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September 6, 2020

The Execution of Leon Czolgosz, the Man Who Assassinated President William McKinley in 1901

The Execution of Leon Czolgosz, or Execution of Czolgosz with Panorama of Auburn Prison, is a 1901 silent film produced by the Edison Studios arms of Edison Manufacturing Company. The film is a dramatic reenactment of the execution of Leon Czolgosz by electric chair at Auburn Correctional Facility following his 1901 conviction for the assassination of William McKinley. It is considered an important film in the history of cinema.



Throughout 1901, Edison had produced and released numerous films about the assassination, due to intense public interest. For the final film in the series, producer Edwin S. Porter sought permission to film the execution itself but was denied. Instead, they filmed outside the prison the day of the execution, then recreated the execution on a set.

The film comprises four shots. Two of them are actual footage of the outside of Auburn Prison on the day of the execution. The other two are recreations of the execution with actors, cut together in an early example of continuity editing.

The film begins by showing railroad cars in the foreground with the overshadowing walls of a state prison in the background. The second camera position, from a higher elevation, pans slowly showing the yard interior of the prison and some of the large buildings. There is a dissolve from the exterior to the interior, a set of a stone wall with an iron barred door. Uniformed men are visible; they open the door and remove a man in civilian clothes. The camera then dissolves to another set in which there is a chair with wires attached. The man in civilian clothes is brought in and strapped to the chair. At the end of the film, two of the six witnesses examine him with stethoscopes.

Clipping of a wash drawing by T. Dart Walker depicting the assassination of President William McKinley by Leon Czolgosz at Pan-American Exposition reception on September 6, 1901.

Czolgosz had shot McKinley on September 6, 1901. Eight days later, the nation’s 25th president succumbed to his wounds. He was succeeded in office by Theodore Roosevelt, the vice president. McKinley had been elected to a second term in 1900.

Czolgosz was executed seven weeks later on October 29, 1901. While some American anarchists described his action as inevitable, motivated by the country’s brutal social conditions, others condemned his actions, arguing that he hindered the movement’s goals by damaging its public perception.

Czolgosz’s brother, Waldek, and his brother-in-law, Frank Bandowski, were in attendance at the execution. When Waldek asked the warden for his brother's body to be taken for proper burial, he was informed that he “would never be able to take it away” and that crowds of people would mob him. Although post-trial Czolgosz and his attorneys were informed of his right to appeal the sentence, they chose not to after Czolgosz declined to appeal, and because the attorneys knew that there were no grounds for appeal; the trial had been “quick, swift, and fair.”

Scene of the shooting inside the Temple of Music. The spot where McKinley was shot is marked with an X, near the bottom-right corner of the picture.

McKinley was shaking hands in a reception line in the Temple of Music on grounds of the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York, when the 28-year-old anarchist approached him. He had a .32-caliber Iver Johnson revolver which he had purchased four days earlier for $4.50 and which he concealed in a handkerchief in his right hand.

McKinley, perhaps assuming the handkerchief was an attempt by Czolgosz to hide a physical defect, reached out to shake the man’s left hand. Czolgosz moved in close to the president and fired two shots into McKinley’s abdomen. The president rose slightly on his toes before collapsing forward, saying “be careful how you tell my wife.” McKinley’s aides wrestled Czolgosz to the ground before he could fire a third bullet.

President McKinley greeting well-wishers at a reception in the Temple of Music minutes before he was shot on September 6, 1901.

George B. Cortelyou, McKinley’s secretary, had feared that an assassination attempt would take place during a visit to the Temple of Music and took it off the schedule twice. McKinley restored it each time.

McKinley suffered a superficial wound to the sternum. The other bullet, however, entered his abdomen (it was never found). McKinley was rushed into surgery and seemed to be on the mend by September 12. Later that day, however, the president’s condition worsened and, on September 14, he died from gangrene that had remained undetected in the wound.

Witnesses said McKinley’s last words were those of the hymn “Nearer My God to Thee.”

One of the last photographs of the late President McKinley. Taken as he was ascending the steps of the Temple of Music, September 6, 1901.

The “last posed photograph” of President McKinley, in the Government Building on September 5, 1901. Left to right: Mrs. John Miller Horton, Chairwoman of the Entertainment Committee of the Woman’s Board of Managers; John G. Milburn; Manuel de Azpíroz, the Mexican Ambassador; the President; George B. Cortelyou, the President’s secretary; Col. John H. Bingham of the Government Board.

Czolgosz, a Polish immigrant, grew up in Detroit and had worked as a child laborer in a steel mill. He had lost his job during the economic Panic of 1893. As a young adult, he gravitated toward socialist and anarchist dogma. He claimed to have killed McKinley because the president headed what Czolgosz regarded as a corrupt government. The unrepentant killer’s last words were, “I killed the president because he was the enemy of the good people — the working people.”

Soon after taking office, Roosevelt declared, “When compared with the suppression of anarchy, every other question sinks into insignificance.”

The Temple of Music was demolished in November 1901, along with the rest of the Exposition grounds. A stone marker in the median of Fordham Drive, a residential street in Buffalo, marks the approximate spot where the shooting occurred.

Congress subsequently enacted legislation that charged the U.S. Secret Service with responsibility for protecting the president, an assignment that has been expanded in subsequent years to also cover the vice president, their respective family members and the president’s top aides.




These Are the World’s Oldest Masks Ever Discovered, And Are Estimated to Be 9000 Years Old!

