
25 Of The Best Finds On A Group Sharing All Things Interesting
There is a wealth of information for curious minds to devour if we delve further into certain photographs. The Utterly Interesting subreddit is comprised of more than 91,000 inquisitive minds interested in discerning the backstory of certain historical images. As the saying goes, a picture speaks a thousand words, and the particular images we’ve shared in the gallery below have garnered the attention of many in this community with a penchant for appreciating fascinating captures of past events.
#1 Kathleen Did Not Light Up A Room

#2 Replica Dog Tags Of Every Soldier Who Never Made It Back From Vietnam

#3 A Seaman’s Request For An Extraordinary Leave Of Absence, 1967

#4 A Black Friday Event I Can Get On Board With

#5 A Man Looking For A Wife In 1865. His Potatoes Were Bully So I’m Sure He Didn’t Have To Look For Long

#6 Museums Are Great

#7 This Seems Relatively High. This You? If So, Why?

u/No_Curve_8141: The industry started making sound levels abhorrent. The apologists will say that it’s your fault because you don’t have a mega lit sound system, but it’s the same way in movie theaters now. Inaudible dialogue with ear-shattering music and explosions. Imprison the sound engineers I say.
#8 Museum In Japan That Showcases Various Naturally Formed Rocks With Faces On Them

#9 The Skeleton Of A Stingray

#10 Jon From 1997, Clearly One Of The Good Guys

#11 A Historic Journey Of Bridges. Devils Bridge Near Aberystwyth, Wales. The Original Medieval Bridge At The Bottom, The 18c Turnpike Road Bridge In The Middle And The Modern 20c Bridge Above

#12 C.s. Lewis’ Advice To A Young Girl On How To Become A Better Writer

#13 The Seiko TV Watch Back In 1982

#14 Douglas Adams’ Grave Has A Bouquet Of Pens And A Small Towel Laid Out For Him. I Think He’d Appreciate This

#15 The Size Of This Flag Flown On A Spanish Ship At The Battle Of Trafalgar (1805)

#16 Home Coming- Jimmy Stewart And His Dad Outside The Family Hardware Store, Indiana, Pa., 1945

#17 The Spiral Staircase In Loretto Chapel, Santa Fe, Known As The “Miraculous Staircase,” Built Without A Center Support And Without Nails

#18 Inside The Walls Of Mont Saint-Michel, France

#19 These Were Sold During Prohibition Era As Flavour Blocks To Make Juice. The Box Came With Dried Grapes With Fermentation Instructions How “Not” To Make Wine

#20 Storyboards Martin Scorsese Drew When He Was 11-Yrs Old For A Roman Epic: “The Eternal City”

#21 In The Atlantic Ocean Off The Coast Of Iceland Is A Lighthouse At An Altitude Of 40 Meters

It was built on Westman Island in 1939 a time when helicopters were not yet in use. Master climbers were used during its construction and for transportation of materials.
#22 The Grave Of An American Pilot Buried By Imperial Japanese Troops. The Sign Reads “Sleeping Here, A Brave Air-Hero Who Lost Youth And Happiness For His Mother Land. July 25 – Nippon Army”. Kiska, Alaska, 25 August 1943

#23 At The Wank Mountain In Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, This Wankbahn Brings You To The Wankhaus On Top, Where There’s A Wank View Observation Area

#24 “First The Man Takes The Drink, Then The Drink Takes The Man.” Made From Bronze, Glass, And Silver Patina By Thomas Lerooy In 2014

#25 A Little Alpine Refuge That Was Built More Than 2700m Above Sea Level In Italy’s Dolomite Mountains (Mount Cristallo)

This refuge has been built inside one of the peaks of the massif, with brick walls, a slanted roof, two doorways and four windows framed in wood.

Shanilou Perera
Shanilou has always loved reading and learning about the world we live in. While she enjoys fictional books and stories just as much, since childhood she was especially fascinated by encyclopaedias and strangely enough, self-help books. As a kid, she spent most of her time consuming as much knowledge as she could get her hands on and could always be found at the library. Now, she still enjoys finding out about all the amazing things that surround us in our day-to-day lives and is blessed to be able to write about them to share with the whole world as a profession.