- A 1940s beach shot allegedly proves time travel.
- It shows hundreds of Britons relaxing on the beach after the Second World War.
- In September 1943, the families were relaxing on the beaches of Cornwall, when an impostor appeared.
A 1940s beach shot allegedly proves time travel. It shows hundreds of Britons relaxing on the beach after the Second World War. Among the many sun rays, it seemed from a different time.
In September 1943, the families were relaxing on the beaches of Cornwall, when an impostor appeared. A standing man in a brown suit looks at a smartphone from the 1940s. Social media users discussed their engagements.
He was dubbed the “Texting Time Traveler” because the photo showed him browsing through his phone. Others dismissed the claims as “crazy” and said he was smoking. Some social media users said the photo from Toan Beach, Newquay, proved “time travel is real”.
“Is it just me or is this guy checking his phone… in the 1940s?” read one comment.
“Looks like beachwear has changed!” said another. Jacket, tie, hat? I remember that from the 1950s.
3rd: “Nice catch. It’s clearly the shot guy who’s a time-traveling tourist checking his mobile device.
“Finally the proof we need that time travel is real.”
But the theory was dismissed by one user who said: “I think the chap is rolling a cigarette!”
Other historical images have shaken time travel believers in recent weeks.
Some observers said that the 1938 footage obtained by The Mirror proved that time travel was real.
Walking towards the camera clip a young woman holding something over her head. Conspiracy theorists claim that a woman was filmed talking on a cell phone decades before it was invented. With one palm clasped above her head, the woman chatters through the crowd. Before the film ends, she cuts it short.
A woman, dressed in 30s fashion, lowers the object from her ear, revealing a dark hand-sized object like a modern cell phone. A YouTuber claimed that the woman in the photo was his grandmother and was using a cell phone, further deepening the mystery.
PlanetCheck on YouTube claims that DuPont’s Leominster factory made the division’s experimental wireless phone.