#historic photo
The relief of the Union of Workers and Peasants on the facade of the Central Museum of V.I. Lenin. 1918, Georgii Alekseev.
A column of demonstrators at the Aleksandrovskii railway station.
Unknown author, March 1917, Moscow.
Commissar of the food detachment, 1918, Soviet Russia.
Vladimir Mayakovsky in New York, 1925.
Reconnaissance car on the street, March 1917, Revolutionary Russia.
By Iakov Vladimirovich Steinberg.
Demonstration on Uritskii Square, May Day, 1925, Leningrad. MAMM/MDF.
Orphanage. Unknown author, 1925, Leningrad, MAMM/MDF.
Festive decoration on the exterior of the arcade “Passage” (Пассаж), dedicated to the International Day of Cooperation.
1925, Leningrad.
Presentation of the banner at mine No. 23. Vsevolod Tarasevich, 1956, villages Bokovo-Antritsit, Voroshilovgrad region, Ukrainian SSR.
A flight observation post:
Transportation of grain by car:
Photographer: Vladislav Vladislavovich Mikosha, 1938, U.S.S.R.
On March 13, 1930, the Moscow Labor Exchange was closed.
The last work referral was issued to the mechanic Mikhail Shkunov. The Soviet Union became the first country in the world to completely end joblessness.
In Moscow, 1947.
Cinematographer of the village club.
September 1, 1951, Tatar ASSR, village of Bukharai, from the archive of Rustem Mukhametzyanov.
Tram line at Krasnaya Vorota. Unknown author, 1917, Moscow.
In the collective farm shop.
Photographer: Mikhail Prekhner, 1934.
Spring sowing in the fields of the country. Komsomolets Volodya Kovalenko. Vsevolod Tarasevich, 1950s, Crimea region, Evpatoria district, Pervomaisky collective farm, MAMM/MDF.
Les siècles se rencontrant : Juives : La mère et la fille. DS 135 .G72 M47 C67 1917
Newly catalogued for the Jewish Salonica Postcard Collection: Two centuries meeting – the mother and daughter, circa 1917.
“A mother and her daughter walk down a street in Salonica (Thessaloniki, Greece) around 1917, as depicted in this historical postcard newly cataloged and added to our Jewish Salonica Postcard Collection. The mother is in a traditional Jewish dress while the daughter wears a modern Parisian one.”