Workers in the lock and drill department at National Cash Register. Dayton, OH. 1902.
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Workers in the lock and drill department at National Cash Register. Dayton, OH. 1902.
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Workers in the seamless tube department at the Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation. Aliquippa, PA. 1930/1950.
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Workers at the Liberty Loan Bonds Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Washington, DC. 1918.
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Workers at the 140-inch mill at the Carnegie Steel Company.Homestead, PA. 1892.
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Work crew at the Atwater Kent Radio Factory. Philadelphia, PA. 1925.
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Workers assembling a 44-inch blooming mill at the Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation's Aliquippa Works. Aliquippa, PA. September, 1953.
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Workers assembling speaker grilles at the Atwater Kent Radio Factory. Philadelphia, PA. 1928.
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Workers processing steel rods at the Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation. Pittsburgh, PA. 1929.
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Never realised the submarine was relatively well developed long before the land tank was even thought of.
Wonder what the survival rate of these early subs was, even without going to war?
Hi: The Hunley Submarine from 1865 killed all three of the crews it ever had. It was the first sub to sink an enemy ship. Carl.