PRODUCT SEARCH | CURRENCY | INDEX >
Cannon on a rampage at 30 miles an hour! Cadillac Ad 1944. Art James Bingham
Cannon on a rampage at 30 miles an hour! Cadillac Ad 1944. Art James Bingham
€17.88
Cannon on a rampage … at 30 miles an hour!
Artwork by James Bingham.
Life, September 18, 1944.
Here’s a picture of something that the enemy doesn’t like! It’s a 75-millimeter cannon—roaring along at thirty miles an hour—maneuvering for position from which to pour its high-explosive shells on a moving target.
High-Resolution file from the original, digitally restored. Max-Quality jpg (5000x6700px, 37.98MB).
Read more on this topic
Browse the World War II Archive
or browse previous-next
Rights Advisory
This work is out of copyright as it was published in the United States WITHOUT a copyright notice, or it was published WITH a copyright notice, but it was not renewed 28 years after publication.
Read more.
Please notice that any advice or comment provided here is not and does not purport to be legal advice as defined by s.12 of the Legal Services Act 2007.
World War II Cadillac advertisements are among the most iconic of thousands published in the USA.
On January 16, 1942, 39 days after Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt, with an executive order, created the War Production Board (WPB) to convert peacetime industrial production to meet the needs of the war, along with setting priorities and prohibiting the manufacture of non-essential goods.
Only 55 days after automobile production ended, Cadillac delivered the first tank. Just 17 days later, the second was shipped. Production was beginning to roll and soon to become a flood.
More info on this item
World War II Cadillac advertisements are among the most iconic of thousands published in the USA.
On January 16, 1942, 39 days after Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt, with an executive order, created the War Production Board (WPB) to convert peacetime industrial production to meet the needs of the war, along with setting priorities and prohibiting the manufacture of non-essential goods.
Only 55 days after automobile production ended, Cadillac delivered the first tank. Just 17 days later, the second was shipped. Production was beginning to roll and soon to become a flood.