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A series of posters — on display at the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Mo., until Sept. 15 — designed by the Army to show America’s discharged soldiers how they ...
5. Not everyone loves Rosie the Riveter. After its rediscovery, the "We Can Do It" poster became a worldwide feminist symbol, replicated on everything from T-shirts to postage stamps.
WW1 in pictures: Poster women of World War One. ... Head of Collections at the National Army Museum, ... They tapped into the influence women had over their men to get them to join up, ...
I Want You for U.S. Army, 1917, James Montgomery Flagg The Huntington Library, Art Galleries, and Botanical Gardens Step into Your Place, 1915, artist unknown The Huntington Library, Art Galleries ...
In honor of the 100th anniversary of the U.S. joining World War I on April 6, ... The image was later adapted by the U.S. Army for the poster with the new, unforgettable call to action.
Iconic U.S. Army recruitment poster from World War I sells for $20,000 at auction in New York The iconic poster sold Tuesday at Guernsey's in Manhattan, New York It had a pre-sale estimate of ...
Slide 1 of 8, Lord Kitchener recruitment poster from World War One, This famous poster used the face of Lord Kitchener to persuade men to join the army. Kitchener died when his ship hit a German mine.
During World War I, posters beckoned civilians to join the armed forces and beseeched State-side warriors to conserve wheat and sugar, all in the name of helping the troops.
In Russia, a documentary being shown about Western, state-run propaganda during World War I is illustrated with a fan-drawn poster drawn during a Team Fortress 2 publicity campaign in 2009.
This 1917 Women's Land Army poster depicting a dutiful woman doing farm chores was published in London to encourage women to work the land in place of men who had gone to serve in WWI. AbeBooks.com ...