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KEYWORDS: Vocational Rehabilitation

Results: 161 - 197 of 197 total  

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Date Format Image Collection
June 1918 Photograph  One-legged man sits at typewrite Visual Still
June 1918 Photograph  Six men working in a typesetting room. Visual Still
May 1919 Photograph  About a dozen one-legged men stand in a row, facing men holding exercise balls.  crutches lie on the floor. Visual Still
May 1919 Photograph  About a dozen men sitting on the floor of a gym, crutches at their sides. Visual Still
May 1919 Photograph  Men doing calisthenics in a field next to a three-story brick building. Visual Still
circa 1885 Photograph  Young men and women in woodworking shop. Visual Still
June 1918 Photograph  Man with one arm working in a greenhouse. Visual Still
1942 Photograph  Cover of Goodwill's 1942 annual report. A man working standing next to a kitchen blender. Visual Still
1942 Photograph  A young woman on the telephone. Visual Still
1942 Photograph  Three women sits and talk. One has a crutch and braces. Another has a cane. Visual Still
1942 Photograph  Men working in a shop repairing furniture. Visual Still
1942 Photograph  A man wearing a welding shield. Visual Still
1942 Photograph  An elderly man varnishing a chair. Visual Still
October 1918 Photograph  Men working at carpentry machinery. Visual Still
June 1918 Photograph  Man in wheelchair reading aletter, a woman standing net to him. Visual Still
1909 Photograph  Woman sitting at a typewriter taking dictation. Visual Still
1910 Photograph  Two men working in wire drawing factory. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes in which men with double leg amputations are being taught to walk with prostheses. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes At work again and Back to the farm in which men using working protheses perform manual labor in a woodworking shop and on a farm. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing a disabled veteran in a field with his wife. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes of men in hospitals recovering from war wounds - simple designing while still in bed ; an American soldier begins again to take an interest in life. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing a portrait photograph of a man who lost his arm in an industrial accident, also shows a view of him at a machine in a woodworking shop. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing a man recovering from war wounds at Walter Reed Hospital learning the craft of engraving. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes in which men with partial leg amputations are being taught to work in a printshop. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing a disabled man with one leg working with film projection equipment. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes in which men with partial arm amputations are taught welding. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes in which blind men perform mechanical tasks in workshops. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing military personnel reading Braille and using typewriters. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes in which blind men perform mechanical tasks in workshops. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes in which disabled veterans learn trades. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes in which men with partial arm amputations perform mechanical drafting without the need for prostheses. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Exhibit poster showing two scenes in which disabled soldiers are being taught useful skills to enable them to find employment upon discharge from military service - Disabled Serbians working in the carpentry shop at Lyons, France ; A tailoring class in Paris taught by a one-legged instructor. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Poster explaining government policies toward disabled military personnel. Visual Still
1919 Poster  Poster reading that The Disabled Man Who is Profitably Employed Is No Longer Handicapped.

Training for self-support is not only humane, but economical. The advantages already extended to injured soldiers at home and abroad must be extended to every citizen disabled in industry or accident.

Rehabilitation is the fundamental means of attack on the problem of disability. Let us help the cripple in the future, not by handing out alms, but by giving him a fair chance to win his own way to self-respect and self-support. Visual Still
May 1960 Speech    Document
February 13, 1958 Speech    Document
February 18, 1931 Speech    Document
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