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Parke, Davis and Company, manufacturing chemists, Detroit, Michigan. One of the steps in reducing fluid extracts to solid extracts

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Summary

Picryl description: Public domain image of a factory worker, plant, manufacture, assembly line, industrial facility, early 20th-century industrial architecture, free to use, no copyright restrictions. show less

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michigan wayne county detroit safety film negatives parke davis company chemists steps fluid extracts fluid extracts manufacturing united states history factory workers detroit publishing company photograph collection library of congress
date_range

Date

01/01/1943
person

Contributors

Siegel, Arthur S., photographer
place

Location

Detroit (Mich.) ,  42.33139, -83.04583
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Source

Library of Congress
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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 Fluid, Chemists, Parke

Detroit, Michigan. New method of making x-ray photographs size 4x5 inches instead of larger. Used at the Herman Kiefer Hospital for Communicable Diseases, to show various stages of tuberculosis. Timer for x-ray apparatus

Parke, Davis and Company, manufacturing chemists, Detroit, Michigan. Attaching the sling for suspending flasks of blood plasma

Parke, Davis and Company, manufacturing chemists, Detroit, Michigan. Counting empty gelatin capsules

Studying why fruits taste that way. E.K. Nelson of the Department of Agriculture is shown making tests with an apparatus which the Department imported from Germany for the purpose of studying the essential oils or "flavor-giving" content of fruits and vegetables. At present chemists are acquainted with the essential oils of only a few fruits, such as some of the citrus group. The apparatus is a vacuum distill which permits the distillation of liquids at temperatures much lower than usual by reducing the pressure, 1/10/31

Detroit, Michigan. Steps in the manufacture of casings for 105 mm. shells in the Budd wheel plant. Machining the rotating band on the shell

Detroit, Michigan. Assembly of Rolls Royce engines at the Packard motor car company. Checking threads with an amplifier

Halftrac scout cars. When the American assembly line gets down to business, things gets done and done well. The assembling of engines for the Army's new halftrac scout cars is a job well done and understood by the trained men of a large Ohio truck plant. White Motor Company, Cleveland, Ohio

Converting to war production. Steel workers make structural changes as a big auotmoobile plant is entirely changed over to mass production of army tanks and "jeeps." Ford Lincoln plant, Michigan

Detroit, Michigan. Steps in the manufacture of casings for 105 mm. shells in the Budd wheel plant. Lubricating fluid pouring on the base end of a shell which is being finished

Conversion. Automobile industry. To convert automobile assembly plants into war production plants, much of the old machinery must be removed. This workman, perched high, is helping to speed the changeover by removing an overhead conveyor. The Plymouth Company, Chrysler Corporation, Detroit, Michigan

Chrysler tank arsenal. The M-3 tank has an overall length of 18 feet, which means the track for one-side of this 28- ton monster is about 40 feet long. Each individual tread is made of solid rubber

A black and white photo of a conveyor belt. Dodge Brothers Motor Car Company Plant, Michigan

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michigan wayne county detroit safety film negatives parke davis company chemists steps fluid extracts fluid extracts manufacturing united states history factory workers detroit publishing company photograph collection library of congress