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The stash of 190 propaganda posters from World War I and World War II were found last year on top of two sawhorses in the basement of a Rochester, New Hampshire, library. ROCHESTER, N.H.
World War I, the Great War, the war to end all wars, was not the war to end all propaganda. That may be the most striking lesson offered by “Over There! Posters From World War I,” which runs ...
World War I posters re-created by Clara Aranovich. United States National War Garden Commission, 1918; Z.P. Nikolaki, Library of Congress, 1918; Clara Aranovich 2020-07-22T19:51:21Z ...
The armistice that came into effect at 11 a.m. local time on Nov. 11, 1918, silenced the guns of World War I, ending one of the bloodiest conflicts in modern history.
When hostilities broke out in 1914, officials were quick to make use of the old war hero – the pointing image went on to be one of the most reproduced posters ever.
Posters From World War I” opens July 26 and continues until June 14, 2015. More to Read L.A. 2026 World Cup committee hosts art contest to select official poster design ...
World War I produced one of the most memorable images in American history: the U.S. Army recruiting poster that depicts a commanding Uncle Sam pointing his finger at the viewer and urging young ...