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April 10, 2026

The Life of Teresa Wilms Montt, the Woman Who Was Not Suitable for “Young Ladies”

“My name is Teresa Wilms Montt, and I am not suitable for young ladies.” –– That’s how she introduced herself to the world, one of the most rebellious and luminous voices of Chilean literature in the 20th century.

Teresa Wilms Montt (full name: María Teresa de las Mercedes Wilms Montt), also known as Thérèse Wilms Montt or by pseudonyms like Tebal and Teresa de la Cruz, was a Chilean writer, poet, and anarcha-feminist born on September 8, 1893, in Viña del Mar, Chile. She died on December 24, 1921, at age 28 in Paris, France. Her short life was marked by rebellion against conservative aristocratic norms, intense personal suffering, literary innovation, and a tragic end that has made her a symbol of early 20th-century feminist defiance in Latin America.


Born into an elite, well-connected family (a scion of the influential Montt family), Teresa received a privileged education focused on languages, music (piano and singing), and social graces aimed at securing a “good” marriage. She was multilingual, fluent in English, French, Italian, and Portuguese, and wrote some of her diaries in French. From a young age, she displayed a creative, restless spirit that clashed with the submissive role expected of women in Chile’s upper-class society.

In 1910, at just 17, she married Gustavo Balmaceda Valdés (eight years her senior and related to former Chilean president José Manuel Balmaceda), despite opposition from both families. The couple had two daughters, but the marriage was troubled by his jealousy and alcoholism, her growing independence, and frequent moves between cities like Valdivia and Iquique. During these years of relative solitude, she began writing privately, kept diaries, and published under the pseudonym “Tebac” (or similar). She was influenced by Spanish feminist Belén de Sárraga and Chilean leftist thinker Luis Emilio Recabarren, which fueled her emerging anarcha-feminist views emphasizing women’s autonomy and independence.



Marital conflicts escalated when Teresa fell in love with her husband’s cousin. In 1915, at age 22, her family and husband confined her to the Convent of the Precious Blood (La Preciosa Sangre) in Santiago as punishment for alleged adultery. Separated from her young daughters, she endured profound isolation and began a harrowing personal journal documenting her despair, loss, and first suicide attempt in March 1916.

In June 1916, with help from the Chilean poet Vicente Huidobro (who became her lover and companion), she escaped the convent and fled to Buenos Aires, Argentina. This marked the start of her life in exile and greater literary freedom. She embraced bohemian intellectual circles, collaborated with magazines like Nosotros, and rejected traditional bourgeois values. She lived nomadically, traveling to Madrid, Barcelona, New York (where she tried but failed to join the Red Cross, reportedly mistaken for a German spy during World War I), London, and Paris.



Her life was further scarred in 1917 when a young Argentine poet, Horacio Ramos Mejía (age 22), committed suicide in front of her due to unrequited love and her refusal to commit fully. This event deeply traumatized her and inspired some of her most poignant writing.

Teresa published several works during her brief career, blending surrealist elements, eroticism, spirituality, prose poetry, and intimate diary-like fragments. Her themes often explored love, death, grief, female independence, oppression, and the tension between sensuality and sorrow. She was known for sensual, incantatory language that mixed Catholic, pagan, and personal imagery.

She also left unpublished diaries and fragments, some blending autobiography, poetry, and reflections on death as a form of liberation or “warm bath” oblivion. Her work stood out for its visceral honesty, sensuality, and feminist undertones amid a male-dominated literary scene.


In 1920, Teresa briefly reunited with her daughters in Paris, but their subsequent departure left her devastated. Already in fragile health and grappling with depression, exile, and separation from her children (whom she could not easily see or bring to Chile without facing social judgment), she overdosed on Veronal (a barbiturate) on Christmas Eve 1921 at Hôpital Laennec in Paris. She lingered in agony before dying at 28. She is buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery. One of her final reflections captured her exhaustion: “To die, after feeling everything and being nothing…”

Though somewhat forgotten in her lifetime and immediately after—partly due to scandal surrounding her intimate, erotic writings and unconventional life—Teresa Wilms Montt is now recognized as a pioneering voice in Latin American feminism and modernist literature. Her rebellion against patriarchal constraints, convent confinement, and pursuit of artistic and personal freedom resonate as both personal tragedy and social prophecy. She embodied the struggles of women seeking independence in conservative societies, influencing later discussions of gender, sensuality, and creativity. Her diaries and poems continue to be studied and translated, with renewed interest in English and other languages highlighting her as “the genius of the broken souls” or a woman “not suitable for young ladies.”

