Original Vintage WWII Poster The Enemy Is Listening Careless Talk Secretary H 46.46 in W 33.08 in D 0.04 in Original Vintage WWII Poster Great Americans Industrial War Work Military Design H 27.17 in W 20.08 in D 0.04 in Original Vintage WWII Poster Civil Defence Women Wanted For Evacuation Ser...
WWII Minorities, Women and The War at Home. Minority Participation African Americans generally served in segregated units and were assigned to non- combat. World War II Posters and Propaganda Posters created during WWII were used as motivation and propaganda. As each poster comes up, look for: P...
1942 U.S. Public Health Service poster Since theCOVID-19 emergencybegan, the importance of handwashing has been brought back to the forefront of hygiene practices and is now one of the most important recommendations given by governments all over the world to fight the spread of the virus. In...
''Rosie the Riveter'' became an iconic WWII propaganda piece and symbol of the strength of women. Rosie was the famous female face on the propaganda poster with the slogan, ''We Can Do It,'' urging women to roll up their sleeves and get to work in the wartime factories. Women helped...
Mikhail Trakhman was born in Moscow in 1918. After graduating from school, he began working at the newsreel studio and at the same time studying for courses in the field of assistant operator. From 1938 he became the photo reporter of the Uchitelskaya Gazeta, and in 1939 he was drafted in...
The fascination with the Battle of Britain continues, together with the mythology of the Blitz and the now ubiquitous ‘Keep Calm and Carry On’ poster (which was never actually deployed during the war but is now seen on mugs, tea towels and countless other products). Adolf Hitler Adolf ...
Josei shingun poster of Japanese female war worker In WWII as men went to fight at the front women had to replace them in industry. There is a famous "Rosie the Riveter" poster that encouraged women to leave their homes and take part in the war effort. The poster above was exhibited by...
This work-incentive poster was made for the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company and became one of the most famous icons of World War II. "Rosie the Riveter" in Richmond American civilians in the wartime boom town of Richmond included the real-life “Rosies” and others who toiled ...
When word of the Japanese surrender broke, people spilled into the streets of New York City from restaurants, bars and theaters to celebrate the news. Sailor George Mendonsa spotted Greta Friedman in Times Square, a woman he'd never met, and planted a kiss on her lips. ...
The amount of unimaginable suffering & death of innocent men, women & children that had no say in the war to begin with was nothing more than a test to see the effects of nuclear devastation on the human populace. There was no excuse for the ...