Shot in the Dark
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Shot in the Dark
Tom Lovell
This is real footage from 120 years ago.
None of the people in it knew that the city around them had four days left…
What you are watching is a cable car gliding down Market Street in San Francisco, filmed on the 14th of April, 1906.
The camera was mounted on the front of the car, so you see the city exactly as it was: the crowds, the horse-drawn carriages, the early automobiles weaving through traffic, the men in hats, the great buildings rising on either side. An ordinary spring afternoon in a thriving American city.
Four days later, on the morning of the 18th of April, a magnitude 7.9 earthquake struck. The shaking lasted under a minute, but it ignited fires that burned through the city for days…
By the time it was over, more than 3,000 people were dead and roughly 80 percent of San Francisco had been destroyed. Almost every building you see in this footage was gone.
And the film itself nearly went with it.
The negative was placed on a train bound for New York on the 17th of April, the day before the earthquake. Had it left a single day later, it would have burned in the fire along with the studio that made it.
This entire moving record of a lost city survives because of one day…
The Return of the Living Dead (1985) - Dir: Dan O’Bannon
Questions? http://news.usaunify.org/TTLX49
Transferring mail from an ocean liner to the Goodyear Blimp in Los Angeles Harbor, 1931 (USC Digital Library/California Historical Society Collection)
“I have come to believe that if history were recorded by the vanquished rather than the victors, it would illuminate the real, rather than the theoretical, means to power; for it is the defeated who know best which of the opposing tactics were irresistible. The Russian peasant has another way of saying this: “He who wears the shoe knows best where it pinches.”
Maya Deren, Divne Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti
Limestone stela with images of the goddess Tanit, Neo-Punic, British Museum
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