• @TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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      206 months ago

      It was brought up in the movie, “Lincoln”, that the “Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection” by Charles Darwin was already published at the height of the US Civil War. Somehow, I disassociate the two events as being on completely different time period.

      • Tar_Alcaran
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        6 months ago

        Lincoln and Darwin were born in the same year, 1809.

        And to really blow your mind: Charles Dickens was born 3 years later, and not, say, a hundred years before.

    • KSP Atlas
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      56 months ago

      Did Japan have any fax lines though? Unless you’re talking about a samurai that left Japan

      • @Snowclone@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        He was visiting the US

        Edit: also Lincoln would have had to traveled to Paris or Lyon the last year of his life to send a pentelegraph (early fax machine) and said samurai would need to be in the other city to receive it. Not impossible technically, but Lincoln only left the US very briefly at Niagea Falls, never traveled to Europe. So it’s possible, but unlikely.

    • snooggums
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      106 months ago

      Yeah, people often forget how long people live after major events in history and are surprised the underlying issues haven’t gone away. We still have people from the wrong side of the civil rights movement in leadership positions.

  • @nuxi@lemmy.world
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    346 months ago

    At no point in my HS history class did our teacher mention that she was alive and living a few hours away from us.

    • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      To be fair, I’d say teaching you guys should be proof enough of her non-corpse status that she didn’t have to tell you outright 🤷

  • @TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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    326 months ago

    What always gets me is Pablo Picasso died in 1973. For some reason I always thought he was around a century or two earlier.

  • @Peppr@sh.itjust.works
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    276 months ago

    I’m an older millennial, born 1984, recently turned 40.

    My gramps was born 1909. Not only was he alive during WW2, he was of fighting age. Not only did he fight in WW2, he was actually one of the oldest guys in his unit, seeing as he was over 30 when he got drafted.

    WW2 and other first half of the 20th century shit isn’t anywhere as far back in time as it feels it is.

    • @chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I remember my great-grandma talking about picking cotton in the field one day, and being scared out of her mind when an airplane flew over her head. She’d come to Texas from California on a covered wagon, had never lived in a home with electricity, and hadn’t heard about the flying machine being invented.

      I helped her set up an email account about a year before she died.

  • TheLowestStone
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    176 months ago

    Which means that Shrek could have been Rosa Parks’s favorite movie of all time.

  • ivanafterall ☑️
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    6 months ago

    Same year as Barbara Walters. But also Audrey Hepburn and Grace Kelly. Yasser Arafat. Ed Asner. June Carter Cash. And, famousbirthdays.com tells me, TikTok’s Gangsta Grandma.

    Edit: They were all born the same year Wyatt Earp died.

  • @TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world
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    146 months ago

    Your title got me too.

    I’ve always found it interesting how a black and white photo can distort our perception of when something happened.

    Was researching million man March for a presentation. Some of the first pictures were in bnw even though it happened in the 90s.

    My conspiracy side says it’s deliberate. 🤷‍♂️