fyeah-history:

Charleston Dancers, Club Prudhom, c.1920s
The Charleston dance became established (worldwide) during the Jazz Age. The series of steps is thought to have originated with African-Americans living on a small island near Charleston, South Carolina. The Charleston was performed as early as 1903 and made its way into Harlem stage productions by 1913. In 1923, it was introduced to the theater going public at the New Amsterdam Theater in New York, when the “Ziegfeld Follies” staged a dance that featured the Charleston. The dance was an immediate hit. In the 1920’s, women who did the Charleston were called “Flappers” because of the way they would flap their arms and walk like birds while doing the Charleston. Many college students of the period, mostly men, wore raccoon coats and straw hats when doing the Charleston. By 1926, the Charleston had been replaced by other popular dances of the day. Charleston-style dance patterns and steps (often called Lindy Charleston) are very popular today with Lindy Hop and Jitterbug dancers. Addison Scurlock, photographer.

Source: Scurlock Studio Records, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution

yeaverily:

Tour de France, 1920s.

Things you won’t see today: Not only are the bikers smoking, but they are completing the race on single speed bikes (seriously, only one gear).

maudelynn:

A Fox Shoes Advert Photo by Charles Gates Sheldon

hollyhocksandtulips:

1928, photo by George Hoyningen-Huene

solo-vintage:

HRH Princess Mary, only daughter of Queen Mary of Teck, 1920s

deviatesinc:

Anna Köchl, born male-bodied but allowed by her family to live as a woman, pictured here at 18 in 1929.

sydneyflapper:

I’m Going Way Up To Mars

Because in the 1920s…anything is possible! I like the fact he’s passing Venus during his interplanetary travel.