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March 16, 2026

Portraits of Ndugu M’Hali, a Young Enslaved African Who Was the Personal Servant of Sir Henry Morton Stanley

Ndugu M’Hali (c. 1865 – March 28, 1877), widely known as Kalulu, was an enslaved African boy who became the close companion, servant, and adopted son of the famous Victorian explorer Henry Morton Stanley. Despite his short life, he traveled across three continents and became a minor celebrity in the Western world before his tragic death at age 12.

M’Hali was born around 1865 in what is now Tanzania. As a young child, he was captured during a slave raid and sold in a market in Tabora. In 1871, the famous explorer Henry Morton Stanley “purchased” him (though Stanley later framed this as “freeing” him). Stanley gave the boy the name Kalulu, which means “young antelope” in the Swahili language, because of his perceived speed and grace.

Stanley grew deeply attached to Kalulu, though the relationship was inherently one of unequal power. Stanley took the boy back to Europe and America, treating him as a protégé, a valet, and a living symbol of his “civilizing” missions. Kalulu accompanied Stanley to London, New York, and Paris. He sat for professional portraits in expensive Victorian suits and attended prestigious dinners.

Stanley even wrote a fictionalized adventure book titled My Kalulu, Prince, King and Slave: A Story of Central Africa (1873), which turned the boy into a household name in England. For a brief period, Stanley enrolled Kalulu in a school in Wandsworth, London, hoping he would eventually return to Africa as a colonial intermediary.

In 1874, Kalulu joined Stanley on the Trans-Africa Expedition, a massive and brutal journey to map the Congo River.

On March 28, 1877, tragedy struck at the Livingstone Falls. Kalulu was in one of the canoes that was swept over a massive waterfall. He and five other crew members drowned. Stanley was devastated by the loss and renamed that specific stretch of water Kalulu Falls in his honor.

Historians view Kalulu’s life through a more critical lens today. While Stanley described their bond as one of father and son, modern analysis highlights the colonial exploitation at play. Kalulu was a child who was uprooted from his culture, renamed, and used as a prop for Stanley’s public image, only to die in his early teens serving the very man who “owned” him.






Photos of Thérèse of Lisieux Dressed Up as Joan of Arc, ca. 1895

Thérèse of Lisieux (1873–1897), in religion Therese of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face, was a French Discalced Carmelite who is widely venerated in modern times. She is popularly known in English as the Little Flower of Jesus, or simply the Little Flower, and in French as la petite Thérèse (‘Little Therese’).

When reading accounts of the patriotic deeds of French heroines, especially Joan of Arc, Thérèse felt a great desire to imitate them. She sensed within herself the same burning zeal, and it was through this admiration that God helped her understand that her own glory would consist in becoming a great saint. This was no passing fancy. Thérèse wrote plays and poems about Joan of Arc, relating especially to Joan’s time in prison as Thérèse herself suffered from the illness that would eventually take her life.

Thérèse produced her first play for the Carmelite community on January 21, 1894: “The Mission of Joan of Arc, or The Shepherdess of Domremy Listening to Her Voices.” She then wrote a second, longer and more ambitious work: “Joan of Arc Accomplishing Her Mission,” presented for the prioress’s feast day on January 21, 1895. This longer play was greeted with general enthusiasm.

Sometime between January 21 and March 25, 1895, Thérèse’s sister Céline photographed her five times dressed as Joan of Arc in the courtyard of the sacristy, next to a small polychrome wooden statue known as Our Lady of Providence. Thérèse wore a brown wig over her Carmelite toque and a gold-paper costume over part of her habit.






This is where the story takes a deeply sad turn.

A man writing under the name Leo Taxil published a series of autobiographies featuring supposed Freemason conversions to Catholicism. The most popular featured a character named Diana Vaughan, whose fictional conversion was said to have been inspired by Joan of Arc. Diana’s story became wildly popular and even made its way inside the Carmel walls.

Thérèse, moved by “Diana’s” story, sent her a retouched copy of one of the Joan of Arc photographs, the image of herself as Joan and her sister Céline as Saint Catherine. But Diana Vaughan was a hoax. She did not exist. Leo Taxil, a con man, had invented her to ridicule the Church.

