Together we win / James Montgomery Flag

 

World War I–era poster shows a shipyard worker marching in step with a sailor and a soldier, driving home the message that the war effort depended on everyone. Created for the United States Shipping Board’s Emergency Fleet Corporation, also showing that industrial labor supported troops overseas by building and supplying ships. The hammer and dockside setting connect factory work directly to national defense. Helping Americans see shipyards and workshops as front-line contributions, not just support roles.

 

Liberty Parade on Fifth Avenue WWI Era

 

Crowds pack Fifth Avenue as a massive American flag is carried up the street during a World War I–era Liberty Bond parade in New York City. Marchers in uniform hats support the enormous banner while spectators line the sidewalks and hang from windows above, reflecting the national push to fund the war effort through public bond sales.

 

Historic American Flag Carried into Battle by American Soldiers During WWI

 

 American servicemen gathered along a rail platform at the close of World War I, marking their release and return from captivity. The soldiers hold a U.S. flag that had been secretly hidden while they were held in German prison camps and later revealed in Basel, Switzerland, on December 7, during the release of the first train of American privates. The long line of men, bundled in heavy coats, reflects the scale of the war and the logistics of bringing troops home. This is a quiet but powerful moment, when a simple flag signaled survival, freedom, and the end of a long ordeal for those who served.