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English women finishing a 9.2 shell, between c1915 and 1917. Creator: Bain News ServiceEnglish women finishing a 9.2 shell, between c1915 and 1917. Women workers inspecting 9.2 explosive shells in a factory during World War I.
Munitions Factory, Bridgeport, Connecticut, c1870s. Artist: Theodore R DavisMunitions Factory, Bridgeport, Connecticut, c1870s. Machines speeded up production after the Civil War. Illustration from Adventures of America, 1857-1900, by John A Kouwenhoven
Women Workers for the War, c1914-1918, (c1920). Creator: UnknownWomen Workers for the War, c1914-1918, (c1920). Shell-making in one of the Scottish munition works. Women manufacturing shells in a factory during the First World War
Female munitions workers, Shoreditch Technical Institute, London, 1915Female munitions workers, mechanical engineering workshop, Shoreditch Technical Institute, London, 1915
Women munitions workers putting a coat of paint on aerial bombs, World War I, c1914-c1918
A munitions factory, World War I, 1917 (1938). Artist: Horace Walter NichollsA munitions factory, World War I, 1917 (1938). Munitions workers with shells in a warehouse at National Shell Filling Factory No 6 at Chilwell, Nottinghamshire
Munitions factory, London, World War I, 1914-1918. Artist: HauaMunitions factory, London, World War I, 1914-1918
Munitions factory workers, London, World War I, 1914-1918. Artist: HauaMunitions factory workers, London, World War I, 1914-1918. Group portrait of workers in a factory producing bombs. The photographers shadow can be seen in the foreground