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History Through a Lens Poster Series Education Posters
for world and American history classrooms and home schoolers.

educational posters > social studies > history > History Through a Lens < art history


History Through a Lens - Migrant Mother at Art.comThe “History Through a Lens” poster series depicts famous photographs of historic events with commentary as teaching resources. Use the series to emphasize both the event and the role of photography in social reform using the images of child labor, "Migrant Mother" from the Great Depression of the 1930s, and the use video and cell phone cameras.

Events featured in "History Through a Lens" are The Railroad: East and West, First Flight, The Spindle Boys, Migrant Mother, the Hindenburg Disaster, Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima, Survivors at Ebensee, Integration at Central High School, Lee Harvey Oswald and Escape from Vietnam.

• Did you know that the person credited with coining the word "photography" is Sir John Herschel, the son and nephew of astronomers William and Caroline Herschel?


History Through a Lens - The Railroad: East and West Wall Poster (May 10, 1869)
The Railroad:
East and West
History Through a Lens, Art Print

The Railroad: East and West
May 10, 1869

SOCIAL STUDIES-

20th Century America
American Experience
American Revolution
Colonial America
Founding Fathers
Ancient Civilizations
Anc. African Civilizations
anthropology
Asian Americans
aviation
banned Books/authors
Bill of Rights
Black History
US Civil War
Voices of Diversity
notable educators
explorers
flags
Great Thinker Quotes
Heroes Science & Tech
notable historians
Historic Days
historic documents
Historic Headlines
Historic Heroes
history of art
History Through Lens
History Through Literature
Holocaust
Images of Labor
Inventions Changed World
Latinos
maps
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money/currency
Nation of Immigrants
Native Americans
Olympics
peace & justice
philosophers
Political Process
presidents
Stonehenge
Supreme Court
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Technology's Past
Vietnam Era
world leaders
world's religions
World War I
World War II



HISTORY BOOKS


Moments of Impact
Moments of Impact: Stories of the Pulitzer Prize Photographs


Dying to Tell the Story
Dying to
Tell the Story
video


The Camera
The Camera
Ansel Adams


Camera Work
Camera Work:
A Pictorial Guide
Stieglitz


My Secret Camera
My Secret Camera: Life in the
Lodz Ghetto



History Through a Lens - First Flight Wall Poster
First Flight
History Through a Lens, Art Print

First Flight

Poster Text: Orville and Wilbur Wright chose the windy, sandy beaches of the Outer Banks, islands off the coast of North Carolina, to test their gliders and their first airplane. The two brothers from Dayton, Ohio, made Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, famous when their airplane took off and flew under its own power – the first time a motorized airplane actually flew. This picture records the first flight of the Wright Brothers' plane on December 17, 1903. Orville was at the controls. Wilbur ran alongside holding on to a wind to keep the plane balanced, and he let go as the plane rose in the air. Wilbur had set up the camera, and the picture was taken by John Daniels, a local man who came by to help the brothers. On this first flight the plane stayed in the air for twelve seconds and flew 120 feet. The Wright brothers made four flights that day; the longest light lasted 59 seconds.
The Wright airplane was the first great invention that ws fully documented by photography. Wilbur and Orville had taken up the photography as a hobby before they became interested in aviation. During the four years they worked to build their airplane, the found photography to be a valuable tool. They used photos to record their experiments and to analyze their mistakes. And, in the end, a picture proved they had made the first machine to fly under its own power.


History Through a Lens - Spindle Boys Art Print
Spindle Boys
History Through
a Lens,
Art Print

Spindle Boys

Images of Labor posters
child development posters


History Through a Lens - Migrant Mother Wall Poster
Migrant Mother, 1936
History Through a Lens, Art Print

Migrant Mother

Poster Text: Photographer Dorothea Lange took this picture in March 1936 when the United States as in the depths of the Great Depression. This was a time when millions of Americans had no jobs and many businessess failed. The photo, of a poor woman and some of her children, came to be called "Migrant Mother." The woman had picked peas in California, but the crop had frozen in the fields, leaving her unemployed. She is called a "migrant" because she went from place to place looking for work. She and her seven children were living on the frozen vegetables they gathered from the fields and on birds the children managed to kill. When the picture was taken, the woman had just sold the tires from her car to buy food. The photo shows the misery and degree of the depression. The photo appeared in a California newspaper, and it was then in a book that Dorothea Lange wrote with her husband.
Dorothea Lange was working for a government agency called the Farm Security Administration, FSA, when she photographed "Migrant Mother." President Franklin Roosevelt had set up the FSA to provide loans and other help to poor farmers. The FSA hired photographers to take pictures that showed the suffering in the rural areas – the rural slums, ruined farms, and migrant camps. The FSA then sent these photos to news publications. The pictures helped convince Congress to support the programs President Roosevelt proposed to assist poor people.

famous women posters
Oklahoma posters
Story of "The Picture" as told by Florence Owen's grandson.


History Through a Lens - Hindenburg Art Print
Hindenburg Disaster
History Through
a Lens,
Art Print

Hindenburg Disaster
May 6, 1937

aviation posters


History Through a Lens - Raising the Flag at Iwo Jima Art Print
Raising the Flag
at Iwo Jima
History Through
a Lens,
Art Print

Raising the Flag at Iwo Jima

Joe Rosenthal's photograph of Marines Ira Hayes, Mike Strank, Rene Gagnon, Harlon Block, Franklin Sousley, and U.S. Navy corpsman John Bradley, raising the U.S. flag atop Mt. Suribachi on the fourth day of the Battle of Iwo Jima, February 23, 1945, is possibly the most reproduced photograph of all time.

WW II posters
Flag posters
Historic Documents / Images


History Through a Lens - Survivors at Ebensee Art Print
Survivors at Ebensee
History Through
a Lens,
Art Print

Survivors at Ebensee

Holocaust posters
Elie Wiesel posters


History Through a Lens - Integration at Central High School Art Print
Integration at
Central High School
History Through
a Lens,
Art Print

Integration at Central High School (Little Rock, AR)

Black History posters
1997 - 40th Anniversary Desegregation Observances
September 2007 - Commemorating 50 Years of Integration
State of Arkansas posters


History Through a Lens - Lee Harvey Oswald Shot Art Print
Lee Harvey Oswald Shot
History Through
a Lens,
Art Print

Lee Harvey Oswald Shot
November 24, 1963


History Through a Lens - Escape from Vietnam Art Print
Escape from Vietnam
History Through
a Lens,
Art Print

Escape from Vietnam
April 29-30, 1975

• more Vietnam War Era posters


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