James Bedford, born in 1893, was an American psychology professor at the university of California




In 1967, Bedford died of cardiorespiratory arrest after he battled kidney cancer that had metastasized to his lungs. In his will he had left $100,000 for cryonics research, and with this money, his body was frozen with two hours of his death. He is the first person to be cryogenically preserved, and waits to be revived in the future.

He lies frozen inside a thermal sleeping bag immersed in liquid nitrogen in an aluminum pod he shares with three other preserved humans within a giant vacuum flask known as a dewar.

James Bedford’s dewar is stacked vertically along with more than hundred other frozen people in the Alcor Life Extensions Foundation in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Cryonics companies believe that one could potentially live indefinitely as long as the body is cryogenically preserved immediately after death.

In the picture below, technicians cover Bedford’s feet after placing him in the dewar.

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