The 1957 Jensen 541 Deluxe: A Fiberglass Masterpiece of British Engineering

Pioneering fiberglass bodywork made this British grand tourer a technical innovator when it debuted at the 1953 Motor Show. Jensen became one of the first manufacturers to utilize this lightweight composite construction, years before it became commonplace in the automotive industry.

Eric Neale’s aerodynamic body design housed a surprisingly spacious cabin that offered greater rear seat room than most contemporary rivals, despite the car’s compact dimensions. The sleek profile was both functional and attractive, contributing to the 541’s impressive 115 mph top speed.

Power came from Austin’s 4.0-liter inline-six engine, mounted in a ladder-frame chassis designed by John Riekie. Producing approximately 210 lb-ft of torque at 2,400 rpm, the engine’s abundant low-end power allowed drivers to remain in top gear for extended periods, delivering both strong performance and relatively modest fuel consumption for its era.

Only 53 Deluxe examples were produced between 1957 and 1959, making these refined sports saloons exceptionally rare today. The combination of innovative construction, practical luxury, and genuine performance capability represented Jensen’s engineering philosophy perfectly. Take a moment to admire these stunning captures of the 1957 Jensen 541 Deluxe Sports Saloon, a car that truly redefined the limits of performance and style in the late fifties.






April 9, 2026

1953 Sunbeam Alpine Roadster Driven by Grace Kelly in “To Catch a Thief” (1955)

Grace Kelly’s car in To Catch a Thief (1955) was a first-generation Sunbeam Alpine roadster, made by England’s Sunbeam-Talbot Company between 1953 and 1955. As the story goes, Alfred Hitchcock and his production team had yet to choose a car for Grace’s character to drive in the pivotal chase scenes. Some had suggested a Jaguar, but a powerful car like that just didn’t seem right for a delicate millionairess. Others mentioned popular sports cars of the day like the bulky Mercedes 190SL. Ford’s popular two-seat Thunderbird was ruled out as too American.

Grace needed a cool-as-ice roadster, but the right choice couldn’t be found. Then, shortly before production began, Hitchcock’s wife Alma saw a magazine ad for a brand-new car called the Alpine. It simply breathed sex appeal, and it was perfect. Alma told her husband about the car, and the decision was made.

The most famous scene involves a high-speed chase along the winding Moyenne Corniche above Monaco. Ironically, this was the same stretch of road where Grace Kelly would later lose her life in a car accident in 1982.

The location of the original car used in the film remains unknown. In a 2006 episode of History Detectives, a car claimed to be the original was proven false after a VIN comparison. However, Prince Albert II of Monaco purchased a meticulously restored replica in 2012 for the Prince’s car collection to honor his mother’s legacy.






Beautiful Photos of Sylvia Sorrente in the 1960s

Born 1941 in Paris, French actress and starlet Sylvia Sorrente gained popularity during the 1960s. Known for her striking presence and classic European beauty, she appeared in various French, Italian, and Spanish productions, often associated with the “cult cinema” of the era.

Sorrente is perhaps best remembered for her roles in films like the gothic horror classic Castle of Blood (1964) and the action-comedy Let’s Not Get Angry (1966). Beyond her film career, she was a frequent subject for high-profile photographers, embodying the glamorous “vibe” of the French Riviera during the height of the Sixties.

Take a look at these beautiful photos to discover the captivating portraits of a young Sylvia Sorrente throughout the 1960s.






Bell Cemeteries in Germany During the Wars

Bell cemeteries (or Glockenfriedhöfe in German) were enormous holding areas where confiscated church bells were stockpiled before being melted down for the war effort. After bells were removed from towers, they were taken by ships and freight trains to smelting works, where large holding areas held the bells before they were taken to the furnace and converted back into bronze ingots.

During the First World War, 44 percent of the bells in Germany alone were lost, many given willingly to support the war effort, and some not so willingly. It is estimated that around 65,000 bells amounting to 21,000 tons were melted down during WWI.

Between 1939 and 1945, the Nazis confiscated over 175,000 bells from towers throughout Europe. To feed their war machine, bells were broken down and melted into large bronze ingots at the bell cemeteries, then sent along to refineries for further processing — the two largest just outside Hamburg. There, the bells were reduced to their component metals: mostly copper and tin, but also lead, zinc, silver, and gold. Tin, especially, became shell casings and armaments.

