54 Chilling Images With Unknown Stories From History

By Sophia Maddox | June 26, 2023

Marilyn Monroe relaxing in her home, 1951

When you look back at history there are moments that you can’t help but feel like you’ve lived. Big, sweeping, epic moments that are etched in stone. But even more fascinating are the stories that exist between the bullet points. These jaw dropping photos that tell the unknown stories are sure to amaze. Click ahead with fervor and plow through pictures and anecdotes about everything from World War II to Madonna, and even the early years of Walt Disney.

That’s not all we have. There are eye opening looks at Mother Nature, natural disasters, and indigenous people that you’d never see in your normal life. Keep some eye drops handy because there’s a lot to learn and photos that will astound. Onward! 

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source: reddit

Before Marilyn Monroe was the blonde bombshell that everyone knows she was an actress performing bit parts in any film that she could scrounge up. However, the tide turned for her in 1950 when she appeared in The Asphalt Jungle. By 1951 she was the toast of the town after appearing at the 23rd Academy Awards

The same year she appeared in Home Town Story, As Young As You Feel, Love Nest, and Let’s Make It Legal. These were huge for her at the time, but they were nowhere near as big as the films that would come her way only a couple of years later. 

One of the stone carvings on top of Notre Dame, 1910


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source: Reddit

Notre-Dame de Paris has been standing in one way or another since 1163. Even though it didn’t truly finish construction until 1345, it’s always under some kind of reconstruction, and following the fires of 2019 it’s likely to be under construction for another hundred years. This cathedral has some of the most breathtaking stone carvings in the world.

Known as gargoyles or grotesques, stone creatures intended to protect the church from malevolent spirits, these creatures were added as drainage systems to keep rain water from pooling on the roof and various levels. Art historian Michael Camille says that the cathedral’s gargoyles look alike because they fall apart so easily:

On medieval churches gargoyles rotted so quickly, if they did their job properly and carried off water, that only a century or so after they were made they had to be replaced.