Pretty macabre by modern standards. Sort of sad to see all the dead infants and children but this was before the era of vaccinations. Perhaps those anti-vaccine freaks should view these photos as a reminder of the benefits modern medicine and sanitation has brought. Besides the macabre setting one of the reasons people had gloomy faces was one had to sit still for several minutes for the photograph so you needed to have a face that would still for that amount of time.
1 posted on
10/09/2013 6:29:42 AM PDT by
C19fan
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To: C19fan
They also made “hair remembrances”. They would weave the deceased’s hair into the shape of a ring to wear or make “flowers” out of it to hang on a wall.
31 posted on
10/09/2013 7:47:25 AM PDT by
DJ MacWoW
(The Fed Gov is not one ring to rule them all)
To: C19fan
In the second photo..which one is the departed? Not sure.
32 posted on
10/09/2013 7:49:08 AM PDT by
patriot08
(NATIVE TEXAN (girl type))
To: C19fan
My grandmother had photos of relatives in coffins in the 60’s so I think it was still commonplace at least in the south through the 60’s.
To: C19fan
In the late 1880s through early 1890s my great grandparents had seven children. Only four lived to become adults.
During one week, two of the children died from diphtheria. Another once deadly disease, now largely eradicated by vaccines.
They lived in Vermillion, South Dakota.
To: C19fan
In some cases, these might’ve been the only opportunity for these families to immortalize their loved ones...
It’s clear it was all done out of love... Good God, that must have been difficult...
37 posted on
10/09/2013 8:43:46 AM PDT by
ScottinVA
(Obama is so far in over his head, even his ears are beneath the water level.)
To: C19fan
There is a book called Wisconsin Death Trip that contains many photos like these.
To: C19fan
Yeah, I've come across some of these while doing genealogy research.
Some today would view the practice as gruesome, but I can understand it:
- Photography was still relatively new, albeit expensive
- grieving relatives wanted to preserve just one more memory of the deceased
Touching, really.
To: C19fan
Gee. Some of them looked like Democrat voters.
45 posted on
10/09/2013 10:47:29 AM PDT by
Safetgiver
( Islam makes barbarism look genteel.)
To: C19fan
When my late mother-in-law was just a girl, she was a nanny for a family in Italy (she was from Switzerland).
Their 4-year-old child died, and mom had to pose her and sit next to her for the funerary photo.
She said that was the creepiest thing that she ever had to do.
To: C19fan
Taking pictures was more expensive - and rare - back then. These might have been the only pictures of the dead child...
53 posted on
10/13/2013 8:42:36 AM PDT by
GOPJ
(Brieitbart sent me... Freeper newfreep)
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