65 things oaklandtribunearchives likes Explore more popular stuff on Tumblr

  1. 303
    Photograph of United States Colored Troops at Port Hudson, Louisiana, 1864
ARC Identifier 594179
    War Department General Order 143 Ordering the Creation of the U.S. Colored Troops, 05/22/1863
ARC Identifier 4662603Page 2 - War Department General Order 143 Ordering the Creation of the U.S. Colored Troops, 05/22/1863
ARC Identifier 4662603
    Photograph of Private Hubbard Pryor before enlistment in 44th U.S. Colored Troops: 10/10/1864
ARC Identifier 849127Photograph of Private Hubbard Pryor After Enlistment in 44th U.S. Colored Troops: 10/10/1864
ARC Identifier 849136

    War Department General Order 143: Ordering the Creation of the U.S. Colored Troops, May 22, 1863

    The outbreak of the Civil War set off a rush by free black men to enlist in U.S. military units. They were turned away, however, because a Federal law dating from 1792 barred Negroes from bearing arms for the U.S. Army. The Lincoln administration wrestled with the idea of authorizing the recruitment of black troops, concerned that such a move would prompt the border states to secede.  

    However, following the Emancipation Proclamation and faced with dwindling white volunteers, black recruitment was pursued in earnest. Volunteers from South Carolina, Tennessee, and Massachusetts filled the first authorized black regiments. Recruitment was slow until black leaders such as Frederick Douglass encouraged black men to become soldiers to ensure eventual full citizenship. (Two of Douglass’s own sons contributed to the war effort.) Volunteers began to respond, and in May 1863 the Government established the Bureau of Colored Troops to manage the burgeoning numbers of black soldiers. By the end of the Civil War, roughly 179,000 black men (10 percent of the Union Army) served as soldiers in the U.S. Army, and another 19,000 served in the Navy.

    via Our Documents

      Loading...
    1. 297

      The American Red Cross was founded on this day — May 21, 1881.

      On the founding anniversary of the American Red Cross, here’s Kathleen Kennedy in her A.R.C. uniform from World War II. The photo was taken in London, circa 1943.

      Kathleen was the second daughter and fourth child of Joseph and Rose Kennedy.

      While in college, Kathleen Kennedy began volunteering for the Red Cross in New York in the summer of 1940.  After working for the Times-Herald newspaper, she rejoined the war effort by volunteering again for the Red Cross, this time in London. Read More

      -From the JFK Library

      Our gratitude goes out to all the volunteers and relief workers of the Red Cross in Oklahoma today, and across the world everyday.

        Loading...
      1. 391

        slatevault:

        The fiercely independent Eleanor Roosevelt had a permit to carry a pistol. Here it is: http://slate.me/14IGr07

          Loading...
        1. 1,456

          social-blog:

          For more than 30 years, the former town of Potosi resided underwater after it was flooded.

          This is in Venezuela. The town was flooded in 1985 to make a dam, parts of the town reemerged in 2010 during a drought.

            Loading...
          1. 49

            bookriot:

            The library in a noted 1920s doll house. More on miniature libraries here.

            Loved the tiny Tarzan Jr. in that link!

              Loading...
            1. 268

              fdrlibrary:

              Day 43: May 18

              Leg braces used by Franklin Roosevelt
              (Steel, leather)

              FDR could not stand without the support of leg braces like these. They were strapped to his legs and locked at the knee. These braces weigh approximately ten pounds.

              In order to appear to “walk” in public, Roosevelt used a cane and a strong companion’s arm to support his weight while he pitched his body forward. This required skill and considerable upper body strength, developed through practice and exercise.

                Loading...
              1. 162

                Kaiser shipyards, Richmond, California. Miss Eastine Cowner, a former waitress, is helping in her job as a scaler to construct the Liberty Ship SS George Washington Carver launched on May 7, 1943.

                From the series: Negro Activities in Industry, Government, and the Armed Forces from the Records of the Office of War Information.

                  Loading...
                1. 114

                  bookriot:

                  The books in this teeny tiny library measure just 1-1.5 inches each! See more of the smallest books in the world.

                  tiny and meta!

                  “Little Library” (2009), by Todd Pattison. Photo from the Guild of Book Workers.

                    Loading...
                  1. 581
                    [Operation Cue] - A few minutes after detonation the atomic blast in Operation Cue looked like this, 05/05/1955
ARC Identifier 541787
                    Two-Story House at Operation Cue, 5,500 Feet from Blast, before the Blast, 05/05/1955
ARC Identifier 6234460Two-Story House at Operation Cue, 5,500 Feet from Blast, after the Blast, 05/05/1955
ARC Identifier 6234461
                    Mannequin in a Two-Story House at Operation Cue, 5,500 Feet from Blast, before the Blast, 05/05/1955
ARC Identifier 6234464Mannequin in a Two-Story House at Operation Cue, 5,500 Feet from Blast, after the Blast, 05/05/1955
ARC Identifier 6234466
                    [Operation Cue] - One-story shed beside LP (liquified petroleum) tank - both smoldering from heat of flash, 05/05/1955
ARC Identifier 541790[Operation Cue] - One-story shed beside LP (liquified petroleum) tank as blast wave hits disintegrating shed, 05/05/1955
ARC Identifier 541791

                    Operation Cue - May 5, 1955

                    Part of the overall “Operation Teapot” series of nuclear test explosions in Nevada, Operation Cue was a civil defense exercise to intended to observe the effects of nuclear weapons on a civilian infrastructure, including the construction of test houses populated with mannequins.

                    Photographs of Operation Cue from the Records of the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization, 1947 - 1962

                    via DocsTeach

                      Loading...
                    1. 519
                        Loading...
                      Loading more posts...