Sunday, April 19, 2026

France Built a Fake Paris During World War One to Trick German Bombers

 Toward the end of World War One French engineers built a second Paris.


Not a real city. A phantom one. A careful illusion designed to fool German bombers flying at night into dropping their explosives on empty countryside instead of the real French capital.


The project was conceived in 1917 and construction was underway in 1918 when the war ended before it could be fully tested in operation. But it was real, it was detailed, and it represents one of the most remarkable feats of military deception in history.


What They Built


The fake Paris was constructed on the outskirts of the city, near the town of Maisons-Laffitte to the northwest. The designers understood that German pilots navigating at night used lights and landmarks to identify their targets.


So they built landmarks.


Workers constructed a replica of the Gare du Nord railway station including fake platforms and rooftop structures that would look like the real thing from the air. They built a facsimile section of the Champs-Elysees with the avenue's characteristic dimensions and layout reproduced in wood and canvas. They erected dummy factory buildings and industrial structures.


Then they lit everything.


The fake city was illuminated in a pattern designed to mimic how Paris looked from the air at night. Translucent panels and strips of lights simulated the glow of streets and windows. The effect from altitude was meant to be convincing enough that a German airman would mistake it for the real city.


Why This Was Necessary


By late in the war German long-range aircraft and dirigibles had been bombing Paris and other French cities with increasing capability. The psychological effect of aerial bombardment on civilian populations was understood even then as a significant weapon of war.


The French could not simply turn off all the lights in Paris. The city had to function. Factories had to run. The civilian population had to live. Complete blackout was not practical.


The alternative was misdirection. Give the bombers a target that looked real and put it where bombing it would hurt nothing.


The war ended in November 1918 before the fake Paris could be fully evaluated in combat conditions. But the concept it demonstrated, that elaborate physical deception could protect real targets by creating convincing dummy ones, became a standard part of military thinking in the conflicts that followed.


In World War Two both sides used inflatable tanks, fake airfields, and dummy installations to mislead reconnaissance aircraft and bombers. The idea had French origins from a project that most people have never heard of.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

The Simple Shoebox Method That Could Save Your Family History Forever

 Every family has one.


A shoebox. A drawer. A bin in the closet. Somewhere in your home or your parents home or your grandparents home there is a collection of old photographs, letters, documents, and objects that have been sitting in the same place for decades.


Those items are your family's historical record. They are irreplaceable. And every year that passes without someone doing something to preserve them is a year closer to losing them forever.


Paper yellows. Photographs fade. Documents crumble. Memories die with the people who hold them. And when the person who knows whose faces are in those photographs is gone nobody can ever find out.


Here is a simple system that anyone can use to rescue what is in that shoebox before it is too late.


Step One: Gather Everything in One Place


Go through your home and collect every old photograph, letter, document, certificate, and physical memento you can find. Check the closets, the attic, the basement, the drawers, everywhere.


If your parents or grandparents are still living visit them and do the same. Ask to borrow anything old. Tell them you want to make copies for the family.


Do not wait until someone passes away to do this. By then access to their belongings is complicated by grief, by legal processes, and sometimes by conflict among family members. Do it now while it is easy.


Step Two: Label While You Still Can


Before you scan or photograph anything write on small sticky notes or paper slips everything you know about each item. Who is in the photograph. When it was taken. Where. What the occasion was. Who the letter is from and to. What the document is.


If there are people in old photographs whose names you do not know find someone who might know and ask immediately. Show the photographs to older family members. Record their answers. Those answers are as important as the photographs themselves.


A photograph without a name attached becomes a mystery within one generation. A photograph with a name, a date, and a location becomes a historical document that lasts forever.


Step Three: Scan or Photograph Everything


You do not need a professional scanner. The camera on your smartphone is sufficient for most purposes.


For photographs and documents lay them flat on a clean surface in good natural light and photograph them straight on. Get close enough to fill the frame. Take multiple shots of important items.


Free scanner apps like Microsoft Lens or Adobe Scan can improve the quality of document photographs automatically. For very old or fragile photographs a flatbed scanner gives better results if you can access one. Many libraries have scanners available for public use at no charge.


