177 Comments Posted by binabinaaa

wrote:
I love this shot. The vastness of the space makes you feel really small.
wrote:
Wow, this is a great shot.
wrote:
This used to be such a beautiful building. I remember driving by it on the way to my aunts house. It is such a shame what has become of it in its later years. We as a people in the country are all about having new things and getting rid of the old. If we were in Europe this building would be considered young. But here we consider it to old to be of any real use when the fact is it would be of great use if the maintance was kept up on.
wrote:
Motts thank you for feeding my hunger of history and how people lived during WWII. You are a true artist and inspiration.
wrote:
the door is trying to fight off the rust
wrote:
thank you for the explanation.
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I also see it I think she needs to go to the bottom bunk in the medical room
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I cant imagine having that water drip on me.eeeeewwwwww
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the tunnel feels kind of ominious dont make me go down there
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would like this whole cabient transported to my house so I can have a better look. and so I can practice whose first?
wrote:
neat crib. but done forget about the chamber pot underneath. makes you wonder if there is a hole in the bottom of the crib
wrote:
interesting picture. definetly doesnt want the bottom bunk either
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its what every fashionable mother should be wearing
wrote:
they made gas masks for babies. it was more like a helmet with cloth attached to the bottom of it. you would put the babies head in the helmet wrap the cloth snuggly around the baby and secure it under its butt. I had heard somewhere that there were ones that were more bag like where you put the whole baby in there but I havent seen any of that type.
wrote:
I see the spectacles laying there and think to myself if you had to wear those and the gas mask you might be screwed. If you wanted to see you couldnt breathe if you wanted to breathe you couldnt see.