Showing posts with label first. Show all posts
Showing posts with label first. Show all posts

Whitney Plantation: America’s First And Only Slavery Museum

Whitney Plantation is located near Wallace, in Louisiana, on the historic River Road in St. John the Baptist Parish, less than an hour from New Orleans. Founded in the days before the Civil War, this former sugar cane plantation is today America’s only museum dedicated entirely to slavery.

The property was originally known as Habitation Haydel, after its owner Ambroise Heidel, a German immigrant, who came to Louisiana and bought this tract of land in the 1750s. Heidel originally grew indigo before his son Jean Jacques converted the plantation to sugar in the early 1800's. It was Jean Jacques who built the historic French Creole raised-style main house. Back in those days, sugar plantations, just like any other plantation in the country, employed mostly African slaves as labor. Some 350 slaves are recorded to have lived, sweated, toiled and beaten here.

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Photo credit: Corey Balazowich/Flickr
The First Person to Die...

The First Person to Die...

1...on a hoverboard


...on a hoverboard

Nawaf, right, from a selfie
A "swegway" (also known as a hoverboard) is a Segway without handles. Whatever you call it, these electric skateboard-like devices are illegal on public streets in Britain and are believed to be highly dangerous. In early December 2015, Nawaf Al-Tuwayan, a 15-year-old who lived in London, used one to make a trip to the store to get some milk for his mother. Witnesses say he looked unsteady on the device and fell in the middle of the road, only to be hit by a double decker bus and dragged 200 yards. His was the first known death of its sort in England. (In October 2015, a 6-year-old was killed while riding a hoverboard in the UAE).
(Source 1 | Source 2)

2...in a self-driving car


...in a self-driving car

According to the truck driver, Brown was watching a Harry Potter movie on the screen
Canton, Ohio resident Joshua Brown was the ultimate Tesla fanatic—and paid the ultimate price. Brown, a former Navy SEAL, posted hours of video of himself driving his Model S on YouTube in Autopilot mode, including one that showed it avoiding an accident.
Autopilot is still very much in beta. Perhaps because of its limitations, Joshua also became its first victim. Truck driver Frank Baressi was making a left turn when Brown's Model S plowed through the middle of the trailer and crashed into a telephone pole down the road. “He went so fast through my trailer I didn't see him,” Baressi was quoted as saying.
(Source 1 | Source 2)

3...on the electric chair


...on the electric chair

"The man never suffered a bit of pain," said Dr. Fell
The electric chair was invented to be a more humane form of capital punishment, but its first use was positively shocking. William Kemmler, convicted of hacking his wife to death with an ax, was the first man to meet his fate by electricity. On Aug 6, 1890, Kimmler put on a suit and tie and calmly strode into the electrocution chamber and allowed himself to be strapped in. “Well, I wish everybody good luck,” he said.
Warden Charles F. Durston ordered the switch thrown, and 1,000 volts coursed through Kemmler's body for 17 seconds. Although there was the stench of burned flesh, the doctors in attendance quickly realized Kemmler wasn't dead, and the switch was thrown a second time at double the voltage. Kemmler's eyes began to bleed, and his body caught fire. He was pronounced dead shortly thereafter.
(Source 1 | Source 2)

 

4..by a meteorite


..by a meteorite
A bus driver named V. Kamaraj is unlucky enough to be the first, and only, person to be killed by a falling meteorite. On Feb. 6, 2016, the space rock fell in Tamil Nadu, a state in southern India. It killed Kamaraj and injured three other people, leaving a 4-foot hole in the ground. NASA says his demise is the only death by meteorite in recorded history.
(Source | Photo)

5...in a powered airplane


...in a powered airplane

In spite of the death, the Army awarded them the contract
Orville and Wilbur Wright, aka the Wright Brothers, are forever associated with the first airplane flights in modern times. However, a lesser known fact is that Orville was responsible for the first passenger death. Thomas Selfridge was an officer in the US Army Signal Corps assigned to its new Aeronautical Division, which was investigating air travel for military use. On September 17, 1908, Selfridge was the passenger in an airplane piloted by Orville Wright as part of a test. The propeller split and the plane went into a nosedive and crashed. Orville was severely injured but recovered; Selfridge fractured his skull in the accident and died several hours later.
(Source)

6...in an automobile


...in an automobile
Amateur scientist Mary Ward was the first automobile passenger to die on a ride on August 31, 1869.
Mary was a true pioneer in an era when women were not considered intelligent enough for the sciences. She wrote many books on astronomy and microscopes, but her promising life was cut short when she went for a ride on a steam-powered car built by a family friend. She was thrown from the vehicle when it rounded a curve and crushed by one of its wheels. In 1869, Bridget Driscoll of London became the first pedestrian fatality. As she was crossing the street, she froze at the sight of an automobile (it was giving demonstration rides) and was unable to move out of the way in time before tragedy struck.
(Source 1 | Source 2)

7...in outer space


...in outer space
The Russians beat the U.S. with not only the first satellite but also with the first and only deaths in space. Soyuz 11 was the first successful trip to the first space station, Salyut 1, launched by the Soviets in 1971. The three-person crew, Georgy Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov, and Viktor Patsayev were able to spend 22 days on board, a record for the time. However, upon re-entry, their cabin had accidentally depressurized, killing all three instantly. They were discovered lifeless with blood coming out of their noses when the capsule splashed down on June 30, 1971. (On April 24, 1967, Cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov was killed during re-entry on the Soyuz 1, one of the earliest rockets, but he died on impact with the Earth.)
(Source 1 | Source 2 | Via)

