Sometimes a simple photograph can stir unexpected emotions. Images captured across time often reveal unsettling stories hidden behind their surfaces. These haunting historical photos from the past challenge us to explore history’s darker moments and the lasting impact they leave behind.
Mountain of Bison Skulls (1892)
In 1892, outside Michigan Carbon Works in Rougeville, Michigan, a staggering sight was captured: a towering mountain of bison skulls. These bones were destined to become fertilizer, glue, and charcoal, a chilling testament to the devastation wrought by colonization and industrial greed.
In the early 1800s, there were between 30 to 60 million bison in North America. By the time of this photo, fewer than 500 remained. Settlers’ expansion and the market’s thirst for bison products led to a brutal near-eradication, severing Indigenous people’s deep connection to the animals.
Today, wild bison have rebounded to around 31,000, but this photo remains a stark reminder of how close we came to losing them forever.
Inger Jacobsen and Jackie Bülow (1954)