40 of the most powerful photographs ever taken.

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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'Best of' Collections are subjective but some of these are pretty interesting and new to me anyway.




the rest:

40 Of The Most Powerful Photographs Ever Taken
 

WLDB

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Im surprised that picture of a Viet cong being executed didnt make the list.
 

Bar Sinister

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Jan 17, 2010
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Some great photos there, but here are a few they might have added.


Napalm victim Kim Phuc


Warsaw Ghetto Boy



VJ Day
 

Colpy

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Some great photos there, but here are a few they might have added.


Napalm victim Kim Phuc


Warsaw Ghetto Boy



VJ Day

Did you know the burned little girl in the first photograph now lives in Toronto???

'Napalm Girl Photo' From Vietnam War Turns 40

bump

and thanks guys....great pics





And here it is....in Saigon.

Oh, and before anyone starts feeling too sorry for the guy on the receiving end.....

"Nguyễn Văn Lém (referred to as Captain Bảy Lốp) (died 1 February 1968 in Saigon) was a member of the Viet Cong who was summarily executed in Saigon during the Tet Offensive. The execution was captured on film by photojournalist Eddie Adams, and the momentous image became a symbol of the inhumanity of war. The execution was explained at the time as being the consequence of Lém's suspected guerrilla activity and war crimes, and otherwise due to a general "wartime mentality." It was later learned that Lem was suspected of having murdered one of Gen. Loan's senior officers, and his entire family, during the Tet Offensive shortly before Gen. Loan summarily executed him on a busy Saigon street.
On the second day of Tet, amid fierce street fighting, Lém was captured and brought to Brigadier General Nguyen Ngoc Loan, then Chief of the Republic of Vietnam National Police. Using his personal sidearm, General Loan summarily executed Lém in front of AP photographer Eddie Adams and NBC television cameraman Vo Suu.[1] The photograph and footage were broadcast worldwide, galvanizing the anti-war movement; Adams won a 1969 Pulitzer Prize for his photograph.
South Vietnamese sources said that Lém commanded a Vietcong death squad, which on that day had targeted South Vietnamese National Police officers, or in their stead, the police officers' families. Corroborating this, Lém was captured at the site of a mass grave that included the bodies of at least seven police family members. Photographer Adams confirmed the South Vietnamese account......."


Nguyen Van Lem - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

Bar Sinister

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bump

and thanks guys....great pics





And here it is....in Saigon.

Right, and that one is even uglier when it is seen in moving picture film. Photos that had a major impact in turning Americans against the war.
 
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Colpy

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Right, and that one is even uglier when it is seen in moving picture film. Photos that had a major impact in turning Americans against the war.

Not pretty, fully justified........

One of the problems with our ability to fight and win now is that our right (and it is a right) to see what goes on undermines our resolve, sometimes without reason.
 

EagleSmack

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This is a compiled list of 12 of the Most Iconic Photos Ever Taken, a couple of which have been posted here already.

I'd agree that all on the list are iconic, but the last two are incredibly intense, powerful and quite disturbing.

Swick » 12 Of The Most Iconic Photographs Ever Taken

Yes these ones were much more intense. Wow.

Right, and that one is even uglier when it is seen in moving picture film. Photos that had a major impact in turning Americans against the war.

No question. This is the photo that did it.
 

Blackleaf

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The "Second Great Fire of London", 29th/30th December 1940.

Between 6 pm and 6 am the next day, more than 24,000 high explosive bombs and 100,000 incendiary bombs were dropped on London by the Luftwaffe. The raid and the subsequent fire destroyed many Livery Halls and gutted the medieval Great Hall of the City's Guildhall.

The largest continuous area of Blitz destruction anywhere in Britain occurred on this night, stretching south from Islington to the very edge of St Paul's Churchyard. The area destroyed was greater than that of the Great Fire of London in 1666. The raid was timed to coincide with a particularly low tide on the River Thames, making water difficult to obtain for fire fighting. Over 1500 fires were started, with many joining up to form three major conflagrations which in turn caused a firestorm that spread the flames further, towards St Paul's Cathedral.

Prime Minister Winston Churchill insisted that the Cathedral be saved at all costs.

160 civilians died during that 12 hours. 14 firemen died fighting the fires and 250 were injured. Buildings completely destroyed in the fire storm included 19 churches, 31 guild halls and all of Paternoster Row. Paternoster Row was the centre of the London publishing trade and an estimated 5 million books were lost in the fire.

Probably everyone today is aware of Herbert Mason's iconic photograph of St Paul's Cathedral standing proudly and seemingly untouched amid a sea of smoke and flame on the 29th/30th December 1940, the night that became known as the Second Great Fire of London. This photograph was circulated around the world and became a symbol of the British people's defiance against the Nazi hordes waiting across the Channel.



The truth is that far from being undamaged, the famous old cathedral did in fact sustain quite serious damage on a number of occasions during the War and on the night that Mason's photograph was taken, came within a whisker of joining the ten Wren churches destroyed within the Square Mile on that fateful night.

During The Great War, the Dean and Chapter of St Paul's had formed the St Paul's Watch in order to guard the Cathedral against German air attacks, which in those days came from the giant airships colloquially known as Zeppelins and the Gotha biplane bombers. In that conflict, the Cathedral had survived unscathed and the Watch had been disbanded in 1918. In 1939, the Watch was reformed as a dedicated team of three hundred fire watchers and fire fighters formed mainly from the Cathedral's own staff but augmented by members of RIBA - the Royal Institute of British Architects - including the future Poet Laureate, Sir John Betjeman. About forty of the Watch were on duty at any one time, with more being drafted in during air raids. On the night of the 29th/30th December, it was estimated that some eight hundred incendiaries fell on and around the Cathedral, all of which were successfully dealt with by the Watch - all except for one rogue bomb which lodged in the lead covering of the Dome. This bomb was too high for those stationed on the Stone Gallery to reach and too far down for the members stationed on the Ball high above street level. As the incendiary fizzled and burst into life, the onlookers could only watch helplessly and pray that somehow the bomb would not fall into the Dome and ignite the timber framework that supported the whole structure, for if this were to happen then the Cathedral was certain to burn like the rest of the City, leaving just a shell. Just as things were looking desperate, either a miracle or a result of gravity occurred, depending on one's point of view and the bomb fell outward, bounced down the side of the Dome and landed on the Stone Gallery where it was pounced upon by members of the St Paul's Watch and quickly extinguished.

The St Paul's Watch was disbanded once again after the war but was reformed once again in 1952 when it was renamed The Friends of St Pauls who today sell guidebooks and assist visitors to the Cathedral.


St Paul's Cathedral and the surrounding area today

Blitzwalkers: Saving an Icon: The St Paul's Watch and a Flawed Hero

Second Great Fire of London - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
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