July
1942: United We Stand,
developed by and originally on view at the Smithsonian’s National
Museum of American History, Behring Center, celebrates this patriotic
endeavor. The exhibition provides a rare glimpse of this campaign designed
to boost morale on the home front and to demonstrate the power of magazines
to inform the public. Featuring 88 original magazine covers spanning
a variety of themes, the exhibition offers visitors an opportunity to
explore the history, artistry and patriotic symbolism of the “United
We Stand” campaign. Cover artists illustrated American military and industrial power, patriotism on the home front, the beauty of the American landscape and the simple elegance of the flag and other national symbols. Participating magazines represented nearly every subject and class of publication, from Ladies’ Home Journal to Walt Disney’s Comics. Time, Reader’s Digest, and National Geographic were among the publications that broke from their traditional cover designs to incorporate the flag. Industry and association magazines also showed their allegiance. For example, The DuPont Magazine featured an American flag unfurled in front of four industrial smokestacks. Most of the covers are from the collection of Katy and Peter Gwillim Kreitler, who have amassed more than 300 of the original July 1942 covers. By focusing attention on the ideals that made war worth fighting, the “United We Stand” campaign demonstrated the power of national icons to rally public support and encourage a sense of national pride during difficult times. From July 1942 to September 2001 to today, the covers and the values they portray still resonate. |
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©2003 Challenger Space Center • 21170 N 83rd Ave • Peoria,
AZ 85382
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