Depression era photos from your hometown

A new Yale project allows viewers to explore 175,000 images by county.

  • A plane crashed at the base of the Air Transport Command, but was repaired and got to the Russo-German front. Nome, Alaska. Unknown, 1943.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USW33-053758]
  • A woman shows off her chili peppers. Concho, Arizona. Russell Lee, 1940.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF33-012945]
  • An aerial view shows housing for agricultural workers at the Farm Security Administration (FSA) farm workers community. Woodville, California. Russell Lee, 1942.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF33-013235]
  • A baby with club feet wears homemade splints at a Farm Security Administration camp for migratory workers. Farmersville, California. Dorothea Lange, 1939.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF34-019601]
  • An instructor shows student how to use a spectrograph to study materials using measurements of the arc of light they emit. Golden, Colorado. Andreas Feininger, 1942.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USE6-D-008688]
  • A Japanese boy reads at a FSA farm workers' camp. Twin Falls, Idaho. Russell Lee, 1942.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF34-073763]
  • Japanese FSA farm workers stand in a field. Twin Falls, Idaho. Russell Lee, 1942.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF34-073809]
  • A man uses enormous asbestos mittens to handle hot magnesium ingots at Basic Magnesium’s plant in the southern Nevada desert. Clark Nevada. Fritz Henle, 1943.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USE6-D-009330]
  • A man works at a mineral spring near the White Sands project. Otero, New Mexico. Arthur Rothstein, 1936.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF34-002952]
  • A chef with his dinner gong at the Rimrock Camp in the central Oregon land development project. Jefferson, Oregon. Arthur Rothstein, 1936.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF34-004700]
  • A brakeman waves from an ore train at the open-pit mining operations of Utah Copper Company. Bingham Canyon, Utah. Andreas Feininger, 1942.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USE6-D-009883]
  • A man pours a heat of iron at the Columbia Steel Company. Ironton, Utah. Andreas Feininger, 1942.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USW3-043343]
  • Women work on sections to add to the fuselage of a new B-17F (Flying Fortress) bomber. Seattle, Washington. Andreas Feininger, 1942.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USE6-D-008209]
  • A worker for Long Bell Company sights a tree in the undercut to determine the exact direction it will fall. Cowlitz, Washington. Russell Lee, 1941.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF33-013176]
  • Stockmen stand on street corner. Sheridan, Wyoming. Marion Post Wolcott, 1941.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-USF34-058731]
  • Cowhands sing after day's work. Rosebud, Montana. Arthur Rothstein, 1939.

    Library of Congress; Prints & Photographs Division; FSA/OWI Collection; [LC-DIG-fsa-8b18142]

 

Between 1935 and 1944, a group of photographers fanned out to document life across America. The initiative was a public relations move to bolster support for programs under President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s contentious Farm Security Administration, which sought to help those hardest hit by the Great Depression. When it was over, some 175,000 photographs were transferred to the Library of Congress and eventually placed online, but they remained hard for the wider public to access.

Now, a team from Yale University has made it much easier to explore the photos snapped by legends like Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans and Arthur Rothstein, using an interactive web-based map and archive called Photogrammar. The map allows you to view images county-by-county, some of which appear here. “Nobody has seen them all,” says Laura Wexler, an American Studies professor at Yale and co-director the project. The photographers who headed West featured plenty of farmers and ranchers. But they also documented female factory workers in Washington, a man stacking magnesium bullion in Nevada, and a New Mexico woman cradling a wall of chili peppers. In every image, says Wexler, there’s a story to be told.

Linda VanFossan
Linda VanFossan
Sep 25, 2014 08:17 AM
It would be really great if we could have the link to this great treasure--why tell us how great it is, if we cannot view it?
Jodi Peterson
Jodi Peterson Subscriber
Sep 25, 2014 09:31 AM
Hi Linda, the link to Photogrammar is given in the text above -- just click the word "Photogrammar" and it takes you to the archive,
http://photogrammar.yale.edu/map/. Thanks for reading. Best, Jodi Peterson, managing editor
Larry Hauk
Larry Hauk
Sep 30, 2014 01:47 PM
Jodi, I went to the interactive map and clicked on Milam County, my home county. There were two photos but neither is actually in Milam County. Both are from Black, Texas, in Parmer County in West Texas. FYI.
Jodi Peterson
Jodi Peterson Subscriber
Sep 30, 2014 01:52 PM
Hi Larry, thanks for the note. That sounds like something you should ask the Photogrammar site creators about. HCN isn't responsible for the accuracy of their mapping, of course. Best, Jodi Peterson, managing editor
Doug Pineo
Doug Pineo Subscriber
Oct 01, 2014 09:13 AM
Those women working in Boeing's plant in Seattle, Washington, are working on a wing section, not a fuselage. One thing we loose as we hurtle forward into the future is clarity about the past. When I was a kid we all knew the war planes of World War 2, and the Cessnas, Mooneys and Pipers which emerged in postwar general aviation. Today, journalists reporting a story on NPR will refer to "P-51 bombers", and it goes unremarked. For westerners, remembering the past is a mixed bag, when we hang on too hard to things like the kind or ranching that wipes out stream corridors, while the children of Palouse wheat ranchers my age have never known a free-flowing Snake River, or the Columbian sharp-tailed grouse which disappeared from the Palouse between 1925 and 1947.