeauvillé: twitter.com/BoulantAntoine2/status/1289433693149257728?cxt=HHwWgICnmZfH_uQjAAAA Dans un ensemble de daguerréotypes familiaux, nous trouvons deux portraits de personnes âgées : Joseph Girot (1753 - 1844), et Marguerite Hermann (1761 - 1846). Je ne suis pas sûr de leur implication dans la révolution française. Les photos se trouvent sur le site du Musée français de la photographie : collections.photographie.essonne.fr/board.php#. En 1869, M. Léger (1769 - 1869), sur lequel j'ai trouvé peu d'informations biographiques, a fait enregistrer le son des battements de son cœur. L'enregistrement sonore peut être écouté sur KZread : kzread.info/dash/bejne/fq16wZaKiZenn6g.html.

  • @HermitKing731
    @HermitKing73110 ай бұрын

    These people have likely met people born in the 1600s.

  • @ImPacmanOnYoutube
    @ImPacmanOnYoutube Жыл бұрын

    I can't imagine what the human population was around those times.

  • @energyasylum997
    @energyasylum997 Жыл бұрын

    Thumbnail picture is UNCLE BEN of Uncle Bens Minute Rice!! Or Sam Jackson in Django movie!! ✊🏽

  • @Urlocallordandsavior
    @Urlocallordandsavior Жыл бұрын

    I wonder why is there so few navy men who got their photographs taken compared to army men back in those days.

  • @goognamgoognw6637
    @goognamgoognw6637 Жыл бұрын

    These people lived a 100% organic life with no pesticides, no plastics, no pollutant, as long as they had reasonable sustenance they lived well into their 90's with a clear mind.

  • @juancordeiro5507

    @juancordeiro5507

    Жыл бұрын

    You are wrong people died younger

  • @goognamgoognw6637

    @goognamgoognw6637

    Жыл бұрын

    @@juancordeiro5507 those who didn't lived very old.

  • @KD400_

    @KD400_

    Жыл бұрын

    But they still had poor nutrition don't forget George Washington literally had none of his teeth remaining lol

  • @SofaKingShit

    @SofaKingShit

    11 ай бұрын

    They were using lead (pipes and cosmetics), arsenic(food and clothing) and cyanide (leather) in their consumables

  • @goognamgoognw6637

    @goognamgoognw6637

    11 ай бұрын

    @@SofaKingShit Guess what, you are eating glyphosate, you body is full of ingested nano plastic particles, the chemical industry is using more unknown long term toxicity compound now than ever. In a century someone will say how toxic your life is today. At least they ate organic non mass produced foods.

  • @RDX1981
    @RDX1981 Жыл бұрын

    The wife of 3rd president , that was amazin , her story. Some of these people probably heard stories and saw people from 17 century

  • @DanielGonzalez-sp9xz
    @DanielGonzalez-sp9xz Жыл бұрын

    A lot of these people lived long past 100 woah!

  • @PC-lu3zf
    @PC-lu3zf Жыл бұрын

    My 5th great grandfather was born in 1757 died in 1862 I’ve 2 photos of him.

  • @barrymoore4470

    @barrymoore4470

    Жыл бұрын

    Those are to be treasured, for sure. Do you know the photographic process used in those two images of him?

  • @Miles-co5xm
    @Miles-co5xm Жыл бұрын

    Age of the people at this time was very high

  • @enriquefau8974
    @enriquefau8974 Жыл бұрын

    To mind-blowingly put in perspective, some of these people were born: ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - While people who were born in the 1600s still comprised the majority of the population in the world - While world population was around 800 million people (c. 1750) (less than a single modern country like India or China) - While feudalism was still a primary way of structuring society in some places like France (until the French Revolution, 1789) - Before the last woman was officially burned at the stake (Catherine Murphy, executed 1789) - Before the steam engine was invented (c. 1760) - Before the water-powered cotton mill was invented (1742) - Before Anders Celsius proposed a new way of measuring temperature (1742) - Before Napoleon Bonaparte (born 1769) - Before British King George III (born 1738) - Decades before the Seven Years' War would even start, which could be considered one of the first leading factors to the foundation of the United States, which happened even more decades later - Before the Australian territory was even mapped or explored (James Cook first explorer 1769 - 1770) - Before Adam Smith published "The Wealth of the Nations", considered by many as the birth of modern economics and capitalism (1776)

  • @MetaBlooper
    @MetaBlooper Жыл бұрын

    I just had a question: is there any photo of someone born in the 1700s? If not, what’s the youngest person born in the 1700s photographed?

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    The oldest plausible birthdate photographed is 1744/45, with the oldest unverified birthdates going back to 1735. There are thousands of photographs (if not more) of people born in the 1700s.

