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New York City police stop a chauffer for a breath test, Jan 21, 1939
New York City police stop a chauffer for a breath test, Jan 21, 1939

EVB2943895: New York City police stop a chauffer for a breath test, Jan 21, 1939 / Bridgeman Images

Couple served beer in a 1933 advertising photo for a brewer
Couple served beer in a 1933 advertising photo for a brewer

EVB2943896: Couple served beer in a 1933 advertising photo for a brewer / Bridgeman Images

Martha Eccles Dodd and her husband Alfred K. Stern in the late 1930s, when they began spying for the Soviet Union. Her earlier romantic life when she lived in Berlin with her father, U.S. Ambassador William Dodd, is detailed in Erik Larson's book, 'In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin'
Martha Eccles Dodd and her husband Alfred K. Stern in the late 1930s, when they began spying for the Soviet Union. Her earlier romantic life when she lived in Berlin with her father, U.S. Ambassador William Dodd, is detailed in Erik Larson's book, 'In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin'

EVB2943897: Martha Eccles Dodd and her husband Alfred K. Stern in the late 1930s, when they began spying for the Soviet Union. Her earlier romantic life when she lived in Berlin with her father, U.S. Ambassador William Dodd, is detailed in Erik Larson's book, 'In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin' / Bridgeman Images

Treasury Dept. guards shipment of silver dollars from Philadelphia mint, 1935. The machine gun armed agents stand outside the Treasury building
Treasury Dept. guards shipment of silver dollars from Philadelphia mint, 1935. The machine gun armed agents stand outside the Treasury building

EVB2943903: Treasury Dept. guards shipment of silver dollars from Philadelphia mint, 1935. The machine gun armed agents stand outside the Treasury building / Bridgeman Images

Sing Sing Prison, a New York State Penitentiary in Ossining 1931
Sing Sing Prison, a New York State Penitentiary in Ossining 1931

EVB2943909: Sing Sing Prison, a New York State Penitentiary in Ossining 1931 / Bridgeman Images

Labor secretary William Doak and W.W. King, examining a 1931 television receiver at the Labor Department. The magnifying screen aided viewing the small round TV image
Labor secretary William Doak and W.W. King, examining a 1931 television receiver at the Labor Department. The magnifying screen aided viewing the small round TV image

EVB2943916: Labor secretary William Doak and W.W. King, examining a 1931 television receiver at the Labor Department. The magnifying screen aided viewing the small round TV image / Bridgeman Images

Government employee with 1890 census records, c. 1940
Government employee with 1890 census records, c. 1940

EVB2943917: Government employee with 1890 census records, c. 1940 / Bridgeman Images

Federal workers in the patent office file room, where patents are kept on file for public use. Feb. 29, 1940
Federal workers in the patent office file room, where patents are kept on file for public use. Feb. 29, 1940

EVB2943920: Federal workers in the patent office file room, where patents are kept on file for public use. Feb. 29, 1940, Harris & Ewing (1905-45) / Bridgeman Images

A worker in the Social Security Board Records Office at the 'visible control' rack. Each card in this rack represents an operation completed on one block of 1,000 applications. By glancing at each compartment in the rack, the number of operations completed can be estimated. c. 1937
A worker in the Social Security Board Records Office at the 'visible control' rack. Each card in this rack represents an operation completed on one block of 1,000 applications. By glancing at each compartment in the rack, the number of operations completed can be estimated. c. 1937

EVB2943926: A worker in the Social Security Board Records Office at the 'visible control' rack. Each card in this rack represents an operation completed on one block of 1,000 applications. By glancing at each compartment in the rack, the number of operations completed can be estimated. c. 1937 / Bridgeman Images

Davison Highway, built in 1941-42, was a depressed six-lane, limited-access highway connecting Detroit and Highland Park
Davison Highway, built in 1941-42, was a depressed six-lane, limited-access highway connecting Detroit and Highland Park

EVB2943935: Davison Highway, built in 1941-42, was a depressed six-lane, limited-access highway connecting Detroit and Highland Park / Bridgeman Images

