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Minneapolis, Minnesota. Bernard L. Lukin, twenty-eight, of Norwegian ancestry. His father has a small farm in South Dakota. He left the farm in 1936 and has been working in Minneapolis since then. He is now working in a small machine shop turning out tools and dies for war plants in the area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Bernard L. Lukin, twenty-eight. His mother is Danish, his father is Norwegian. He is working in a small machine shop turning out tools and dies for war plants in the Minneapolis area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Bernard L. Lukin, twenty-eight. His mother is Danish, his father is Norwegian. He is working in a small machine shop turning out tools and dies for war plants in the Minneapolis area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Glenn E. Westerheim, whose mother was born in Hodonga, Norway and father in Oslo, Norway. They have been in this country about thirty years. He is now working in a small machine shop turning out tools and dies for the war plants in the Minneapolis area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Glenn E. Westerheim, whose mother was born in Hodonga, Norway and father in Oslo, Norway. They have been in this country about thirty years. He is now working in a small machine shop turning out tools and dies for the war plants in the Minneapolis area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Lars Anderson, whose father is the president of the Swedish Sciety in Minneapolis. His parents come from the town of Melurud, province of Dalsland, Sweden. He has just started working in this small machine shop turning out tools and dies for the war plants in the Minneapolis area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Lars Anderson, whose father is the president of the Swedish Sciety in Minneapolis. His parents come from the town of Melurud, province of Dalsland, Sweden. He has just started working in this small machine shop turning out tools and dies for the war plants in the Minneapolis area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Glenn E. Westerheim, whose mother was born in Hodonga, Norway and father in Oslo, Norway. They have been in this country about thirty years. He is now working in a small machine shop turning out tools and dies for the war plants in the Minneapolis area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Carl Westin, whose father Olaf and mother Elsa come from the town of Sandarne, province of Helsingland, Sweden. He is now working in a small machine shop turning out tools and dies for the war plants in the Minneapolis area

Minneapolis, Minnesota. Bernard L. Lukin, twenty-eight, of Norwegian ancestry. His father has a small farm in South Dakota. He left the farm in 1936 and has been working in Minneapolis since then. He is now working in a small machine shop turning out tools and dies for war plants in the area

description

Summary

Public domain photograph of 1930s industry, war production in the United States free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

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minnesota hennepin county minneapolis safety film negatives minneapolis minn bernard bernard l lukin twenty eight norwegian ancestry norwegian ancestry father farm dakota machine shop machine shop tools war plants war plants area 1940 s 40 s industrial facilities machine shops american farmers library of congress
date_range

Date

01/01/1942
person

Contributors

Delano, Jack, photographer
place

Location

Minneapolis (Minn.) ,  44.98000, -93.26389
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions. For information, see U.S. Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Black & White Photographs http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/071_fsab.html

label_outline Explore Ancestry, Twenty Eight, War Plants

Oswego, New York. Willard DiSantis, sixteen-year old high school boy who made seventy-six model planes for the U.S. Navy, and was awarded the honarary rank of admiral

New York, New York. Industrial training for war work offered to women by New York University under United States government sponsorship. Former jewelery [i.e., jewelry] designer, who made the pin and earrings she wears, learning to weld and solder by constructing these miniature radio towers

Fair employment practices in defense industries. A poster distributed by the OEM (Office of Emergency Management) Labor Division and the President's Committe on Fair Employment Practice to war plants and employment offices throughout the United States

High school Victory Corps. Future airplane mechanics tear planes apart, build them up again in aeronautics class at Washington High School, Los Angeles, California

Knoxville, Tennessee (Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)). Training for war production at NYA (National Youth Administration) school

War production drive sticker. The war production drive headquarters. The War Production Board (WPB) produced these stickers for distribution in war plants. They were designed for pasting on workers' machines to stimulate output of vital war materials. Sheets of assorted stickers may be obtained by writing Distribution Section, War Production Drive Headquarters, Washington, D.C

A Swedish defense worker, who was born in Sweden, working at a plant in Minnesota

Production. P-51 "Mustang" fighter planes. The accuracy of a milling machine operation is checked by an inspector in a machine shop at the Inglewood, California, plant of the North American Aviation. The casting being milled will be part of the landing gear of a P-51 fighter plane. This plant produces the battle-tested B-25 "Billy Mitchell" bomber, used in General Doolittle's raid on Tokyo, and the P-51 fighter plane which was first brought into prominence by the British raid on Dieppe

A black and white photo of a man working in a workshop. Pie Town, New Mexico. Farm Security Administartion photograph.

Give It Your Best. Three-color (red, white and blue) poster designed and distributed July 1 by the Division of Information, Office for Emergency Management (OEM) , for display in war plants throughout the nation. Sizes available: 40 x 56 in., 28 x 40 in. 28 12 x 20 in., 14 x 20 in. and 10 x 18 in

Aluminum casting. One of the skilled workers in an aluminum foundry pictured ramming the drag side of a sand mold. This foundry is producing aluminum equipment for Uncle Sam's war effort, under subcontract to other factories producing war items. Aluminum Industries Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio

Fort Belvoir, Virginia. Constantine P. Lihas, a twenty-one year old Greek-American soldier, formerly a material handler at the General Electric Company plant at Pittsburgh. Both parents were born in Greece; father came to the United States in 1906, mother in 1921. He was born in this country and has been in the army five months. Lihas in a decontamination outfit

Topics

minnesota hennepin county minneapolis safety film negatives minneapolis minn bernard bernard l lukin twenty eight norwegian ancestry norwegian ancestry father farm dakota machine shop machine shop tools war plants war plants area 1940 s 40 s industrial facilities machine shops american farmers library of congress