► Welcome to today’s history-narrated video, where we take a fascinating visual odyssey through historical photos listening to echoes of history, complimented by a compelling and informative narration.

Featured in this video:
00:00 History Narrated, Intro
00:08 Gia Scala, English-born actress of Sicilian-Irish descent
00:33 1958: Russia practiced outdoor naps for babies to boost immunity
00:57 1920: Lesbian couple in semi-drag wedding attire, Budapest.
01:09 WWII NYC promoted “Do Your Bit! Skate To Work” for fuel conservation.
01:34 1957: Man used wooden stick for first selfie with camera.
01:43 1963 “The French Chef” episode: Julia Child popularized French cuisine on TV.
02:08 Tuesday Weld: Actress known for impulsive, reckless roles, exploring sexuality.
02:21 Observation balloon aids Battle of Passchendaele, 1917, Ypres, Belgium.
02:43 Children in Paris celebrated Armistice, waving flags, November 11, 1918.
02:59 Forced indigenous children pray in Canadian residential schools (1930-1970).
03:14 Bastogne evacuation 1944: key Battle of the Bulge, pivotal WWII engagement.
03:43 1964 photo: Muhammad Ali and Malcolm X, American history influencers.
03:54 1970s: Debbie Harry, aka Blondie, influential punk and new wave icon.
04:17 Watergate scandal exposed by journalists Woodward and Bernstein, led to Nixon’s historic resignation.
04:40 Finnish 11-year-old Nestori Lindström who ran away from home in 1941 to fight Soviets.
04:53 Atatürk: Turkish army leader, revolutionary, first President (1923-1938).
05:08 April 1, 1945: Marines storm Okinawa’s shores in amphibious assault.
05:22 1880s American prairie settler family captured in a photograph.
05:30 American soldier displays war trophies at Château de Rochefort-en-Terre, 1919.
05:43 Ruby Bridges: Pioneering integration at William Frantz School, 1960 Civil Rights.
06:05 1919: Russian soldiers in Civil War, Bolsheviks vs. Royalists.
06:17 Skatepark image, Carson, 1978: early skateboarding culture and popularization.
06:45 US soldiers interact with captured Wehrmacht troops during WWII in 1944.
07:00 1912: Tsesarevich Alexei slides down cloth, Tsar Nicholas II’s son.
07:13 August 6, 1945, North River, US Army soldiers returning home after WWII.
07:29 Yuri Gagarin’s 1962 visit to Carlsberg Brewery amid space race.
07:51 JFK marries Jacqueline Bouvier in Newport on September 12, 1953.
08:03 November 1918: Joyful U.S. soldiers in London after World War I.
08:21 Oglala Sioux’s Red Hawk, circa 1905, iconic Native American image.
08:36 Red Army soldier holds looted Hitler bust, symbolizing WWII end.
09:00 1945 photo: soldier reunites joyfully with daughter after WWII.
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Music:
► YouTube Library
► Epic Intro 2018 by Sascha Ende
Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/3002-epic-intro-2018
License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
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Gia Scala (1934-1972) was an English-born actress  of Sicilian-Irish descent. After moving to the US,   she pursued acting, gaining fame in Hollywood,   but struggled with alcohol and faced a tragic  accidental death in 1972, at the age of 38. In the mid-20th century, some countries, including  Russia, practiced letting babies sleep outdoors,  

Even in cold weather, believing it strengthened  their immune systems. It was common to see   babies bundled up and napping outside in  prams for better health, captured in 1958. In 1920, a lesbian couple in  semi-drag wedding attire was   photographed in Budapest, Kingdom of Hungary.

During World War II in the 1940s, New York City  had a campaign with the slogan “Do Your Bit! Skate   To Work. Save Gas” to urge people to conserve  fuel due to rationing. The goal was to promote   alternative transportation like roller-skating,  biking, or walking to support the war effort.