General Motors executives commemorate the production of GM's 25,000,000th car, 1940. Group includes Harlow Curtice, GM president; Alfred Sloan, and William Knudsen
General Motors executives commemorate the production of GM's 25,000,000th car, 1940. Group includes Harlow Curtice, GM president; Alfred Sloan, and William Knudsen

EVB2943937: General Motors executives commemorate the production of GM's 25,000,000th car, 1940. Group includes Harlow Curtice, GM president; Alfred Sloan, and William Knudsen / Bridgeman Images

Two streamlined 1930s locomotives, near Washington, D.C
Two streamlined 1930s locomotives, near Washington, D.C

EVB2943939: Two streamlined 1930s locomotives, near Washington, D.C / Bridgeman Images

The Taj Mahal, Visit India, c.1930 (poster)
The Taj Mahal, Visit India, c.1930 (poster)

EVB2943947: The Taj Mahal, Visit India, c.1930 (poster), Bagdatopoulos, William Spencer (1888-1965) / Bridgeman Images

Travel - air, land, sea. Book through Burnes, Philip & Co. Ltd, c.1935 (poster)
Travel - air, land, sea. Book through Burnes, Philip & Co. Ltd, c.1935 (poster)

EVB2943949: Travel - air, land, sea. Book through Burnes, Philip & Co. Ltd, c.1935 (poster), Jardine, Walter Lacy (1884–1970) / Bridgeman Images

Goodyear Blimp at a Washington, D.C. area airport, c. 1940. Enterprise (NC-16A) made its first flight on August 23, 1934 and operated between NYC and Washington. It starred in the 1977 Hollywood movie BLACK SUNDAY
Goodyear Blimp at a Washington, D.C. area airport, c. 1940. Enterprise (NC-16A) made its first flight on August 23, 1934 and operated between NYC and Washington. It starred in the 1977 Hollywood movie BLACK SUNDAY

EVB2943959: Goodyear Blimp at a Washington, D.C. area airport, c. 1940. Enterprise (NC-16A) made its first flight on August 23, 1934 and operated between NYC and Washington. It starred in the 1977 Hollywood movie BLACK SUNDAY, Harris & Ewing (1905-45) / Bridgeman Images

New York City at night, view toward south with Rockefeller center and Empire State Building, 1930s
New York City at night, view toward south with Rockefeller center and Empire State Building, 1930s

EVB2943976: New York City at night, view toward south with Rockefeller center and Empire State Building, 1930s / Bridgeman Images

Headlines posted in the window of Brockton Enterprise Newspaper office, Brockton, Mass., 1940
Headlines posted in the window of Brockton Enterprise Newspaper office, Brockton, Mass., 1940

EVB2943981: Headlines posted in the window of Brockton Enterprise Newspaper office, Brockton, Mass., 1940, Delano, Jack (1914-97) / Bridgeman Images

News photographers in Berlin, Germany, 1930s
News photographers in Berlin, Germany, 1930s

EVB2943987: News photographers in Berlin, Germany, 1930s / Bridgeman Images

News photographers filming a building demolition in Washington, D.C., c. 1940. They are standing on the top of automobiles to get a better angle of the explosion scene
News photographers filming a building demolition in Washington, D.C., c. 1940. They are standing on the top of automobiles to get a better angle of the explosion scene

EVB2943988: News photographers filming a building demolition in Washington, D.C., c. 1940. They are standing on the top of automobiles to get a better angle of the explosion scene / Bridgeman Images

Baroness Hilla Rebay, an abstract painter and key advisor Solomon R. Guggenheim, as he built the modern art collection to be housed in the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. She advocated the selection of Frank Lloyd Wright to design the new museum. 1931
Baroness Hilla Rebay, an abstract painter and key advisor Solomon R. Guggenheim, as he built the modern art collection to be housed in the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. She advocated the selection of Frank Lloyd Wright to design the new museum. 1931

EVB2943989: Baroness Hilla Rebay, an abstract painter and key advisor Solomon R. Guggenheim, as he built the modern art collection to be housed in the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. She advocated the selection of Frank Lloyd Wright to design the new museum. 1931 / Bridgeman Images

Sculptor Gutzon Borglum (1871-1941), on a ladder with his model of Mt. Rushmore memorial. 1936
Sculptor Gutzon Borglum (1871-1941), on a ladder with his model of Mt. Rushmore memorial. 1936

