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In image at lower right: The Wilhelms
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In image at lower right: The Wilhelms of Alamosa
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In image at lower left: The Wilhelms of Alamosa
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Attributed to O.T. Davis. In pencil at the top left on the back of the image: sugar beets
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Attributed to O.T. Davis. In purple ink at center left on the back of the image: FORD'S, DENVER, COLO.
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In image at lower right: O.T. DAVIS PHOTO No 1935
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In image at lower right: SUGAR- BEETS. MOSCA. Colo. O.T. DAVIS PHOTO No. 1242
c. 1910
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In image at lower right: SUGAR- BEETS. MOSCA. Colo. O.T. DAVIS PHOTO No. 1242
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The study of World War II Japanese American removal and incarceration remains fresh and interesting, even though it happened decades ago1 Despite the best efforts of those who had been uprooted, deprived of unalienable rights, and held captive against their will for over three years, little redress was to be found for more than a generation. A partial and belated governmental recognition and rectification finally came, but its insufficiency further...
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In pencil at top left on the back of the image: Switchbacks on Alamosa River. Photographer unknown
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In image at lower left: T BONE RANCH/ W.A. BRAIDEN/ CONEJOS COUNTY COLO; in image at lower right H.F. HUME
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Much as the glider program has oftentimes been overlooked by popular culture since the end of the war, so too has the program been largely overlooked by many academic studies of the war. Only a handful of books have been devoted to the glider program and many of those books were memoirs written by the pilots themselves. When looking at the few books devoted entirely to the program, three historical questions come up when looking at the glider program....
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Attributed to O.T. Davis. In pencil on back of image: On Main & Hunt
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In an unassuming rural town in Massachusetts during the early 1800's a revolution in American economy and women's rights was born. Lowell, Massachusetts, on the Merrimack River, was the home of the textile industry in America. The Boston Associates, the brains and funds behind the textile mills, unwittingly set up a system, The Waltham-Lowell system, in order to maintain a paternalistic control over the female operatives at the Lowell textile mills....