LOLCats, a Storied History Spanning a Century

Despite the mockingly hilarious Laugh-Out-Loud cats (and their made-up history dating them to 1912-1913), Mental Floss has pointed out an early, real LOLcat that appeared in a 1929 issue of Parents Magazine. The image depicts a histrionic cat "laughing" with the caption, "Ha, Ha, Ha, It must be so!" The idea behind the photograph was to have it hang in the nursery, effectively terrifying children away from ever owning felines. While 1929 seems like a long time ago to be LOLing at cats, photographer Harry Whittier Frees, says Neatorama, took small animals and dressed them up in ridiculous clothes as early as 1903. Employed by Rotograph, a popular postcard company, Frees often added his own captions, like "How's the weather out?" or "What's delaying my dinner?" (Too bad cheeseburgers weren't even invented then!). As Frees, erm, matured, he created more costumes and relied less on punchlines, which can be seen in his later, William Wegman-style work. It seems his most LOL-worthy material was produced between 1903-1906, before he turned into a creepy cat person.
So there you have it, the history of LOLcats seems to originate from Harry Wittier Frees and his bizarre way of documenting animals, from his initial work with Rotograph to his own photography. Perhaps today, he would indeed has a flavor. [From: Mental Floss, via Boing Boing, One More River, Neatorama, and Techland]













