r/historicaleducation • u/atomicpineapples • Nov 26 '19
r/historicaleducation • u/Sir_Tmotts_III • Nov 26 '19
historicaleducation has been created
PSAs, short films, articles, posters, and anything else informative from days past.
r/historicaleducation • u/elblanco • Nov 26 '19
Farewell etaoin shrdlu (the last days of LinoType at the NYT)
r/historicaleducation • u/cardboardconcussion • Nov 26 '19
Tea Making Tips (1941)
r/historicaleducation • u/cardboardconcussion • Nov 26 '19
The Transistor: a 1953 documentary, anticipating its coming impact on technology
r/historicaleducation • u/NeverRelaventUser • Nov 26 '19
Duck and Cover (1951) meant to teach students what to do in case of a nuclear attack from the USSR who got nukes two years before, as if hiding under a desk would help
r/historicaleducation • u/The_Didlyest • Nov 26 '19
Bell Labs: Similarities of Wave Behavior; This is a must see if you are an engineer or you are interested in science.
r/historicaleducation • u/levelfap • Nov 26 '19
General post office pole climbing training
r/historicaleducation • u/xeim_ • Nov 26 '19
(1956) "A Short Vision" My favorite piece of historical animation. A creepy, sort of educational, animated short on the horrors of a nuclear apocalypse.
r/historicaleducation • u/mrsamosa • Nov 26 '19
A 1940s industrial fire safety video. "Fire produces products and payrolls; fire makes things and fire makes jobs, but fire out of control is man's greatest enemy: destroyer of life and happiness, of wealth and industry..."
r/historicaleducation • u/[deleted] • Nov 26 '19