
- January 22, 1926. Washington, D.C. “Arcade Hockey Club.” And if roller hockey isn’t your cup of tea, we also have Billiards Dancing Bowling.

- Washington, D.C., circa 1919. “Sennett girls.” Producer Mack Sennett’s comedy reels featured a bevy of “bathing beauties,” among them Marvel Rea, seen here in the harlequin costume. National Photo Company.




- 1962, Seattle, Washington, USA – A little girl listens in on The Hearing Exhibition at the Seattle World’s Fair.


- Space Pilots. Minneapolis, Minnesota: A small boy’s dream of piloting a rocket ship through outer space came as nearly true as modern science could make it for plastic-helmeted Johnny Bower (left), and Neil Smith, both seven years old. The youngsters got their big break when Minneapolis-Honeywell’s Aeronautical company invited them, among other young sons of technical employees to visit the plant and see what their dads were doing. “Pilots” Bower and Smith are manipulating special computing equipment developed to duplicate characteristics of supersonic craft and the flight conditions they might be expected to encounter.

- Host Bud Collyer brings laughter and smiles to the faces of panelists Polly Bergen, Ralph Bellamy and Kitty Carlisle while Hy Gardner remains only mildly amused.



- Nazis burn the library of Magnus Hirschfeld’s Institute for Sexual Science in Berlin, 1933. In doing so countless texts and documentation of early 20th century LGBTQ* history disappears. Remember, it’s never “just some books.”

- Nun using card catalogue in the New York Public Library, 1944. Alfred Eisenstaedt.
Tags: 1910s, 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, 1960s, Alfred Eisenstaedt, athletics, Berlin, Bud Collyer, Civil Rights Movement, comics, DC, film, gay rights, Hy Gardner, identity, Institute for Sexual Science, kiss, Kitty Carlisle, lesbians, libraries, Mack Sennett, Magnus Hirschfeld, Marvel Rea, nuns, Polly Bergen, protest, public history, queer, race, Ralph Bellamy, rockets, sexuality, space, television, theater, To Tell the Truth, World Fairs
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1962, Seattle, Washington, USA --- An 11-year-old girl bends light waves on the Hartl Disc inside the US Junior Laboratory of Science Pavilion at the World's Fair. This pavilion allows children to interact and gain knowledge of complicated science facts. --- Image by © Ted Spiegel/CORBIS

The FJ Holden, 1954.

No strings attached: Berlei girdles, 1954.


Minneapolis, Minnesota, circa 1905. "West Hotel." Busy both architecturally and commercially. 8x10 inch glass negative, Detroit Publishing Co.
…aaaaaand Monkees!


Tags: 1900s, 1950s, 1960s, advertising, automobiles, hotels, LGBT, Minneapolis, music, protest, queer, sexuality, television, The Monkees, women's bodies, World Fairs