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1947: A Year in the Collections

Jackie Robinson made history on April 15, 1947, when he broke baseball’s color barrier to play for the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field. While winning Rookie of the Year honors and helping the Dodgers win the National League pennant, Robinson faced close scrutiny. As he later recalled, "I had to fight hard against loneliness, abuse, and the knowledge that any mistake I made would be magnified because I was the only black man out there." On October 14, 1947, Charles "Chuck" Yeager was the first to break the sound barrier. The rocket-engine powered Bell X-1, piloted by Yeager, reached a speed of 1,127 kilometers (700 miles) per hour, Mach 1.06, at an altitude of 13,000 meters (43,000 feet). 


Design for a Texaco Advertisement

The Way of Life of the Northern Negro: Untitled

Three O'Clock Jump; Four O'Clock Jump

Flip and Jazz; Lover

When Irish Eyes Are Smiling; Macushla

Marian Anderson, Celebrated Contralto, Recognized as one of the Greatest of All Time

Lionel Barrymore

Indiana, from the United States Series

Oklahoma, from the United States Series

"American Beauty" Iron

Design for a Cover for The New Yorker

Sheela's clothing store designed by Alvin Lustig. Interior view

Design No. 1 of Sunbeam Toaster

World Inventors Exposition catalogue cover designed by Alvin Lustig

A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams

Bookjacket for "Three Lives" by Gertrude Stein, New Directions Books,

Bookjacket by Alvin Lustig for "Three Tales" by Flaubert, New Directions Books

Breuer House I, New Canaan, Connecticut

Magnetic Disk Recorder

Control Panel, Bell Telephone Laboratories Model 5 Computer

Photograph of letter carrier collecting mail

J. Robert Oppenheimer and Albert Einstein

Andy Warhol seated at a desk

ANSCO Pioneer Camera

Typewriter used by B.C. Franklin

Arnold Joseph Toynbee

Mari Susette Sandoz

George Kennan

Design for an Abstraction Composition

"Champs Elysees" Boys

Who But You by Nacio Herb Brown

Good Morning!

Pair O'Dice Club

Wires

Zurich


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