Chief Gall (Phizí) of the Hunkpapa Lakota at Standing Rock Reservation, North Dakota - Circa 1880s [591×707]

"I went to your great city [Washington D.C.] and saw many people. Some had fine clothes and diamonds; others were barefoot and ragged. No money to get something to eat. They are beggars, and need your help more than the Indian does. I gave them the money you gave me. All people are alike among Indians. We feed our poor." Read more [here.](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gall_(Native_American_leader))

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Bruce and Demi, 1990s

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1984-1986 found my old HS stash box

An illicit time capsule, which is totally legal in California today.

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Adult Star and model Mary Millington, 1975. Colorized.

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The Skeet Club of Fall Creek, Wisconsin posed for an official portrait in the early 1900s, equipped with shotguns, rifles, bottles, hounds, and a papier-mâché rabbit. Look out ladies and paper animals alike!

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Lux Interior and Poison Ivy circa 1980

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Members of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows in Kerkhoven, Minnesota, dressed in their ceremonial regalia, circa 1900s.

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Little girl and her pet toad at a pet show, Venice Beach, California, 1936.

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Johnny Cash performing for prisoners at Folsom Prison, January 13, 1968.

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My dad and his VW 🐞 about to go explore the world circa 1994 March ish

What were you doing in March of 1994

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Richard "Dick" Harding Davis, circa 1907

"1900s Ideal Man" Richard Harding Davis embodied derring-do and masculinity. A novelist, journalist, and dapper man-about-town, he was a leading war correspondent, covering the Spanish–American War, Second Boer War, and World War I. His dramatic reports paired with his striking appearance: square-jawed, stylish, and always clean-shaven, setting a trend at the turn of the 20th century. Many leading writers admired him, and he inspired illustrator Charles Dana Gibson's "Gibson man." People of all genders would exclaim, "What a Dick!" His personality blended vanity with self-deprecation. "What I like most in men," he said, "is the ability to sit opposite a mirror at dinner and not look in it" — a trait he admitted to lacking. Davis died from a sudden heart attack on April 11, 1916, while on a telephone call a week before his 52nd birthday. Read more [here.](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Harding_Davis)

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