visibility Similar

code Related

Shenandoah Valley. Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisburg, which turns out fifteen bottle washing machines a year, selling at thirty-five hundred dollars a piece. This was an invention of Mr. Fletcher's under the spur of necessity

Shenandoah Valley. Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisburg, which turns out fifteen bottle washing machines a year, selling at thirty-five hundred dollars a piece. This was an invention of Mr. Fletcher's under the spur of necessity

Shenandoah Valley. Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisburg, which turns out fifteen bottle washing machines a year, selling at thirty-five hundred dollars a piece. This was an invention of Mr. Fletcher's under the spur of necessity

Shenandoah Valley. Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisburg, which turns out fifteen bottle washing machines a year, selling at thirty-five hundred dollars a piece. This was an invention of Mr. Fletcher's under the spur of necessity

Shenandoah Valley. Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisburg, which turns out fifteen bottle washing machines a year, selling at thirty-five hundred dollars a piece. This was an invention of Mr. Fletcher's under the spur of necessity

Shenandoah Valley. J.C. Myers, because of his intermittent employment, is a potential worker in a defense plant. When business is brisk, he works as an extra in Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisonburg

Shenandoah Valley. J.C. Myers, because of his intermittent employment, is a potential worker in a defense plant. When business is brisk, he works as an extra in Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisonburg

Shenandoah Valley. J.C. Myers, because of his intermittent employment, is a potential worker in a defense plant. When business is brisk, he works as an extra in Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisonburg

Shenandoah Valley. J.C. Myers, because of his intermittent employment, is a potential worker in a defense plant. When business is brisk, he works as an extra in Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisonburg

Shenandoah Valley. Paul Fletcher's tiny factory in Harrisburg, which turns out fifteen bottle washing machines a year, selling at thirty-five hundred dollars a piece. This was an invention of Mr. Fletcher's under the spur of necessity

description

Summary

Actual size of negative is D (approximately 3 1/4 x 4 1/4 inches).

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 37, frame 219.

label_outline

Tags

virginia harrisonburg safety film negatives lot 2116 united states office for emergency management john vachon paul fletcher shenandoah valley fletcher fifteen bottle office of war information farm security administration united states history library of congress
date_range

Date

01/01/1941
place

Location

harrisonburg
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

https://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

label_outline Explore Paul Fletcher, Lot 2116, Harrisonburg

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

Unloading cans of milk and cream from truck to belt conveyer at Dariymen's Cooperative Creamery. Caldwell, Canyon County, Idaho

A black and white photo of a fireplace with pictures on it. Office of War Information Photograph

Oil burners to machine gun parts. Fixture which holds bare of raw materials from which small pieces, cut to size, are obtained for production of precision parts for Uncle Sam's machine gun squads. Site of these operations is an Eastern factory which has been converted from manufacture of oil burners to production of war essentials. Reif-Rexoil Company, Buffalo, New York

Carver Cotton Gin Company, East Bridgewater, Massachusetts

Greensboro, Greene County, Georgia. In the Mary-Leila cotton mill

San Augustine, Texas. W.F. Hays, the editor of the San Augustine Tribune

A black and white photo of a man in a workshop. America during Great Depression and World War Two. FSA / OWI Photograph.

A black and white photo of a man working on a pipe, Great Depression. FSA/OWI Photograph

Fiberglass manufacture, Owens-Corning, Toledo, Ohio. Fiberglass yarns are twisted and plied on standard textile machinery as a step in the manufacture of tapes and cloths, used principally to insulate electric equipment operating under heavier loads today than ever before

A couple of men standing next to each other. World War Two Era FSA/OWI Photograph.

A special drill press cuts a great number of holes simultaneously in casings for engines at the Pratt and Whitney Aircraft Corporation. East Hartford, Connecticut

Topics

virginia harrisonburg safety film negatives lot 2116 united states office for emergency management john vachon paul fletcher shenandoah valley fletcher fifteen bottle office of war information farm security administration united states history library of congress