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In June 2021, as cities across the United States and around the world experienced abnormally high temperatures, a photograph that supposedly showed two mannequins that had melted during a heat wave in London in 1929 was circulated on social media: This is a genuine photograph of two deformed mannequins that melted during excessive heat in 1929. This photograph was originally published in the June 1, 1929 issue of The Sphere, a British newspaper that ran from 1900 to the 1960s. The image was included in a News of the Week section where it carried the caption: WILTING LILIES: Two wax bathing bells in New Bridge Street register extreme depression owing to the heat-wave. Even human, as well as waxen, beauties have felt apt to wilt in the recent burst of hot weather. The original newspaper clipping can be seen in the British Newspaper Archives. This clipping can also be glimpsed below via a Tweet from Yesterday's Print, a Twitter account that collects newspaper clippings and old photographs, in response to a post from Fake History Hunter, a Twitter account that seeks to correct historical misinformation on social media: We're not sure of the specific temperature that was reached on the day these mannequins melted, but newspaper clippings from the time noted that London was truly experiencing a heat-wave. Here's an article from Reuters that was published a few days before this melted mannequin photograph appeared in The Sphere. 26 May 1929, Sun The Observer (London, Greater London, England) Newspapers.com This article reads:
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