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Sailors at work aboard Amiral Aube, French ship

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Public domain historical photo, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

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glass negatives sailors work amiral aube amiral aube french ship workers industrial history shipyard library of congress
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Date

01/01/1900
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Bain News Service, publisher
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Library of Congress
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http://www.loc.gov/
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No known restrictions on publication.

label_outline Explore Aube, Amiral, Amiral Aube

On AMIRAL AUBE - Public domain portrait photograph

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

New York, New York. New England fisherman aboard their ship at Fulton fish market

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

Three-inch A.A. cartridge cases. Cartridge cases for three-inch antiaircraft shells are produced by a series of operations that transform a flat brass disc into a case ready for loading with propelling charge and shell. Between each operation there is careful washing to remove all scale and adhesion and to leave surfaces clean for later processing. The big Midwest plant doing the work is well equipped to handle it in stride

Portrait photo of [U.S.S. Maine, junior officers]

Mary Tomlin at work on "tube winding" on first floor.

Production. Tin smelting. "Bars" of pure tin are trimmed and cleaned before removal from the molds in which they were formed in a Southern smelter. All the trimmings are returned to the "pot boilers" for remelting. The plant, finest and most modern in the world, extracts the pure metal from South American ore

Victory food from American waters. Tomorrow's fishermen--young Gloucester boys push wagons of rosefish from the unloading pier to the processing plant where the fish are filleted and frozen. Many of the boys will follow their forefathers and fishermen in New England waters

Conversion. Toy factory. Stephanie Cewe and Ann Manemeit, have turned their skill from peacetime production of toy trains to the assembly of parachute flare casings for the armies of democracy. Along with other workers in this Eastern plant, they have turned their skill to the vital needs of the day, and in many cases have seen to it that the machinery they used to use does Uncle Sam's most important work today. Here, they are assembling parachute flare casings, using the same electric screwdrivers they formerly used to assemble the locomotives of toy trains. A. C. Gilbert Company, New Haven, Connecticut

"We have it rich." Washing and panning gold, Rockerville, Dak. Old timers, Spriggs, Lamb and Dillon at work

U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland. Building a ship's model

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glass negatives sailors work amiral aube amiral aube french ship workers industrial history shipyard library of congress