  • @MetaBlooper

    @MetaBlooper

    Жыл бұрын

    I didn’t even realize my question was do dumb. What I ment was is there a photo of someone still in there 30s who was born in the 1700s. For this to be the case, they would have needed to be photographed in late 1839 and been born in late 1799.

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@MetaBlooper Sorry, I understand what you mean now. While I'm currently not aware of any photos of someone born in the 1700s in their 30s, a possible candidate is Alphée de Regny (1799 - 1881), who appeared in some early daguerreotypes of Jean-Gabriel Eynard: c. 1840-41 (age 40-42), de Regny is standing in the center: bge-geneve.ch/iconographie/oeuvre/2013-001-dag-040 c. 1841 (age c. 42), standing on the left: bge-geneve.ch/iconographie/oeuvre/p1973247 c. 1841/42 (age c. 42-43), with his wife and child: bge-geneve.ch/iconographie/oeuvre/84xt25566 c. 1841 (aged c. 42), de Regny is second from the left: bge-geneve.ch/iconographie/oeuvre/2013-001-dag-024 Here are some other ones which come to my mind, although there are many more out there: Jean-Henri Grandpierre and Alphonse Lacroix (both born in 1799), photographed by Jeaen-Gabriel Eynard in 1843 (aged 43-44): bge-geneve.ch/iconographie/oeuvre/2013-001-dag-033 Self-portrait by Antoine Claudet (1797 - 1867), early 1840s, aged c. 43+: www.antiquestradegazette.com/news/2013/early-photographic-self-portrait-unveiled-after-170-years/ Samuel Bispham (1796 - 1885) photographed at age 43 in Summer 1840 by Robert Cornelius: books.google.com/books?id=QsI0EAAAQBAJ&pg=PT129&lpg=PT129&dq=robert+cornelius+samuel+bispham&source=bl&ots=ObyZPwcv1G&sig=ACfU3U3qLORJSNHQFU44wOSosO5E9n-lTA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwia9bD6z6r7AhU9_7sIHXCkBo8Q6AF6BAgpEAM#v=onepage&q=robert%20cornelius%20samuel%20bispham&f=false Another photo of a young(er) looking person born in the 1700s is David Ramsay Hay (1795 - 1866), photographed between age 44 and 50 by Hill & Adamson. www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/67720/david-ramsay-hay-1798-1866-interior-designer-and-author-b

  • @MetaBlooper

    @MetaBlooper

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Ай бұрын

    The M Huet portrait has a possible identity, Constant Huet, born 1797. If the date and identity are correct, he would be aged 40: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:1837_Daguerreotype_of_Huet_by_Daguerre.jpg

  • @Zones33
    @Zones33 Жыл бұрын

    I think it's insane that some of these individuals were Centenarian and some Supercentarians in a time way before modern medicine

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    There are many reports of centenarians from the middle ages, Ancient Rome, Ancient Greece and Ancient Egypt. The Wang Genealogy from China records several people aged 95 or over, going as far back as the 12th century. www.demogr.mpg.de/papers/books/monograph2/record%20longevity.htm There are even more reports of people living 90+ during these times, for example Ramesses II, who is reported to have died at about 90.

  • @bmdjk

    @bmdjk

    Жыл бұрын

    Or maybe that is why they did......

  • @bob3studios
    @bob3studios2 ай бұрын

    who were photographed people who had the earliest dates of passing away? e.g william henry harrison in 1841, though said photograph is lost.

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    2 ай бұрын

    There is a picture of Reuben Law, who died in 1840, but nothing really confirming that it couldn't be his son or someone else. The merchant John Vaughan (1756 - 1841) was photographed by Robert Cornelius, but the daguerreotype has been lost. There are other contenders who may have been photographed, for example the daguerreotypist Vincent Chevalier who died in 1841, or the father the daguerreotypist Richard Beard who died in 1840.

  • @googlesucks6029
    @googlesucks60292 жыл бұрын

    I think some of these people were dead by the time they were photographed. Like literally.

  • @aeiou9054

    @aeiou9054

    2 жыл бұрын

    What do you mean?

  • @googlesucks6029

    @googlesucks6029

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@aeiou9054 The Victorians had a fad where they took pictures with and of dead loved ones, they'd prop them up and pose them like they were still alive. Some of these people do not look good at all.

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    2 жыл бұрын

    Any specific ones you're talking about? In most post-mortem photos from this era the subject is lying down, most of the time on a bed. You would need quite a sturdy stand to support the weight of a dead body.

