WWI pillow fight
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WWI pillow fight
The CLB 75 Tank
The CLB 75 is not what it seems. The photograph above was taken during a California National Guard exercise which was widely publicised but the tank featured at its centre is little more than a tractor encased in stamped sheet metal.
Developed by the C.L. Best Tractor Company of San Francisco, the CLB 75 is based on the chassis of a CLB 75hp 'Tracklayer'/’Autotractor’. It had a sheet metal outer-skin and a rounded turret. It’s an eye-catching design, like something straight out of an H.G.Wells novel.
A C.L. Best Autotractor, the basis of the CLB 75 (source)
The tank has a set of tracks and a front steering wheel. The CLB 75 appears to be bristling with a pair of cannons and at least two machine guns in the turret. The CLB 75 was what is often described as a ‘parade tank’, an impractical tank designed as a showpiece for parades at home rather than in the field on the frontline. Similar parade tanks were built on Holt and Caterpillar tractors. This particular example even features in Pathe newsreel where it’s described as a ‘land dreadnought’ and shown in mock attacks mounted during National Guard exercises.
In reality during the First World War the US developed or produced three actual tanks: the M1917 Light Tank - based on the French Renault FT, the Ford M1918 3-Ton Tank and the MKVIII ‘International’ heavy tank. While none of those saw action during the war they were more practical, actual armoured fighting vehicles than the parade tanks like the CLB 75.
Sources:
Images: 1 2 3
Caterpillar Chronicle : History of the Greatest Earthmovers, E.C. Orlemann
Early US Armor: Tanks 1916–40, S.J. Zaloga
American Tanks In Action 1917, British Pathe, (source)
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“Photograph of Women Rivet Heaters at Puget Sound Navy Yard,” 5/29/1919
Series: General Photographic File, 1893 - 1945. Record Group 86: Records of the Women's Bureau, 1892 - 1995.
Women riveters pose for the camera at the Navy Yard in Puget Sound, Washington. Taken a generation before the more famous World War II image of “Rosie the Riveter,” this photograph shows women working in industrial jobs traditionally filled by men, just as women did during World War II.
Uncover more World War I Centennial Resources at the National Archives.
via DocsTeach
Remember them.
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.
November 11, 1918 saw a temporary cessation of hostilities between the Allied nations and Germany – an armistice that signified the end of World War I.
On April 26, 1937 Rep. Bertrand Gearhart (R-CA) introduced H.R. 6656 – “A bill making the 11th day of November in each year a legal holiday.”
In this letter, Rep. Gearhart writes to the Honorable Hatton W. Sumners (D-TX), Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, asking that his bill creating “a day for the celebration of the blessing of peace rather than the victories of war” be taken up by the full committee. The Judiciary Committee did eventually reported favorably on the bill, sending it the Senate. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed H.R. 6656 into law on May 13, 1938.
Armistice Day was celebrated in the United States primarily to honor veterans of World War I until 1954. In June 1954, at the urging of veteran service organizations, the Act of 1938 was amended by striking out the word "Armistice" and inserting the word "Veterans.” Veterans Day has been celebrated ever since to honor American veterans of all wars.
Letter from Bertrand Gearhart, Papers Accompanying Specific Bills and Resolutions of the Committee on the Judiciary, HR75A-D20, April 26, 1937, Records of the U.S. House of Representatives, Record Group 233.
"Therefore, in the realities of the capitalist system, and not in the banal philistine fantasies of English parsons... 'inter-imperialist' or 'ultra-imperialist' alliances, no matter what form they may assume, whether of one imperialist coalition against another, or of a general alliance embracing all the imperialist powers, are inevitably nothing more than a 'truce' in periods between wars. Peaceful alliances prepare the ground for wars, and in their turn grow out of wars; the one conditions the other, producing alternating forms of peaceful and non-peaceful struggle on one and the same basis of imperialist connections and relations within world economics and world politics. But in order to pacify the workers and reconcile them with the social-chauvinists who have deserted to the side of the bourgeoisie, [a defender of the alliance system] separates one link of a single chain from another, separates the present peaceful (and ultra-imperialist, nay, ultra-ultra-imperialist) alliance of all the powers for the 'pacification' of China (remember the suppression of the Boxer Rebellion) from the non-peaceful conflict of tomorrow, which will prepare the ground for another 'peaceful' general alliance for the partition, say, of Turkey, on the day after tomorrow, etc., etc.” - Vladimir Lenin, State and Revolution
AnswerTime! Ask an Archivist about World War I
Join the National Archives’ Mitch Yockelson for a World War I-themed Tumblr Answer Time here at @todaysdocument on Wednesday, October 4 from 12pm - 1pm ET (9am- 10am PT) !
Ask your questions now at http://todaysdocument.tumblr.com/ask →
October 4 is #AskAnArchivist Day and as we’re in the midst of the World War I Centennial, we’ve invited World War I expert Mitch Yockelson to join us for a Tumblr Answer Time. Bring all your questions about World War I including:
How can I research an ancestor who fought in the war?
What World War I resources does the National Archives have?
What prominent personalities emerged out of the war?
How did African Americans serve during the war?
What roles did women fill?
Mitchell Yockelson is an investigative archivist with the National Archives Archival Recovery Program. He has also written two books on World War I, including Forty-Seven Days: How Pershing’s Warriors Came of Age to Defeat the German Army in World War I.
FOOD WILL WIN THE WAR!
August 10, 2017, marks the 100th Anniversary of the signing of the Lever Food and Fuel Control Act, creating the U.S. Food Administration during World War I.
On August 10, 1917, President Woodrow Wilson signed the Lever Food Act and issued subsequent Executive Order 2679-A creating the U.S. Food Administration, U.S. Fuel Administration, and named Herbert Hoover the director of the Food Administration.
The U. S. Food Administration, operating in each state, was to
Assure the supply, distribution, and conservation of food during the war,
Facilitate transportation of food and prevent monopolies and hoarding, and
Maintain governmental power over foods by using voluntary agreements and a licensing system.
Using the same authority, Wilson created two subsidiaries, the U.S. Grain Corporation and the U.S. Sugar Equalization Board. Together with the U.S. Food Administration, these bodies would extraordinarily impact American lives.
Under Hoover's direction, the Food Administration, in league with the Council of Defense, urged all homeowners to sign pledge cards that testified to their efforts to conserve food. The government issued the appeal on a Friday. By the following week, Americans had embraced wheatless Mondays, meatless Tuesdays, and porkless Saturdays to assist the troops overseas.
The National Archives, including the National Archives at Riverside, holds the Records of the U.S. Food Administration (RG 4). Many of the materials are described in our online catalog, and include digitized materials such as the posters above. Please visit the catalog for a list of records from RG 4.