Grade Range: K-12Resource Type(s): Artifacts, Primary SourceDate Posted: 9/3/2008
This image, said to be the most popular poster design of World War II, appeared as a billboard in 1941. Carl Paulson created the design under the direction of the Outdoor Advertising Association of America, Inc., for a U.S. Treasury Department campaign promoting the widespread public ownership of defense bonds and stamps. To demonstrate the power of advertising while selling bonds, the billboard industry displayed this image of the American flag at more than 30,000 locations in some 18,000 cities and towns across the country in March and April 1942. The Treasury brought back the billboard for campaigns in July 1942 and 1943. To meet public demand for copies of the billboard, the Government Printing Office printed 4 million small color reproductions. Use this Investigation Sheet to guide students through describing the object and analyzing its meaning.
Museum education
On a Sunday morning in December 1941, a chaplain had his most difficult assignment — to say...
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Told by a Japanese American boy, this story shows how baseball made life in the internment camps ...
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