Nesmith, Robert I.
At the recommendation of the U.S. War Department’s War Production Board, the Victory Labor Management Committees of Anaconda, Butte, and Great Falls coordinated their efforts to roll out the first issue of Copper Commando in August 1942. The War Production Board selected Robert Newcomb of New York City to develop and head the publication. He was soon joined by associate editor Marg Sammons, who later became co-editor with Newcomb (June 1943). The Labor Management Committees filled their editorial boards (from Anaconda, Butte, and Great Falls) with ACM management and representatives from AFL and CIO unions.
A biweekly newspaper in magazine format, Copper Commando was to be an appealing, pictorial publication that would communicate the importance of metal production to the war effort. Human interest stories and images detailed the activities of Anaconda Copper Mining Company workers as well as housewives, schoolchildren, and others contributing to the cause. A number of pieces illustrated the wartime uses for copper and zinc and explained how Montana metals were helping to win the war. Copper Commando was distributed to the employees of the Anaconda Copper Mining Company in Anaconda, Great Falls, and Butte, to former employees serving in the military, and to union organization headquarters. The publication ran until the War Production Board was disbanded in November 1945.
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2019-07-08 01:07:01 pm |
Ethan Gruber |
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User published constellation |
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2016-08-15 02:08:53 am |
System Service |
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2016-08-15 02:08:53 am |
System Service |
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Initial ingest from EAC-CPF |
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