EVB2943998: Sculptor Gutzon Borglum (1871-1941), on a ladder with his model of Mt. Rushmore memorial. 1936 / Bridgeman Images

Blasting dynamite on Abraham Lincoln sculpture on Mount Rushmore, c. 1935. Explosives 'carved' 90% of the monument, leaving only three to six inches of rock was left to remove with precision drilling and then finishing. Photo by Charles d'Emery
Blasting dynamite on Abraham Lincoln sculpture on Mount Rushmore, c. 1935. Explosives 'carved' 90% of the monument, leaving only three to six inches of rock was left to remove with precision drilling and then finishing. Photo by Charles d'Emery

EVB2944003: Blasting dynamite on Abraham Lincoln sculpture on Mount Rushmore, c. 1935. Explosives 'carved' 90% of the monument, leaving only three to six inches of rock was left to remove with precision drilling and then finishing. Photo by Charles d'Emery / Bridgeman Images

Staged photo of worker hanging from Jefferson's eye lid on Mount Rushmore. c. 1934. Photo by Charles d'Emery
Staged photo of worker hanging from Jefferson's eye lid on Mount Rushmore. c. 1934. Photo by Charles d'Emery

EVB2944009: Staged photo of worker hanging from Jefferson's eye lid on Mount Rushmore. c. 1934. Photo by Charles d'Emery / Bridgeman Images

Work continues at Mt. Rushmore in winter, c. 1935. Heads of Washington and Jefferson are in progress. Photo by Charles d'Emery
Work continues at Mt. Rushmore in winter, c. 1935. Heads of Washington and Jefferson are in progress. Photo by Charles d'Emery

EVB2944013: Work continues at Mt. Rushmore in winter, c. 1935. Heads of Washington and Jefferson are in progress. Photo by Charles d'Emery / Bridgeman Images

Photographer Charles d'Emery at Mt. Rushmore. He documented the progress of the carving for over a decade, c. 1930s
Photographer Charles d'Emery at Mt. Rushmore. He documented the progress of the carving for over a decade, c. 1930s

EVB2944016: Photographer Charles d'Emery at Mt. Rushmore. He documented the progress of the carving for over a decade, c. 1930s / Bridgeman Images

African Americans shopping in the Gee's Bend cooperative store, May 1939. The store was established with assistance from the New Deal Resettlement Administration
African Americans shopping in the Gee's Bend cooperative store, May 1939. The store was established with assistance from the New Deal Resettlement Administration

EVB2944035: African Americans shopping in the Gee's Bend cooperative store, May 1939. The store was established with assistance from the New Deal Resettlement Administration / Bridgeman Images

Harvesting soybean hay with a mule drawn wagon, Lake Dick, Arkansas, Sept. 1938. Several farmers work together, including the Lake Dick cooperative president, who drives the mule. Photo by Arthur Rothstein
Harvesting soybean hay with a mule drawn wagon, Lake Dick, Arkansas, Sept. 1938. Several farmers work together, including the Lake Dick cooperative president, who drives the mule. Photo by Arthur Rothstein

EVB2944042: Harvesting soybean hay with a mule drawn wagon, Lake Dick, Arkansas, Sept. 1938. Several farmers work together, including the Lake Dick cooperative president, who drives the mule. Photo by Arthur Rothstein, Rothstein, Arthur (1915-85) / Bridgeman Images

Family moving into their new home at Greenbelt, Maryland, a New Deal planned community, Oct. 1937. Residents acceptance was based on income and occupation, and their communal inclinations
Family moving into their new home at Greenbelt, Maryland, a New Deal planned community, Oct. 1937. Residents acceptance was based on income and occupation, and their communal inclinations

EVB2944049: Family moving into their new home at Greenbelt, Maryland, a New Deal planned community, Oct. 1937. Residents acceptance was based on income and occupation, and their communal inclinations / Bridgeman Images

View of the U.S. Capitol from the portico of the new Supreme Court Building. March 1937. Photo was taken during FDR's Court packing initiative
View of the U.S. Capitol from the portico of the new Supreme Court Building. March 1937. Photo was taken during FDR's Court packing initiative

