Bizarre Historical Photos: Peering into the Strange Past

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As the 20th century unfolded, photographers were on a mission to capture the world’s evolution.

They snapped away at everything from the chaos of war to the birth of new inventions, as well as the everyday weird and wonderful sights.

Think about Boston’s Great Molasses Flood or Los Angeles’ strange alligator picnics. These are just a few examples of the oddities that sprinkle our history.

Whether it’s a photo of an unusually large vase or a failed attempt at an amphibious bicycle, these snapshots piqued the interest of both casual viewers and serious historians.

Even the most ordinary photos, like mugshots, can reveal fascinating stories if you look closely.

While many of these historical photos bring a smile or a sense of curiosity, some can be quite sobering. Images of horses jumping into water or baby strollers built to resist gas attacks remind us of the darker moments in our past.

But no matter the emotion they evoke, these photos are all pieces of a puzzle — the story of us. As we uncover the main threads of history, let’s not forget to celebrate its quirks.

Through these old photos, let’s take a look at the peculiar inventions, the outdated customs, and the unique moments that paint our past in all its bizarre and captivating glory, whether they make us laugh or bring a tear to our eyes.

Bizarre Photos from History
A woman tests a stroller intended to be resistant to gas attacks in Hextable, England in 1938, not long before the outbreak of World War II.
Bizarre Photos from History
A picnic at Los Angeles’ California Alligator Farm, where patrons were allowed to mingle freely among trained alligators from 1907 to 1953.
Bizarre Photos from History
Adolf Hitler poses in lederhosen, circa 1927. Hitler had this photo hidden from the public because, in his opinion, it undermined his dignity.
Bizarre Photos from History
Princeton University students after a snowball fight in 1893.
Bizarre Photos from History
Members of the Young Pioneers, a Soviet government youth group, don gas masks as part of an attack preparation drill in the Leningrad area in 1937.
Bizarre Photos from History
Back in the 1930s, when alarm clocks were pricey and not always dependable, folks in Britain sometimes hired a knocker-upper to wake them up in unique ways. Take Mary Smith, for example. She made around six pence a week by shooting dried peas at the windows of sleeping workers in East London using a pea shooter.
Bizarre Photos from History
Before Tim Allen became famous for his grunting on “Home Improvement,” he was actually a small-time drug dealer who once walked through an airport with a pound of cocaine. To avoid a long prison term, he snitched on his partners and eventually became the comedian we all recognize today.
Bizarre Photos from History
The Cyclomer, an amphibious bicycle that never caught on following its introduction in Paris in 1932.
Bizarre Photos from History
No one knows exactly why Harriet Cole, a hospital cleaning lady, decided to donate her body to science. But her donation of her nervous system has had a lasting impact. After Cole passed away in 1888, Dr. Rufus B. Weaver did something unprecedented: he removed and preserved an entire nervous system. It took six months of meticulous work, but when he finished, it became an important teaching tool and a fascinating sight for aspiring doctors. Since then, this achievement has only been successfully repeated three times.
Bizarre Photos from History
French neurologist Guillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne carries out an experiment in electrophysiology by triggering a subject’s muscles with electrical probes in order to produce a given facial expression. 1850s.
Bizarre Photos from History
In April 1926, many Ku Klux Klan members in Cañon City, Colorado strolled down Main Street and had a good time at a traveling carnival’s Ferris wheel. They even posed for a photo, as requested by the carnival owner, and the story made it to the front page of the local newspaper the following day.
Bizarre Photos from History
Las Vegas in 1955, before glitz and glam became a common sign.
Bizarre Photos from History
A 106-year-old woman sits in front of her home guarding it with a rifle, in Degh village, near the city of Goris in southern Armenia in 1990. (Photo by Armineh Johannes).
Bizarre Photos from History
In 1917, 16-year-old Elsie Wright and her nine-year-old cousin Frances Griffiths took photos with the “Cottingley Fairies” in the village of Cottingley, near Bingley in West Yorkshire. One of the greatest hoaxes of the 20th century, they only admitted the photos were faked in 1983.
Bizarre Photos from History
Vehicles and pedestrians stand in chaos in Stockholm, Sweden on September 3, 1967, the day that the country switched from driving on the left side of the road to the right.
Bizarre Photos from History
Participants in the Beautiful Leg Contest wear pillowcases over their heads so that the judges can see only their legs. Palisades Amusement Park, New Jersey. 1951.
Bizarre Photos from History
President Lyndon B. Johnson drives his Amphicar on April 10, 1965. This amphibious land-to-water vehicle of West German origin was produced for several years during the 1960s.
Bizarre Photos from History
Surrealist artist Salvador Dali poses for the photograph known as Dali Atomicus, a collaboration between himself and American photographer Philippe Halsman that was published in 1948.
Bizarre Photos from History
In 1910, the steamship Princess May ran aground in Alaska due to thick fog. Despite carrying nearly 150 people, everyone on board was unharmed.
Bizarre Photos from History
For a brief period in the 1930s, mothers in London kept their babies in cages suspended outside their windows to give them fresh air. Miraculously, no injuries or deaths were ever reported.
Bizarre Photos from History
Robert McGee was left permanently scarred after surviving a scalping at the hands of the Sioux tribe in 1864, when he was just a 13-year-old orphan.
