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                <text>World War II - Fall 2023</text>
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                <text>HIST 27/127 Fall 2023 Students: Matthew Sawyer, Sebastian Schreiber, Ajeet Chohan, Ari Sinyaver, Caden Wooster, Ethan Sartory, Mark Zhang, Karsten Farris </text>
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              <text>Comparing Cast and Welded Part with Pieced and Riveted Part to Improve Production, Willow Run Bomber Plant, 1944</text>
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              <text>Ford Motor Company. Photographic Department, United States, Michigan, Dearborn </text>
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              <text>United States, Michigan, Charter Township of Ypsilanti &#13;
Photographs &#13;
Photographic prints &#13;
B-24 (Bomber) &#13;
Defense Industries &#13;
Mass production &#13;
World War, 1939-1945 &#13;
Ford Motor Company. Willow Run Bomber Plant </text>
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              <text>The American automobile industry's greatest contribution to the World War II effort, apart from the sheer scale of its work, was its technical expertise in quantity manufacturing. Automakers refined the smallest details in an item to increase the speed with which it could be made. That knowledge was reflected in everything auto companies produced during the war, from helmets to helicopters.&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>Karsten Farris</text>
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              <text>19 May 1944</text>
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              <text>Photographic print</text>
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