8...by legal euthanasia


...by legal euthanasia
Euthanasia, or assisted suicide, has long been controversial and is still illegal in many places. The first legally sanctioned euthanasia was in the Northern Territory of Australia, due to the passage of the Rights of the Terminally Ill Act of 1995. The first person to use it was Bob Dent, who suffered from prostate cancer and took his life on September 22, 1996, with the help of Dr. Philip Nitschke. Three other people followed, but public outrage was so strong, the central government nullified the law a year later.
(Source 1 | Source 2)

9...in the Revolutionary War


...in the Revolutionary War
Crispus Attucks was the son of Prince Yonger, an African slave and Nancy Attucks, a Native American (but it's unclear if he was a slave or a free man). On March 5, 1770, Attucks was eating in a Boston pub when a mounting quarrel between British soldiers and Americans began to get ugly. Although the events leading up to his death are unclear—some say he picked up a stick and rallied Bostonians to confront British troops on King Street—Crispus was one of five shot by the British in an incident that became known as the Boston Massacre. Attackus' death spurred calls for the Revolution, and he became the first American martyr.
(Source 1 | Source 2 | Source 3)

Tattoo Artist Who Lost His Arm Gets World’s First Tattoo Machine Prosthesis

A lot of people have tattoos, and each tattoo is special in its own little way. But few tattoos are as special as the ones created by JC Sheitan Tenet. Why? Because the tattoo artist doesn’t do them by hand. He does them by prosthetic hand!

Take a look below to see what we’re talking about. Amazed? Confused? I think we’re both. Tenet, who is based in Lyon, France, lost his arm 22 years ago. He received the world’s coolest prosthetic courtesy of French artist JL Gonzal, who modified an existing arm prosthesis to accommodate the tattoo machine.

More info: Facebook




15-Year-Old Angelina Jolie During One Of Her First Photoshoots
(Interview)

15-Year-Old Angelina Jolie During One Of Her First Photoshoots (Interview)

Happy late birthday to Angelina Jolie! On Saturday, the mother of six turned 41. For this special occasion, we share a collection of photos taken by photographer Harry Langdon 26 years ago at one of Jolie’s first photo shoots. She was only 15 at that time, but the photographer didn’t know that. He was told she was 18.

“Normally before I begin a new session I find out more about the background of a new client. My Representative that time, withheld her real age from me since they thought if I knew, that may inhibit the way I worked with her. I was told and thought she was 18, and judging from her sensuality, it was a matter of very quickly gaining her trust. Never coming on in any way, because once a photographer crosses that forbidden line, the subject will become inhibited. So Angelina just ‘came on to the camera’. No restrictions. I just kept my cool and allowed her to perform. Hardly saying anymore than “turn right, turn left”. No conversation was necessary.” – Harry told us

More info: Harry Langdon | Prints (h/t: designyoutrust)

Angelina Jolie was 15 years old at one of her first photo shoots


Photo by Harry Langdon








 

1Angelina Jolie’s earliest modeling photographs are going under the hammer. The Hollywood star was just 15 when this racy collection of pictures was taken by photographer Harry Langdon. Jolie appears in the black and white pictures with slicked back wet hair, on all fours in a bikini and in a leopard print dress. The photographs are being sold by auction house ‘Profiles in History’ as part of their Original Vintage Glamour Photography.

Quincy Granite Railway: America’s First Commercial Railroad

When architect Solomon Willard arrived in Quincy, Massachusetts, in 1825, and discovered a granite ledge in a wooded area, he knew he had found the perfect raw material for what would become his most famous building, and the first monumental obelisk erected in the United States — the Bunker Hill Monument. Willard envisioned a 221-foot tall obelisk with a 30 feet square base that would require some 6,700 tons of granite. Transporting the massive blocks of granite from the quarry to the site of construction presented a challenge.

Quincy was separated from Charlestown, where the monument would be erected, by 12 miles of swamp, forest, and farms. The granite needed to be delivered to Neponset River, four miles north, from where a barge would transport the stone through Boston Harbor to Charlestown. Willard wanted to move the stones to the Neponset River on sledges during winter, but Gridley Bryant, an engineer, suggested a more efficient method — a railroad.

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The Incline portion of the Granite Railway, Pine Hill Quarry to Neponset River, Quincy. April 1934. Photo credit: Arthur C. Haskell/Library of Congress
Injured Tortoise Receives World’s First 3D Printed Shell

Injured Tortoise Receives World’s First 3D Printed Shell

When Freddy the tortoise was caught in a bush fire in Brazil, his chances of survival were slim. But thanks to a group of pioneering surgeons known as The Animal Avengers, Freddy not only survived his ordeal – he is also now the proud owner of the world’s first 3D printed shell!

“Freddy was the first tortoise in the world to receive a fully rebuilt hull and the first creature that we, as a newly formed group of animal rescuers, decided to help,” said Designer Cicero Moraes, a member of the volunteer group based in Sao Paulo. He designed the shell by reconstructing a 3D computer image based on various pictures he took of Freddy. He then sent the design to Dr Paulo Miamoto, a dental surgeon, who turned the design into reality with the use of a 3D printer. And as you can see, Freddie looks more than happy in his newly printed home! Good work Animal Avengers! Tony Stark would be proud (h/t)

Freddie the tortoise is lucky to be alive after getting burned in a bush fire


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His shell was badly damaged so a group of volunteers made him a new one…with a 3D printer!