Bizarre Photos from History
Back on July 4, 1905, folks gathered to watch a horse diving act, possibly in Pueblo, Colorado. Horse diving was a big hit in the 19th century, featuring horses (sometimes with a rider) leaping from towers into water pools from as high as 60 feet.
Bizarre Photos from History
Women wear plastic headgear intended to protect themselves from snowstorms in Montreal, 1939.
Bizarre Photos from History
Back in 1961, Soviet doctor Leonid Rogozov was in Antarctica at a Russian base when he realized he had acute appendicitis. The twist? He was the only doc there. With no way to bail due to crazy snowstorms, he had to perform an appendectomy on himself. And guess what? He made it through and was back on duty in just two days.
Bizarre Photos from History
Much of Boston’s North End lies in ruin following the Great Molasses Flood of January 15, 1919. A molasses storage tank broke apart, releasing as much as 2.3 million gallons into the streets at 35 miles per hour, ultimately killing 21 and injuring 150.
Bizarre Photos from History
Olive Oatman was born a Mormon, but after her family was slaughtered by Native Americans, she became Oach, a Mojave tribeswoman in the mid-19th century.⁠ Although she later reentered Western society, ⁠she spent much of her adolescent life in the Native American tribe.
Bizarre Photos from History
The German airship Hindenburg, swastikas and all, flies over New York City on the afternoon of May 6, 1937, a few hours before its historic, fiery crash in Manchester Township, New Jersey.
Bizarre Photos from History
Enos the chimpanzee lies in his fight couch before being inserted into NASA’s Mercury-Atlas 5 space capsule, in which he would become the first primate to orbit the Earth on November 29, 1961.
Bizarre Photos from History
Beach policeman Bill Norton measures the distance between a woman’s knee and the bottom of her swimsuit to be sure that it’s not too large — in keeping with rules of the time — in Washington, D.C., 1922.
Bizarre Photos from History
A man holds a Krummlauf, an experimental curved rifle barrel attachment developed by the Germans during World War II in order to shoot around walls and over barriers.
Bizarre Photos from History
A man wears an early version of roller skates powered with pedals and wheels, 1910.
Bizarre Photos from History
English archaeologist Howard Carter first opens the innermost portion of King Tutankhamun’s tomb soon after its discovery near Luxor, Egypt in 1922.
Bizarre Photos from History
A youngster stands near a pissoir, one of the many outdoor urinals installed on the streets of Paris starting in the mid-19th century.
Bizarre Photos from History
A train lays wrecked after entering Paris’ Montparnasse station too fast and failing to brake before crashing through the station wall and down onto the street below, 1895.
Bizarre Photos from History
During World War II in 1942, a Syrian bear named Wojtek was enlisted into the Polish II Corps. He was treated like a regular soldier, complete with a rank, paybook, and serial number. Here, he is seen sitting for a photo with one of his comrades.
Bizarre Photos from History
Cyclists smoke cigarettes while competing in the 1927 Tour de France.
Bizarre Photos from History
The as-yet unassembled face of the Statue of Liberty sits unpacked in New York soon after its delivery from France on June 17, 1885.
Bizarre Photos from History
An enormous octopus balloon rises from the ground at the barrage balloon training center of Tennessee’s Camp Tyson, circa World War II.
Bizarre Photos from History
A pile of American bison skulls sits at an unspecified location, waiting to be ground down into fertilizer, circa mid-1870s.
Bizarre Photos from History
German-American farmer John Meints displays the ill effects of the attack he suffered on August 19, 1918, when locals took him from his home in Luverne, Minnesota, whipped him, then tarred and feathered him. Meints was attacked amid anti-German sentiment that had taken root during World War I.
Bizarre Photos from History
Inventor Hugo Gernsback models his television goggles for LIFE magazine in 1963.
Bizarre Photos from History
A man demonstrates a steel cap, splinter goggles (vision is obtained through thin slits in goggles), and a steel dagger gauntlet, manufactured for the British military during World War I.
Bizarre Photos from History
James Naismith, the inventor of basketball, holds an early ball and basket used for the game at an unspecified date sometime prior to 1939.
Bizarre Photos from History
A Mongolian woman sits trapped inside a wooden box as a form of punishment, 1913.
Bizarre Photos from History
A soldier sprays the interior of an Italian house with a mixture of DDT and kerosene in order to control malaria during World War II, circa 1945.
Bizarre Photos from History
In the winter of 1936, a clothier in Denmark came up with an odd but effective sales scheme: he hung more than 1,000 overcoats from a scaffold around his shop.
Bizarre Photos from History
A Red Cross dog wears a gas mask, 1917.
Bizarre Photos from History
A man stands next to an enormous container used to store wine in Kakheti, Georgia, 1881.
Bizarre Photos from History
Jack the baboon worked on the railway system in South Africa for 9 years in the late 19th century — and never made a single mistake.
Bizarre Photos from History
On November 10, 1938, Maryland inventor George Stern unveiled his creation: a highly volatile fluid that vaporizes so rapidly that the released gases won’t ignite. Interestingly, Stern believed its only practical use would be to create spooky effects for horror films.
Bizarre Photos from History
A man poses with a motorcycle equipped with skis in order to travel through the snow in Kehrsatz, Switzerland during World War I.
Bizarre Photos from History
Laika, the first living creature ever sent into space, sits aboard the Soviet Sputnik II spacecraft, launched from Kazakhstan on November 3, 1957.

(Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons / Britannica / Library of Congress).

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