EVB2944058: View of the U.S. Capitol from the portico of the new Supreme Court Building. March 1937. Photo was taken during FDR's Court packing initiative / Bridgeman Images

West face of the Supreme Court Building, Washington, D.C., Nov. 1936. It was designed by architect Cass Gilbert and was his last major project
West face of the Supreme Court Building, Washington, D.C., Nov. 1936. It was designed by architect Cass Gilbert and was his last major project

EVB2944059: West face of the Supreme Court Building, Washington, D.C., Nov. 1936. It was designed by architect Cass Gilbert and was his last major project / Bridgeman Images

Louis Brandeis, was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by Woodrow Wilson in 1916. He was the first Jew to service on the nation's highest court
Louis Brandeis, was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by Woodrow Wilson in 1916. He was the first Jew to service on the nation's highest court

EVB2944069: Louis Brandeis, was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by Woodrow Wilson in 1916. He was the first Jew to service on the nation's highest court / Bridgeman Images

President Roosevelt broadcasts his proposal to pack the Supreme Court, March 9, 1937. In this Fireside Chat, he accused the Court of improperly setting itself up as a 'third house of the Congress'
President Roosevelt broadcasts his proposal to pack the Supreme Court, March 9, 1937. In this Fireside Chat, he accused the Court of improperly setting itself up as a 'third house of the Congress'

EVB2944071: President Roosevelt broadcasts his proposal to pack the Supreme Court, March 9, 1937. In this Fireside Chat, he accused the Court of improperly setting itself up as a 'third house of the Congress' / Bridgeman Images

Senate Judiciary Committee considers FDR's request 'to pack' the Supreme Court, 1937
Senate Judiciary Committee considers FDR's request 'to pack' the Supreme Court, 1937

EVB2944072: Senate Judiciary Committee considers FDR's request 'to pack' the Supreme Court, 1937 / Bridgeman Images

Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts, was appointed to the court by Herbert Hoover in 1930. Roberts switched his position on New Deal in late 1936, voting to uphold the constitutionality of minimum wage laws in 1937
Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts, was appointed to the court by Herbert Hoover in 1930. Roberts switched his position on New Deal in late 1936, voting to uphold the constitutionality of minimum wage laws in 1937

EVB2944074: Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts, was appointed to the court by Herbert Hoover in 1930. Roberts switched his position on New Deal in late 1936, voting to uphold the constitutionality of minimum wage laws in 1937 / Bridgeman Images

'Gridiron Widows' satirize U.S. Supreme Court, with a tableau in which the First Lady fills the next Supreme Court vacancy. Dec. 16, 1938. Left to right: Elizabeth Craig-Roberts; Helen Atwater-Butler; Ruby Black-McReynolds; Isabel Griffin-Brandeis; Lilli Sheppard-Hughes; Bess Furman-Stone; Catherine Redman-Black; Alena Wharton-Reed; and Dorothy Lewis as Mrs. Roosevelt. In the front is Betty Garnett
'Gridiron Widows' satirize U.S. Supreme Court, with a tableau in which the First Lady fills the next Supreme Court vacancy. Dec. 16, 1938. Left to right: Elizabeth Craig-Roberts; Helen Atwater-Butler; Ruby Black-McReynolds; Isabel Griffin-Brandeis; Lilli Sheppard-Hughes; Bess Furman-Stone; Catherine Redman-Black; Alena Wharton-Reed; and Dorothy Lewis as Mrs. Roosevelt. In the front is Betty Garnett

EVB2944076: 'Gridiron Widows' satirize U.S. Supreme Court, with a tableau in which the First Lady fills the next Supreme Court vacancy. Dec. 16, 1938. Left to right: Elizabeth Craig-Roberts; Helen Atwater-Butler; Ruby Black-McReynolds; Isabel Griffin-Brandeis; Lilli Sheppard-Hughes; Bess Furman-Stone; Catherine Redman-Black; Alena Wharton-Reed; and Dorothy Lewis as Mrs. Roosevelt. In the front is Betty Garnett / Bridgeman Images

Fireworks over the Washington Monument, 1934
Fireworks over the Washington Monument, 1934

EVB2944089: Fireworks over the Washington Monument, 1934 / Bridgeman Images


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