In April 1897, Taxil called a press conference before an audience of around 400 people and revealed that he himself was “Diana Vaughan.” The entire thing had been a ruse to demonstrate the gullibility of French Catholics. His prop that evening was a giant projected image of the photograph of Thérèse, used as a symbol of the naive religious person. Thérèse was dying of tuberculosis at the time. She would pass away just months later, in September 1897, likely aware of the humiliation.

And yet, the story doesn’t end in mockery. That same photograph, used to ridicule a dying nun, has since become one of the most beloved images in Catholic history. It hangs in homes, schools, and chapels around the world. The “naive religious person” Taxil sought to lampoon was canonized in 1925 and declared a Doctor of the Church in 1997.

Both Joan of Arc and Thérèse of Lisieux are now saints, the young warrior and the little flower, forever linked by devotion, suffering, and an unlikely photograph taken in a convent courtyard in the winter of 1895.

Linda Hayden: A Cult Icon of British Horror Cinema

Linda Hayden remains one of the most memorable faces of British cinema from the late 1960s and ’70s, celebrated for her unique blend of youthful innocence and chilling intensity. She shot to fame as a teenager with her provocative debut in Baby Love (1969), but it was her haunting performance as the sinister Angel Blake in the folk-horror masterpiece The Blood on Satan’s Claw (1971) that cemented her status as a cult icon.

With her piercing gaze and ethereal presence, Hayden possessed a rare screen command, moving effortlessly between glamorous roles and complex, darker characters. She epitomized the bold, transgressive spirit of her era, leaving behind a legacy that continues to fascinate fans of vintage thrillers and classic British horror today.

Slow down for a moment and enjoy the captivating allure of a young Linda Hayden in these vintage photos below.






Tennessee During the American Civil War in Rare and Amazing Photos

During the American Civil War, Tennessee served as a vital and bloody crossroads, becoming the second most fought-over state after Virginia.

Known as the “Gateway to the Deep South,” its strategic rivers and railroads made it a primary objective for both Union and Confederate forces. From the devastating carnage at Shiloh to the dramatic “Battle Above the Clouds” in Chattanooga and the decisive clashes in Nashville, the state was a landscape of constant upheaval.

Tennessee was also a land deeply divided in loyalty, particularly between the pro-Union East and the Confederate-leaning West. The war left an indelible mark on the state, as its rugged mountains and fertile plains bore witness to some of the most turning-point moments that ultimately shaped the future of a divided nation.

These rare and amazing photos document the Union Army buildup of troops and supplies in and around the vital railroad center of Chattanooga, Tennessee, with additional scenes of Lookout Mountain and other sites in Tennessee during the American Civil War.

View of park of artillery captured at the Battle of Chattanooga, November 24, 25, and 26, 1863

Battlefield of Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, circa 1865

Capitol, Nashville, Tennessee, circa 1865

Chattanooga depot, Nashville, Tennessee, circa 1865

Grave yard and Monument of Hazen's Brigade on Stones River Battleground, Tennessee, circa 1865

March 15, 2026

30 Candid Photos of Jackie Kennedy Onassis With Her Younger Sister Lee Radziwill From Between the 1950s and Early 1970s

The relationship between Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and her sister, Lee Radziwill, was a complex tapestry of fierce loyalty and sharp sibling rivalry. During the mid-20th century, they were the world’s most watched sisters—icons of style who navigated the heights of political and social power while privately wrestling for their mother’s approval and their own identities.

The sisters were raised in the upper classes of New York society. Jacqueline was three and a half years older than Lee, and they affectionately called each other “Jacks” and “Pekes” as children. In the 1950s, the sisters were young socialites establishing their lives. While they were close, the seeds of competition were planted early by their mother, Janet Auchincloss, who often pitted them against one another.

Jackie married the rising political star John F. Kennedy in 1953. Lee, perhaps feeling the pressure to keep pace, married Michael Canfield the same year. In 1959, Lee married Prince Stanislaw Albrecht Radziwill, gaining a title. For a brief moment, Lee was a “Princess” while Jackie was merely a Senator’s wife, a dynamic that shifted dramatically with the 1960 election.