A man used a wooden stick to take a selfie  by activating the camera, circa 1957. Filming an episode of “The French Chef”  with Julia Child in 1963 was a pivotal   moment in the history of cooking shows and  culinary education. Julia Child, a pioneering  

Figure in American television, introduced French  cuisine to a wide audience in the United States. Tuesday Weld is an American actress known for  her roles as impulsive and reckless women,   often exploring sexual themes in her characters. On October 27, 1917, during the Battle  of Passchendaele (Third Battle of Ypres),  

An observation balloon floated above Ypres,  Belgium, it is used for reconnaissance,   intelligence gathering, and directing artillery  fire, providing crucial battlefield insights. Children in Paris, France, celebrated the  signing of the Armistice ending World War   I by waving French, American, and  Union flags, on november 11 1918.

Between 1930 and 1970, indigenous  children were compelled to pray   to God in a Canadian government and  Catholic Church-run residential school. The evacuation of refugees from the  town of Bastogne in Belgium in 1944,   Bastogne was a crucial location  during the Battle of the Bulge,  

A major offensive by the German army in  December 1944. This battle was one of the   largest and bloodiest engagements of the war,  taking place during a particularly harsh winter. Photograph from 1964 depicts  Muhammad Ali and Malcolm X,   two influential figures in American history.

Debbie Harry, also known as Blondie, is  a music icon known for her contributions   to the punk and new wave music scenes. The  photograph of her wearing a “Camp Funtime”   t-shirt in the 1970s is a glimpse into the punk  rock and alternative music culture of that era.

The Watergate scandal, exposed by The Washington  Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein,   led to President Nixon’s 1974 resignation.  Their investigative journalism held leaders   accountable, and they watched as  Nixon made his historic resignation. Nestori Lindström, an 11-year-old  who ran away from home in December  

1941 to join the fight against the  Soviets but was later sent back home. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk: Turkish  army officer, revolutionary,   and first President of Turkey  from 1923 until his death in 1938. On April 1, 1945, at Okinawa, the first  waves of Marine invaders charged for the  

Beach in armored amphibious  tractors, forming a line. The photograph of a settler family  on the American prairie in the 1880s. American soldier posing with war  trophies outside the Château de   Rochefort-en-Terre in France in 1919 is  a relic of the aftermath of World War I.

Ruby Bridges, the first African-American  child to attend the all-white William   Frantz Elementary School in Louisiana in  1960, captures a pivotal moment in the   Civil Rights Movement and the struggle  for desegregation in the United States. In 1919, Russian soldiers were involved in the  

Civil War between the Bolsheviks (Red  Army) and the Royalists (White Army). The image of a skateboarding park bowl  in Carson, California, from March 23,   1978, is a snapshot of the early days  of skateboarding culture. Skateboarding   had gained popularity in the United States  during the 1970s, and skateparks like the one  

Pictured provided skaters with dedicated  spaces to practice and perform tricks. Two soldiers from the United States Army talking  to captured Wehrmacht soldiers in 1944 captures   a moment during World War II, specifically  during the Western Allies’ campaign in Europe. In 1912, Tsesarevich Alexei, the  son of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia,  

Was photographed sliding down a piece of cloth. On August 6, 1945, a photograph  was taken in North River, New York,   showing US Army soldiers returning to the United  States after the end of World War II in Europe. Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin at the Carlsberg  Brewery in Denmark on September 21, 1962,  

Captures a historic and memorable  moment during the height of the   space race between the United  States and the Soviet Union. Senator John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline  Bouvier on their wedding day in Newport,   Rhode Island, on September 12, 1953. The photograph of recovering U.S.  soldiers taken around London on a  

Bus to see sights shortly after  the Armistice in November 1918,   a moment of celebration and relief  following the end of World War one. Red Hawk of the Oglala Sioux subtribe  on horseback in circa 1905 captures   a striking image of a Native American  figure during the early 20th century.

Red Army soldier Yevgeniy Dolmatovasky holding a   bust of Adolf Hitler that he looted from  the ruins of Berlin, Germany, in May 1945,   is a stark representation of the end of  World War II and the fall of Nazi Germany. The 1945 photograph of a soldier returning  home to his daughter after World War II  

Captures the heartfelt joy and relief  of families reunited after the war.

5 Comments

  1. The lack of intelligence of the Russians has been through centuries: leaving babies sleeping under 0°C Tuesday Weld was so hot but Blondie went so far.. love her😅

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