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Production. M-4 tanks. Better striking power and better protection for our soldiers are provided by the mighty M-4 tank. A machine operation on a tank turret is performed in an Eastern plant

Production. M-4 tanks. A strong, steady stream of mighty M-4 tanks is flowing from our arsenal of democracy. These heavy steel hulls and bogie-wheel assemblies in an Eastern plant give some idea of the massive construction of our new land battleships

Production. M-4 tanks. From our arsenal of democracy pours a strong, steady stream of mighty M-4 tanks. Each tank is given a final careful check before it rolls off the assembly line of an Eastern plant

Production. M-4 tanks. Hull members of an M-4 tank on a "positioner" in the welding ship of an Eastern manufacturer. The M-4 marks a new advance in America's production of heavy armored equipment

Production. M-4 tanks. Mighty M-4 tanks are flowing in a strong, steady stream from the production lines of our arsenal of democracy. These bogie wheels being assembled in an Eastern plant give some idea of the massive construction of our new land battleships

Production. M-4 tanks. From our arsenal of democracy pours a strong, steady stream of mighty M-4 tanks. Each tank is given a final careful check before it rolls off the assembly line of an Eastern plant

Testing M-4 tanks. Over the top, and ready to go down the steep side of a test hill. A mighty M-4 tank makes successful trial turns at an Eastern manufacturing plant

Testing M-4 tanks. A battleship of the land, one of America's mighty M-4 tanks, tops the ridge of a test hill as trial runs are made at an Eastern manufacturing plant

Production. M-4 tanks. A strong, steady stream of mighty M-4 tanks is flowing from our arsenal of democracy. These heavy steel hulls and bogie-wheel assemblies in an Eastern plant give some idea of the massive construction of our new land battleships

Production. M-4 tanks. Better striking power and better protection for our soldiers are provided by the mighty M-4 tank. A machine operation on a tank turret is performed in an Eastern plant

description

Summary

Actual size of negative is C (approximately 4 x 5 inches).

Caption card lists some of the printing history of image.

Title and other information from caption card.

Transfer; United States. Office of War Information. Overseas Picture Division. Washington Division; 1944.

More information about the FSA/OWI Collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsaowi

Film copy on SIS roll 31, frame 856.

label_outline

Tags

safety film negatives william m rittase united states office of war information photo m 4 tanks tank turret machine operation eastern plant office of war information farm security administration united states history workers library of congress
date_range

Date

01/01/1942
place

Location

united states
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

https://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

label_outline Explore M 4 Tanks, William M Rittase, Eastern Plant

Production. Parachute making. There is far more to hemming this parachute than running the sewing machine. The operator must match pencil marks on the braid with pencil marks on the seams to turn out infallible parachutes for men in the Air Force. Pioneer Parachute Company, Manchester, Connecticut

David Paulk reading riddles; Paulk's house, stuffed dolls; Ben Hill County courthouse; C.M. Copeland at woodcarving shop, Ben Hill County, Georgia

Tuskegee Institute, Alabama. Student in the greenhouse

F.F. Cole, junior chemical engineer, keeps data on rate of dehydration of potatoes. Regional agricultural research laboratory, Albany, California

A black and white photo of two women working in a factory. Office of War Information Photograph

Melbourne, Australia. United States Army hospital. Sergeant Alfred Baron, Newark, New Jersey (left) and Technical Sergeant Richard Perry, Mansfield Ohio, in medical store room

Sewing a sack of potatoes. Monte Vista, Colorado

Tire recapping. A recap job on a passenger car tire. The tire with a tread strip of reclaimed camelback rubber is put into a curing mold. The old tread surface had previously been ground down evenly and coated with rubber adhesive. The plan to recap passenger tires with reclaimed rubber camelback, approved by rubber director William M. Jeffers, was put into effect in February 1943 to reduce the demand for replacement tires and still keep civilian cars in service

A black and white photo of men on a boat, Great Depression. FSA/OWI Photograph

Tel Aviv industries, Israel, Matson photograph collection

Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland. Gas demonstration. Working on reconditioned gas masks for civilian defense use at the gas mask factory

A black and white photo of a man cutting a fish. Great Depression Era FSA/OWI Photograph

Topics

safety film negatives william m rittase united states office of war information photo m 4 tanks tank turret machine operation eastern plant office of war information farm security administration united states history workers library of congress