Wow! Underwater photos being done in that time? It's amazing! Am I right?
14 Historical Photos That Can Leave You Stunned

Photographs have the power to tell a story with a much greater impact than mere words. They also provide a quick and interesting glimpse into the time they were taken. We have all seen the famous photograph, V-J Day in Times Square or the iconic portrait of Winston Churchill scowling over a lost cigar. But there are many others that although stunning, have been hiding in obscurity for a long time.
Bright Side collected 14 stunning yet lesser known photographs that are bound to astound you.
Gypsies using a bear as a masseur, 1946
Relocating a 7,600-ton apartment building using hydraulics, 1987
During the communist era in Romania, huge Soviet-style apartment buildings were everywhere. However, while planning a majestic boulevard in the city of Alba Iulia, authorities realized that one of those buildings got in their way. The solution? They split it in 2 and moved one of the halves to the other side of the road using rail tracks and wheels.
80 families stayed inside for the ride. The power and water remained connected.
A woman placed a glass of water on the edge of her balcony and it did not spill a drop during the move.
A computer defeats a reigning chess world champion for the first time, 1997
In the rematch between Garry Kasparov and the updated chess-playing supercomputer Deep Blue, Deep Blue became the first computer system to defeat a reigning world champion in a match under standard chess tournament time controls.
Acoustic locator, 1914-1918
American troops used a newly-developed acoustic locator mounted on a wheeled platform. These later became obscure due to the development of radar in the 1940s.
A shot underwater, 1938
This photograph was shot by the American photographer Bruce Mozert. He is widely regarded as a pioneer of underwater photography.
Everyone in New York in 1939 wore a hat.
The only known photo of a living Quagga at the London Zoo, 1870
The Quagga was a zebra that lived in South Africa. It became extinct in the late 19th century. The name was derived from its call, which sounded like, “kwa-ha-ha.”
A human chess game in St.Petersburg (then Leningrad) in Russia, 1924
This unconventional chess match was played between 2 chess masters, Peter Romanovsky and Ilya Rabinovich. They called in their moves over the telephone and real-life chess pieces—human beings and horses— moved across a huge chessboard covering the Palace Square.
An uncomfortable looking Greta Garbo posing with MGM’s Leo the Lion, 1926
“Ham the Astrochimp”, the first Chimpanzee to be launched into space, 1961
He was launched into space on January 31, 1961, as part of America’s space program. Ham’s name is an acronym for the Holloman Aerospace Medical Center, located at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico that prepared him for the launch.
Residents of West Berlin lift their children to show their grandparents who reside on the Eastern side of the Berlin Wall, 1961
Waiters serve lunch to steelworkers building the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on Park Avenue in NYC, 1930
Pigeons fitted with cameras to take aerial photos, 1908
Which photo did you like the most? Let us know in the comments below.
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