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War worker goes to Washington. Miss Clara Camille Carroll, recently arrived war worker from Cleveland, Ohio, was lucky. The 760,000 dollar Lucy D. Slowe Resident Hall had just been opened for Negro women war workers, and the War Housing desk at the United States Informational Service referred her as a possible tenant. There she met W. Spurgeon Burke, managing director

War worker goes to Washington. The young war worker, Miss Clara Camille Carroll of Cleveland, Ohio, is elated to find a bright and cheery room open to her at the 760,000 dollar Lucy D. Slowe Resident Hall in the nation's capital and prepares to move in immediately

War worker goes to Washington. The young war worker, Miss Clara Camille Carroll of Cleveland, Ohio, is elated to find a bright and cheery room open to her at the 760,000 dollar Lucy D. Slowe Resident Hall in the nation's capital and prepares to move in immediately

War worker goes to Washington. Typical of the thousands of young Negro women summoned to Washington, D.C. for war work, Miss Clara Camille Carroll of Cleveland, Ohio, arrives at Union Station in the nation's capital to accept an appointment as clerk in the Mail and File Section of the Ordnance Department of the War Department. It was a cold and dreary morning when Miss Carrol arrived

War worker goes to Washington. Miss Clara Camille Carroll of Cleveland, Ohio, contributes her bit to the war effort in her daily work. She is one of the thousands of Negro girls now filling clerical positions in the nation's capital

War worker goes to Washington. Typical of the thousands of young Negro women summoned to Washington, D.C. for war work, Miss Clara Camille Carroll of Cleveland, Ohio, arrives at Union Station in the nation's capital to accept an appointment as clerk in the Mail and File Section of the Ordnance Department of the War Department. It was a cold and dreary morning when Miss Carrol arrived

War worker goes to Washington. Acting on the advice of the personnel advisor in her section of the War Department, Miss Clara Camille Carroll registers at the War Housing desk at the United States Informational Service, Fourteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, North West. This office was established to aid war workers in obtaining suitable living quarters

War worker goes to Washington. Acting on the advice of the personnel advisor in her section of the War Department, Miss Clara Camille Carroll registers at the War Housing desk at the United States Informational Service, Fourteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, North West. This office was established to aid war workers in obtaining suitable living quarters

War worker goes to Washington. Back home in the Lucy D. Slowe Resident Hall, Miss Clara Camille Carroll meets a Cleveland, Ohio, friend, Corporal William M. Decatur, Jr., of the cavalry detachment at Fort Meyer, Virginia. While a party for service men is being held in the recreation room, the two home-towners retire to the lounge to discuss old times

War worker goes to Washington. Miss Clara Camille Carroll, recently arrived war worker from Cleveland, Ohio, was lucky. The 760,000 dollar Lucy D. Slowe Resident Hall had just been opened for Negro women war workers, and the War Housing desk at the United States Informational Service referred her as a possible tenant. There she met W. Spurgeon Burke, managing director

description

Summary

Actual size of negative is C (approximately 4 x 5 inches).

Title and other information from caption card.

Transfer; United States. Office of War Information. Overseas Picture Division. Washington Division; 1944.

More information about the FSA/OWI Collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsaowi

Film copy on SIS roll 32, frame 275.

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Tags

district of columbia washington dc safety film negatives lot 1914 roger smith united states office of war information photo war worker negro women war workers war miss clara camille carroll slowe resident hall states informational service office of war information farm security administration race relations united states history african americans library of congress ohio
date_range

Date

01/01/1942
place

Location

district of columbia
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

https://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

label_outline Explore Slowe Resident Hall, Miss Clara Camille Carroll, Lot 1914

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Production. Airplane manufacture, general. A skilled jig builder lines up a metal plate prior to cutting it to the correct contour. Employed at the Inglewood, California, plant of North American Aviation, Incorporated. This plant produces the battle tested B-25 ("Billy Mitchell") bomber, used in General Doolittle's raid on Tokyo, and the P-51 ("Mustang") fighter plane, which was first brought into prominence by the British raid on Dieppe

Detroit, Michigan. Negro professor from Howard University addressing a salvage committee meeting

Washington, D.C. Under the auspices of the Bureau of University Travel and the National Capital School Visitors' Council, over 200 high school students chosen for their intellectual alertness visited Washington for a week. Students on the Capitol steps

Topics

district of columbia washington dc safety film negatives lot 1914 roger smith united states office of war information photo war worker negro women war workers war miss clara camille carroll slowe resident hall states informational service office of war information farm security administration race relations united states history african americans library of congress ohio