Black soldiers of the 369th Infantry, New York National Guard, who had won the Croix de Guerre in France. February 12, 1919.
Returning black soldiers were photographed returning to New York. The link posted in above details their heroism and their later lives, something I always find interesting.
Women radio operators of the U.S. Army, February 12, 1919.
Women were brought into the service in the Great War in substantial numbers for the first time. Among their roles was that of radio and telephone operators. As with other soldiers, some stayed on in Europe after the war, where their services remained in need.
I'll have a post on something in the 2019 genre that is related to the above, but the winds of change were blowing in the state as evidence by the article that the State was getting into highway funding in a major way. $6,600,000 was a huge amount of money in 1919, and it was going into highway construction.
The automobile era had arrived.
A renewed war scare was building as well as it appeared that Germany was about to rearm. It would have had a really hard time doing so in 1919, but the fear was understandable.
And surprisingly, there was discussion in the legislature about adding agricultural workers to the Workers Compensation rolls. They were exempted when the bill passed a few years earlier, and they still are. Such a suggestion would get nowhere today, but then there was a higher percentage of the population employed in agriculture in 1919 than there is in 2019.
And Villa was reported dead again, but the paper was doubting the veracity of that report.
And at Kooi Wyoming, a mining camp near Sheridan Wyoming, thirty five miners were arrested for assembling.
And at Kooi Wyoming, a mining camp near Sheridan Wyoming, thirty five miners were arrested for assembling.
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