Machine Gun Troop, 13th Cavalry Regiment, Fort Ril…
Woman with Wall Clock
Hooray! Let the Christmas Cooking Begin!
Little Man at the Well
Greetings from Our House to Your House
Man and Woman at General Warren Statue, Little Rou…
Best Wishes for a Little League Merry Christmas
The Unisphere at the New York World's Fair of 1964…
Nancy and Her Snowwoman, December 1951
I Am the Stuff
Cool in the cold
Berchtesgaden Salt Mine, September 17, 1962
Colorized
Generations
We Will Never See It Again—The Ferris Wheel at the…
Powder Mill Blew Up, March 31, 1910
Warren Perkins
Men with Tiny Hats
Holiday Greetings from the U.S. Capitol Building,…
Paddling Their Own Canoe at Olcott Beach
Boy with Bowtie
Brother Rarick and Willis at Dixon Church of the B…
Fancy Cow and Calf
The Glen House, Pinkham Notch, White Mountains, Ne…
Costume Creepiness
A Woman and Her Bicycle
Two Women and a Bicycle
Merry Halloween from Brunswick, Maine, 1943
I Love My Jack-O'-Lantern!
Truckload of Copper River Salmon, Cordova, Alaska,…
The Lone Ranger with an Eerie Jack-O'-Lantern, Hal…
Bringing in the Corn
Lewis Metzler and His Bicycle, Williamsport, Pa.,…
Little Girl Nurse
Books for Returning World War I Troops on Board th…
Patriotic Toddler
Man's Portrait in Elaborate Border
Woman Standing in an Elaborate Border
Full Steam Ahead on the City of Toledo
Going Some with the Humdinger of Seattle!
Franklin and Marshall College Students, ca. 1910
The Home of the American Raccoon
Working on the Railroad All the Live-Long Day
Students and Teacher in a One-Room Schoolhouse, Ma…
Push and Pull.
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" Cartes postales et photos historiques de partout dans le monde / Historische Postkarten und Photos aus aller Welt "
" Cartes postales et photos historiques de partout dans le monde / Historische Postkarten und Photos aus aller Welt "
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Men Posing at the Lost Children of the Alleghenies Monument
A memorials photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park.
Inscription on the monument: "The Lost Children of the Alleghenies were found here, May 8, 1856, by Jacob Dibert and Harrison Whysong."
See also a detail showing the inscription and the full version of the real photo postcard (below).
The Lost Children of the Alleghenies monument stands as a memorial to the sad story of George and Joseph Cox, ages 7 and 5, whose bodies were discovered at the site on May 8, 1856. The boys wandered away from their home in the Allegheny Mountains of northern Bedford County, Pennsylvania, on April 24.
The boys' parents sought help when they were unable to locate their children, and hundreds of people eventually came to help search through the mountainous terrain during the following days. After two weeks of searching, however, the boys still had not been found, and the freezing cold weather in the higher altitudes was a cause for concern.
A man named Jacob Dibert, who lived some distance away and had not participated in the search, dreamed that he was out in the woods looking for the boys. He dreamed for three nights in succession that he saw a dead deer, a little shoe, and a tree that had fallen across a stream. After crossing the stream, he found the boys' bodies.
He sought the help of his brother-in-law, Harrison Whysong, who was familiar with the area where the boys had gone missing. After Jacob described what he saw in his dream, the men attempted to locate the site. They noticed a dead deer, found a boy's shoe, and spotted a tree that had fallen over a stream. They crossed over, and discovered George and Jacob's lifeless bodies.
The poignant story of the boys "found by a dream" circulated widely in newspapers and books and by word of mouth. The monument was built and dedicated on May 8, 1906, fifty years after the sad event.
For more information, see the Wikipedia article about the Lost Children of the Alleghenies. The boys' story was also the subject of Alison Krauss's 2007 song, "Jacob's Dream."
Inscription on the monument: "The Lost Children of the Alleghenies were found here, May 8, 1856, by Jacob Dibert and Harrison Whysong."
See also a detail showing the inscription and the full version of the real photo postcard (below).
The Lost Children of the Alleghenies monument stands as a memorial to the sad story of George and Joseph Cox, ages 7 and 5, whose bodies were discovered at the site on May 8, 1856. The boys wandered away from their home in the Allegheny Mountains of northern Bedford County, Pennsylvania, on April 24.
The boys' parents sought help when they were unable to locate their children, and hundreds of people eventually came to help search through the mountainous terrain during the following days. After two weeks of searching, however, the boys still had not been found, and the freezing cold weather in the higher altitudes was a cause for concern.
A man named Jacob Dibert, who lived some distance away and had not participated in the search, dreamed that he was out in the woods looking for the boys. He dreamed for three nights in succession that he saw a dead deer, a little shoe, and a tree that had fallen across a stream. After crossing the stream, he found the boys' bodies.
He sought the help of his brother-in-law, Harrison Whysong, who was familiar with the area where the boys had gone missing. After Jacob described what he saw in his dream, the men attempted to locate the site. They noticed a dead deer, found a boy's shoe, and spotted a tree that had fallen over a stream. They crossed over, and discovered George and Jacob's lifeless bodies.
The poignant story of the boys "found by a dream" circulated widely in newspapers and books and by word of mouth. The monument was built and dedicated on May 8, 1906, fifty years after the sad event.
For more information, see the Wikipedia article about the Lost Children of the Alleghenies. The boys' story was also the subject of Alison Krauss's 2007 song, "Jacob's Dream."
Roger Dodger, Fred Fouarge, Smiley Derleth, Deborah Lundbech have particularly liked this photo
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The author claims that this is a true story that happened in the late 1700s in New Hampshire. (It maybe an ancestor of hers, I can't remember.)
Interesting similarities, although a happier ending for the little girl.
RicksPics club has replied to Deborah Lundbech clubAlan Mays club has replied to Deborah Lundbech clubAlan Mays club has replied to RicksPics clubAlan Mays club has replied to RicksPics club"Poor babes in the wood, oh don't you remember those babes in the wood."
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