Viewing

Viewing Unidentified Person 3445 in this photo.

The highlighted face card below matches the person context you came from.

Jump to current face
Historical photograph from Charles Fox Dayton Ohio CollectionAlbert Fox
c. 1950s · 1/4 identified · Charles Fox Dayton Ohio Collection
IdentifiedUnidentified
Photo 87 of 636
DownloadFamily TreeSee on Map

Charles Fox Dayton Ohio Collection · Personal Photos

4 people detected · 1 identified

c. 1950s ± 7 yearshigh confidence

AI Analysis

Estimated by AI — help us verify

Date Estimate — AI Estimated

circa 1958

Confidence: highRange: 1955–1965
1940s
5%
1950s
70%
1960s
25%
AI Reasoning — AI Estimated

The presence of window air conditioning units, tubular metal patio furniture, and a fringed umbrella strongly point to the mid-to-late 1950s or early 1960s. The primary subject, Albert Fox (born ~1896), appears to be in his early 60s, which aligns perfectly with a date around 1958. The swimwear styles further corroborate this mid-century timeframe.

Location Estimate — AI Estimated

Miami, Florida

Other possible locations
  • Miami Beach, Florida (medium) [both] — A very common mid-century vacation destination for Midwesterners, aligning with the resort visuals and his later life connection to the area.
  • Dayton, Ohio (low) [biographical] — His primary residence at the time, though the commercial signage ('Coffee Shop') makes a local private pool club less likely than a travel destination.
Scene — AI Estimated

A candid black and white photograph of people relaxing around a motel or resort swimming pool on a sunny day. In the foreground, an older man wearing glasses sits at a table, applying lotion from a bottle to his arm, with a cigar and a box of lotion nearby. In the background, other guests are seen wading in the pool or standing on the deck, with a fringed patio umbrella, metal chairs, and a building featuring window air conditioning units and commercial signs.

Photo Detective Evidence — AI Estimated

Photo Detective Analysis

Print/Physical

Black and white snapshot format with typical mid-century contrast and grain

moderate (1950-1970)

Fashion/Grooming

Men's patterned boxer-style swim trunks and cabana robe

strong (1950-1965)

Round wire-rimmed glasses worn by the primary subject

moderate (1940-1960)

Environment

Window air conditioning units visible on the building exterior

strong (1955-1975)

Fringed patio umbrella and tubular metal patio furniture

strong (1950-1965)

Technology

Plastic or glass lotion bottle and commercial packaging design

moderate (1950-1970)

Geographic Analysis

Location: Miami, Florida

Confidence: low

Visual evidence

Motel or resort setting with a swimming pool, window AC units, 'Coffee Shop' and 'Phone' signs, and warm-weather leisure attire.

Genealogical context

Albert Fox resided in Dayton, Ohio during this era, but later married in Miami-Dade, Florida (1975). The visual evidence strongly suggests a vacation destination rather than his Ohio residence.

Missing child analysis

N/A - candid public setting.

Subject Ages — AI Estimated

62, 40, 45, 70

Face Analysis — AI Estimated
  • Face 0: Age ~62, Male — Older man, likely Albert Fox, with short hair and round glasses, shirtless and applying lotion to his arm.
  • Face 1: Age ~40, Female — Woman in the background, partially obscured, wearing a dark top or swimsuit.
  • Face 2: Age ~45, Male — Middle-aged man standing in the shallow end of the pool wearing dark, patterned boxer-style swim trunks.
  • Face 3: Age ~70, Male — Older man standing on the right edge of the frame wearing a striped cabana robe over swimwear.
Group Composition — AI Estimated

Candid

6 people

Candid scene around a swimming pool with one subject prominent in the foreground and others scattered in the background.

Clothing & Attire — AI Estimated

Men are wearing typical mid-century swimwear, including patterned boxer-style trunks and a striped cabana robe. The primary subject wears round wire-rimmed glasses.

Do you recognize someone?

Help us identify the people in this photograph. Your family knowledge could be the key to preserving our shared history.