The Nazis were systematic about it. They graded bells into four groups, A through D, based on historical or cultural value. “A” bells were cast within the preceding ninety years and generally considered without merit, they were the first to be destroyed. Types C and D represented historically valuable bells — type C was put on hold for examination by art historians, while type D was protected. Only one bell was allowed per church, usually the lightest.

Some 150,000 bells were sent to foundries and melted down for their copper. British investigators claimed every single bell was taken out of the Netherlands, with only 300 surviving their stay in the bell cemeteries.

“The so-called bell cemeteries, where the bells were laid to rest before they fell victim to destruction, had something inexpressibly melancholy,” said bell specialist Kramer, quoting a contemporary witness. Smaller bells were smashed with hammers, larger ones blown up: “Usually the bell rang again at the moment it was blown, as if it had made its last wail.”

In defiance, some communities attempted to hide their bells, often by burying them in surrounding grounds or on parishioners' land, but this had to be completed before Nazis took a local inventory and in collusion with the presiding clergy. It was a grave risk.

After the end of WWII, around 13,000 bells that were confiscated but not melted still remained in bell cemeteries. In 1947, the Allied authorities set up a committee, the Ausschuss für die Rückführung der Glocken (ARG), to safeguard the remaining bells and coordinate their return.

Canadian Percival Price, Canada’s first dominion carillonneur and designer of the Peace Tower carillon in Ottawa, was dispatched to help investigate and repatriate as many bells as possible, serving the Monuments Men. He spent two years helping Austrian, Belgian, Dutch, West German, and Italian government commissions locate and repatriate bells.

The repatriation process is ongoing even today. Some bells cast in the 1930s and emblazoned with the swastika or a tribute to Adolf Hitler still hang in local bell towers in Germany, causing a rift between cash-strapped churches who can't afford to replace them and concerned citizens.






Map Creation Before Computers – Using T-squares, Rulers and Ink, ca. 1950s

Before the digital era, creating engineering and architectural drawings was an intensely manual and meticulous process. Draftsmen and engineers relied on traditional tools like mechanical pencils, compasses, T-squares, and set squares, working carefully on large sheets of paper. Every line had to be drawn with exact precision, as mistakes were costly and difficult to correct—there was no “undo” button. A single error could force hours of redrawing or even starting the entire blueprint anew, making the task both time-consuming and high-stakes.


Revisions added another layer of complexity. When changes were requested, drafters had to painstakingly erase and redraw sections without damaging surrounding details. For intricate designs, this could stretch over days or even weeks, consuming valuable time and resources. The fear of costly errors often made designers hesitant to experiment or innovate freely, as each iteration carried the risk of significant setbacks. The fragile nature of paper and manual tools meant that every draft felt like a delicate balance between perfection and potential ruin.

The introduction of AutoCAD in 1982 revolutionized this process by shifting drafting from paper to computer screens. This software brought unprecedented speed, precision, and flexibility to design work. Features such as layers, snapping tools, and easy scaling allowed professionals to make quick edits, streamline revisions, and manage complex projects with ease. AutoCAD not only improved efficiency but also expanded creative possibilities, enabling architects and engineers to push boundaries and focus more on innovation rather than repetitive manual labor. This digital transformation forever changed the landscape of technical design.

The Dawn of Cuban Art Deco: Rare Social Magazine Covers of the 1910s

Founded in 1916 by brothers Conrado Walter and Oscar H. Massaguer, Social was far more than a high-society chronicle, it was the intellectual and artistic heartbeat of early 20th-century Cuba. Most notably, it served as the gateway for the Art Deco movement into the island and made global history as the first publication to utilize photolithographic printing. Operating until 1938, the magazine’s journey was a turbulent one, marked by periods of silence as its directors and contributors faced exile and imprisonment for their bold stances.

While Social catered to the sophisticated elite, Conrado Massaguer famously used its pages to satirize the very class it served, blending haute couture with sharp social critique. The magazine was the unofficial voice of the Minorista Group, a collective of intellectuals at the forefront of Cuba’s cultural and political life. Within its vibrant pages, readers found a revolutionary mix of avant-garde poetry, philosophical essays, and art reviews alongside reports on motor racing and interior design.

Social is remembered as a pioneering force that didn’t just follow trends, it defined Cuban identity and modernism for an entire generation. Below is a collection of rare Social magazine covers from the 1910s.

Social cover, August 1916

Social cover, December 1916

Social cover, July 1916

Social cover, November 1916

Social cover, October 1916




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