The 1960s defined their public image. As Jackie became First Lady, Lee became her unofficial lady-in-waiting and most trusted confidante. Lee accompanied Jackie on the famous 1962 trip to India and Pakistan. They were a formidable duo, though Lee often struggled with being “the sister of the First Lady.” Ironically, it was Lee who first became close with Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis. She was widely rumored to have romantic designs on him, but she ultimately stepped aside to let Jackie cruise on his yacht, the Christina, following the death of Jackie’s infant son, Patrick, in 1963.

After JFK’s assassination, Lee was a pillar for Jackie, frequently staying at her homes in Georgetown and New York to help her navigate the suffocating grief.

The 1970s saw the relationship fracture under the weight of “The Golden Greek” and shifting ambitions. In 1968, Jackie married Aristotle Onassis. For Lee, this was a profound sting; she had loved Onassis first, and Jackie’s marriage to him felt like a public erasure of Lee's own romantic history.

While Jackie lived as “Jackie O” in the early 1970s, Lee attempted to forge her own career in interior design and even tried her hand at acting (which was panned by critics). Lee’s lifestyle often outpaced her income, leading to a reliance on Onassis (and later Jackie) for financial support. This created an imbalance of power that fueled resentment.

Despite their periods of “cold war” silence, their bond remained unique. They shared a secret language and a childhood history that no one else could touch. Lee once famously said, “I’m nobody’s sister,” yet she spent her life defined by that very connection.






The Moment Jack Ruby Shot Lee Harvey Oswald in Dallas on November 24, 1963

One of the most shocking moments in American history, captured live on television and in photographs. On the morning of November 24, 1963, just two days after President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, Lee Harvey Oswald was being transferred from Dallas Police Headquarters to the county jail. As he was escorted through the basement of the Dallas Police Department, nightclub owner Jack Ruby stepped forward from the crowd of reporters and detectives and fired a single .38-caliber revolver shot into Oswald’s abdomen at point-blank range.


Oswald died approximately two hours later at Parkland Memorial Hospital, the same hospital where President Kennedy had died two days earlier.

The shooting was broadcast live on national television, making it one of the first acts of violence ever witnessed in real time by a mass audience. The famous photograph, taken by Robert H. Jackson of the Dallas Times Herald, won the 1964 Pulitzer Prize for Photography.

Jack Ruby (52) shoots Lee Harvey Oswald (24). The image was captured by Dallas Times Herald photographer Robert H. Jackson and it won the 1964 Pulitzer Prize for Photography.

Jack Beers’s photograph taken a split second before Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald on November 24, 1963. The photo was used on the front page of the Dallas Morning News the next day

A camera captures the back of Jack Ruby as he shoots Lee Harvey Oswald who is being escorted by guards during a television press conference at the Dallas police headquarters.

The AP says this is Jack Ruby’s hat on the ground just after shooting Lee Harvey Oswald in 1963.

Mugshot of Jack Ruby taken November 24, 1963, after his arrest for killing Lee Harvey Oswald.

25 Stunning Real Photo Postcards of Zarah Leander in the 1930s and 1940s

During the 1930s and 1940s, Zarah Leander (March 15, 1907 – June 23, 1981) was the most prominent and highest-paid film star in Nazi Germany, known for her deep, dark contralto voice and dramatic persona. Despite her Swedish origin, she became a massive commercial success for the state-owned Universum Film AG (UFA) between 1936 and 1943.

Leander began her career in Swedish theater in 1929 before moving to larger stages in Stockholm and Vienna. She signed a lucrative contract with Berlin-based UFA in 1936, choosing Germany over Hollywood primarily due to family considerations and the high salary offered. She quickly became a superstar with films like Premiere (1937) and To New Shores (Zu neuen Ufern, 1937), directed by Douglas Sirk.

Marketed as a tragic lover and glamorous diva, she was often compared to Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich. Her 1942 film Die große Liebe (The Great Love) became the single biggest box office success in the history of the Nazi film industry, seen by approximately 27 million people. While she never joined the Nazi party, she performed in “request concerts” for soldiers and her work was heavily used for propaganda, making her a highly controversial figure after the war.

After her Berlin villa was bombed in 1942 and she faced pressure to take German citizenship, Leander broke her contract and returned to Sweden in 1943. Initially shunned by the Swedish public and artistic community for her ties to the Third Reich, she was even banned from performing in Germany and Austria until 1948.

She eventually made a successful comeback across Europe in the late 1940s and 1950s, remaining a sentimental favorite in Germany until her death in 1981.









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