  • @aeiou9054

    @aeiou9054

    2 жыл бұрын

    And wich people in this video are dead? Sorry for My English

  • @irisheyesofbelfast

    @irisheyesofbelfast

    Жыл бұрын

    @@arago8649 thank you for using your head. There's many myths regarding the Victorian era, and it boggles my mind that people believe that bs. I understand it is EVERYWHERE......but attempting to educate does nothing most of the time because Google and Jack Mord said so! No sitting, standing, painting eyelids, placing glass eyes, etc etc. The reason the "stand alone corpse" bs doesn't die quietly is due to the internet and greed. Two standing corpse photos recently sold for $10,000! They don't exist!! That is criminal! Here's video of the stand showing how it couldn't even hold a child's body.

  • @user-em7xm8gq2f
    @user-em7xm8gq2f Жыл бұрын

    Очень интересно увидеть реальные фотографии людей, которые родились ещё 3 столетия назад.

  • @kasajizo3136
    @kasajizo3136 Жыл бұрын

    imagine if beethoven lived 20 years longer

  • @barrymoore4470

    @barrymoore4470

    Жыл бұрын

    He died the very year (1827) the first known photograph (that is, the captured image from a camera obscura) was produced (some sources give 1826 as the possible date for this pioneering photograph, but it was certainly made no later than 1827).

  • @stevensims3342
    @stevensims3342 Жыл бұрын

    All of these people look like they lived a very rough and tiresome life.

  • @MetaBlooper
    @MetaBlooper Жыл бұрын

    Doesn’t John Owen have a date of baptism?

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, but it can't be confirmed by contemporary records

  • @user-xl7uo7tu6v
    @user-xl7uo7tu6v11 ай бұрын

    Интересные очень 👍👍👍🦋🦋🦋

  • @ChrisJones-vb5je
    @ChrisJones-vb5je Жыл бұрын

    There is no way Cesar is 111 in that pic, maybe 90

  • @rustymonke
    @rustymonke Жыл бұрын

    4:40 coincidence, I think not

  • @Annie1962
    @Annie19622 жыл бұрын

    please - you don't leave the information up for long enough. slow down

  • @edeliteedelite1961

    @edeliteedelite1961

    2 жыл бұрын

    Pause

  • @byronmurphy1977

    @byronmurphy1977

    2 жыл бұрын

    Change the play speed to 0.75

  • @kacperlesniewski8553

    @kacperlesniewski8553

    2 жыл бұрын

    Learn how to read.

  • @sonorex

    @sonorex

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Annie, just hit the "space" key every time you need further time to read and use it again when done. The key both pauses and gets back to play the video. So you can concentrate on what's on screen.

  • @lornamarie5544
    @lornamarie55447 ай бұрын

    Fascinating, is it me or did people have bigger conks back then? 🤔

  • @youknow227

    @youknow227

    6 ай бұрын

    Conks?

  • @lornamarie5544

    @lornamarie5544

    6 ай бұрын

    @@youknow227 noses - maybe it’s the camera lighting or evolution and natural selection 🤔

  • @mili6580
    @mili6580 Жыл бұрын

    That US has nothing to do with today US

  • @michaelverbakel7632

    @michaelverbakel7632

    Жыл бұрын

    Two photos that blew me away. One was an actual photograph of Jose de San Martin, he is revered in Argentina and is considered the founder of the modern Argentine nation today. The other photo was an actual photograph of the last living child of King George III who was the grandfather of Queen Victoria, so she was Queen Victoria's aunt. There are actually no existing photographs of King George III's family, only paintings, drawings or etchings. This is because most of George III's family lived in the 1700's or early 1800's.

  • @earli2445
    @earli24452 жыл бұрын

    promosm

  • @itsjustmeBen
    @itsjustmeBen10 ай бұрын

    Dude at 3:46 poking his belly fat 😂

  • @pilesthedonkey
    @pilesthedonkey Жыл бұрын

    Not even close

  • @041375lalo
    @041375lalo Жыл бұрын

    Most people were black

  • @kennygroth4938
    @kennygroth4938 Жыл бұрын

    What a bunch of boomers

  • @IeremiasMoore-El
    @IeremiasMoore-El Жыл бұрын

    negative retouching, etching and modeling this is theatre and every single picture shown has been photo-manipulated "photoshop"has been around since at-least the 18th century with evidence of it being around during the renissance combined with projecting images and imposing them on to things then adding and subtracting layers such as the most famous pic of honest abe being a composite of his head on John Calhoun's body, or the many of stallins photos that he had his enemies taken out ....their are countless examples general grant at at city point ( composite ) or the massacre of the domincans

  • @dorcaswalker1867
    @dorcaswalker1867 Жыл бұрын

    title is misleading and a bad example of english !!!

  • @arago8649

    @arago8649

    Жыл бұрын

    How so?