Do not skip items that seem unimportant. The grocery list written in your grandmother's handwriting. The birthday card from 1962. The ticket stub from a movie nobody can remember. These are the texture of a life. Future generations will treasure exactly these things.


Step Four: Store Copies in Multiple Places


The single biggest mistake people make when preserving family history is keeping everything in one place.


Save your scans on your phone and on a computer. Back them up to a cloud service. Email important files to family members. Save copies to an external hard drive that you store somewhere other than your home.


For permanent public preservation upload your family photographs and documents to the Internet Archive at archive.org. It is free. Materials are preserved permanently. They are searchable and accessible to anyone in the world including your descendants a hundred years from now.


If there are genealogical records, birth dates, marriage dates, family connections, upload those to FamilySearch at familysearch.org. It is free and specifically designed to connect family history records across generations.


Step Five: Record the Stories While You Can


Scanned photographs and digitized documents are valuable. But they only tell part of the story.


The rest of the story lives in the memories of the oldest people in your family. And those memories have an expiration date.


Record a conversation with every older family member you can reach. Ask them to tell you about the people in the old photographs. Ask them about their own childhood. Ask them about their parents and grandparents. Record it on your phone, save it, and store it alongside the photographs it relates to.


A five minute voice recording of your grandmother explaining who is in a 1940 photograph is worth more than the photograph alone. Together they become something extraordinary.


The Shoebox Is Already History


The things in that shoebox were put there by people who mattered. They lived through things worth remembering. They loved people who deserved to be remembered.


You are the person who can make sure they are.


You do not need a big plan or a lot of money or special skills. You need a few hours, a phone, and the decision to start today.


The shoebox is waiting. What you do with it is up to you.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina

The CIA Spent Millions Training a Cat to Spy on the Soviets and It Got Hit by a Taxi

 During the Cold War the CIA ran some of the most creative and strange intelligence programs in American history.


MK Ultra tested mind control drugs on unwitting citizens. Operation Paperclip hired Nazi scientists. And then there was Operation Acoustic Kitty.


In the early 1960s someone at the CIA had an idea. Cats were common animals. They wandered freely through parks and streets and public spaces. Nobody paid much attention to them. What if a cat could be used to eavesdrop on Soviet agents having conversations in public places?


What They Built


The CIA spent five years and an estimated twenty million dollars developing the program.


Veterinary surgeons implanted a small microphone in a cat's ear canal. They threaded a thin wire antenna through its tail. They embedded a small transmitter in the cat's chest.


The surgery was real. The technology was real. The idea that a trained cat could be directed to sit near Soviet agents and transmit their conversations was the part that had some fundamental problems.


The First Mission


The program's first operational test took place in a park in Washington DC. The target was a group of Soviet agents sitting on a bench having a conversation. The cat was released nearby.


The cat walked directly into the street and was immediately hit by a taxi.


The CIA declassified a report on the program in 2001. The report describes the challenges involved in making the program work not with embarrassment but with the careful analytical language of people who had spent years and enormous resources on something that did not work at all.


The report concludes that the program was not practical due to the difficulties of training cats to perform targeted behaviors in uncontrolled environments.


In other words the CIA spent five years and twenty million dollars discovering that cats do not take orders.


Why This Story Matters Beyond the Obvious Comedy


Operation Acoustic Kitty is funny. It is also an example of something important about how large bureaucratic organizations work.


The program existed for five years. It received significant funding. It employed scientists and surgeons and handlers and analysts. Nobody at any point in that five year period apparently raised their hand and said that cats are famously untrainable and this will not work.


The internal logic of a large organization with resources and a mission can sustain projects that would fail an obvious common sense check. The question of whether cats follow directions was not asked early enough or loudly enough to stop the program before it consumed twenty million dollars and resulted in a surgically modified cat being hit by a taxi.


That dynamic is not unique to the CIA. It shows up in large organizations everywhere. And the historical record of government programs contains versions of this story on every scale from the absurd to the catastrophic.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.