Men; Recording & registration; Relocation camps; Women; Forced migration; Japanese Americans -- Evacuation and relocation, 1942-1945; Santa Anita Assembly Center (Calif.); World War II, 1939-1945 -- Japanese Americans
Photograph shows a registration and processing scene at Santa Anita, California Assembly Center.
B&W photograph of a pitting device. Inscription reads "Pit finding and holding means - automatically adjusts knife to make correct size cut. Thomas B. Keesling Inventor. Mar 30 1948 - Witness - Chas. O Smith. #1109."
Canned fruit industry; Food processing machinery; Food processing machinery industry;
B&W photograph of the Pilot Pitter machine. "Pilot Pitter Inventor-Designor Thomas. B. Keesling, Photo Apr. 1948" and "1106" inscribed at the bottom of the photo.
B&W photograph of a large bottling or canning machine? Picture taken indoors. "Food Machinery Corp. Anderson-Barngrover Division" and "3847" and "7-24-41" printed along bottom of photo.
B&W photograph of washing/spraying conveyor belt machine? Picture taken indoors. "Food Machinery Corp. Anderson-Barngrover Division" and "3921" printed at bottom of photograph.
B&W photograph of some kind of conveyor-belt machine. Picture taken indoors. "Food Machinery Corp. Anderson-Barngrover Division", "3871", and "11-13-41" printed along bottom of photograph.
Agriculture; Canned fruit industry; Fruit; Fruit crate labels; Prunes; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History
In June 1960, Duffy-Mott purchased all of the processing equipment of the Pratt-Low Preserving Corporation from Thriftimart Inc. Pratt-Low was founded in 1905 in Santa Clara Valley as a packer of California fruits and vegetables.
Busicom; Calculators; Electronic industries; Intel microprocessors; Manufacturing; Photographs; Santa Clara (Calif.); Santa Clara County (Calif.)--History; Technology;
Black-and-white photograph of Busicom calculator. A Japanese calculator manufacturer, Busicom, asked Intel to design a set of chips for a family of programmable calculators. The original design for Busicom's calculator called for at least a dozen...