In 1983, a small team of archaeologists led by Harvard prehistorian Ofer Bar-Yosef, excavated a recently looted cave in the southern Judean Desert. Known as Nahal Hemar, the site appears to have been used to store thousands of objects from an ancestor cult. The scientists uncovered rope baskets, wooden beads, shells, flint knives, figurines carved from bone, human skulls decorated with molded asphalt, and embroidered textiles that may once have been ritual costumes.


They also found fragments of two stone masks, approximately 9,000 years old, which now belong to the Israel Antiquities Authority. Strands of hair, preserved for thousands of years in the dry climate, were stuck to the masks in clumps.

Other Neolithic masks have also been unearthed in the area as well. The rare stone artifacts were sculpted by early farmers whose immediate ancestors had given up hunting and gathering and settled in the Judean Hills, the location of the modern city of Jerusalem, and in the fringes of the nearby Judean Desert.

Weighing in at one or two kilograms apiece, each of the artifacts represents a oval visage with glaring ocular cavities, toothy maws, and a set of holes along the outer edge. They were likely painted in antiquity, but only one has remnants of pigment. Each of them is unique, and possibly depicts individuals. Some of the faces are old, others appear younger. One is a miniature, the size of a brooch. They may represent ancestors venerated as part of an early Stone Age religion.










Glamorous Photos of Ann Sheridan in the 1930s and ’40s

Born 1915 in Denton, Texas, American actress and singer Ann Sheridan made her film debut at 19 in Search for Beauty, she played uncredited bit parts under contract in Paramount films for the next two years starting at $75 a week (equivalent to $1,400 in 2019).


Sheridan worked regularly from 1934 until her death, first in film and later in television. Notable roles include San Quentin (1937) with Pat O'Brien and Humphrey Bogart, Angels with Dirty Faces (1938) with James Cagney and Bogart, They Drive by Night (1940) with George Raft and Bogart, The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942) with Monty Woolley, Kings Row (1942) with Ronald Reagan, Nora Prentiss (1947), and I Was a Male War Bride (1949) with Cary Grant.

In 1966, Sheridan began starring in a new television series, a Western-themed comedy called Pistols ‘n’ Petticoats. She became ill during the filming and died of esophageal cancer with massive liver metastases at age 51 in 1967, in Los Angeles.

For her contributions to the motion picture industry, Ann Sheridan has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7024 Hollywood Boulevard.

Take a look at these glamorous photos to see the beauty of Ann Sheridan in the 1930s and 1940s.










September 5, 2020

33 Beautiful Color Photos of Hastings Blossom Festival, New Zealand in 1956

Hastings’ Blossom Festival was first held in 1950.

It was the creation of Greater Hastings, an organisation established initially to provide an Easter attraction (The Highland Games, first held in 1951).

A Blossom Queen contest was added in 1957 to the Blossom Festival. The rules of the contest stated that contestants presenting themselves had to be aged between 18 and 28, unmarried and, among other things, possess “poise, personality, charm, beauty of face and figure, education, voice quality, speaking ability and be in good health.”

No swimsuit parade would occur and, as the promotional material stated: “This is not a bathing beauty contest - but a Blossom Festival quest.”

At the height of the Blossom festivals in the 1950s, about 60,000 people crammed the streets of Hastings to view the decorated paper crépe floats.

These beautiful color photos from Wayslider that show the Hastings Blossom Festival, New Zealand on 15 September 1956, the year Hastings celebrated attaining city status.

Napier City float

Acme School of Driving float

Baldwin & Swanwick float

Bank of New Zealand float

Barclay Motors float





40 Candid Photographs Capture Best Moments of Freddie Mercury Hanging Out With His Famous Friends

“It’s so easy now, ’cause you got friends you can trust
Friends will be friends”
Freddie Mercury would have celebrated his birthday on 5th September. The lead singer of Queen is best known for being vivacious, flamboyant and supremely talented. A founding member of the band from its inception in 1970, Freddie wowed audiences around the world with his awe-inspiring vocal acrobatics until his tragic death in 1991 at the age of 45-years-old.

To celebrate his birthday in this September, we collected several photos of Freddie with his famous friends such as Elton John, Michael Jackson, David Bowie, George Michael and others from between the 1970s and 1980s.

Michael Jackson, Freddie Mercury and John Deacon

Roger Taylor and Freddie Mercury with Rod Stewart

with Samantha Fox

with Todd Rundgren

Freddie Mercury with Wayne Sleep and Elton John





Fascinating Photos of the Crufts Dog Shows in the 1950s

Crufts is an international dog show, the largest show of its kind in the world, held annually in the United Kingdom. The first official “Crufts” show was held in 1891, with approximately 2000 dogs and almost 2500 entries.

Children and their dogs, 1952. (Thurston Hopkins)

As the show is not an open contest, only dogs qualified throughout the previous year are allowed to take part in, and they will later compete against others in hierarchical fashion to find the Best in Show and Reverse Best in Show. Best in Show winners will receive a replica of the silver Keddall Memorial Trophy and a small cash prize.

Take a look back at the shows in the 1950s:

A boy with his Saint Bernard, 1950. (Keystone)

Best In Show winner, Welsh Terrier Twynstar Dyma-Fi, 1951. (Reg Speller)

A pair of Miniature Bull Terriers, 1952. (Thurston Hopkins)

A Dalmatian, 1952. (Thurston Hopkins)




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