10 Historic Photos That Show Us What It Was Like Living In Idaho In The Early 1900s
Historic photos from the early 1900s provide a vivid glimpse into life in Idaho, showcasing various aspects from farming to Japanese-American internment.
There's something about looking at old photos that does more than any history textbook ever could. Books are great for telling the hard facts, but it's photos that give you insight into what it was like to actually live in that time. These photos were all taken in Idaho in the early 1900s, mostly from the 1930s and 1940s. Accessible through the Library of Congress, they show us what it was like to live in Idaho way back when!
The daughter of a farmer living in the Resettlement Administration purchase area in Oneida County. Her family is about to be removed to better farmland and the present land converted for grazing.
Workers unload crates of freshly-picked peas in Nampa, Idaho in 1941.
Japanese-Americans taking a break in Minidoka, Idaho. In 1942, President Roosevelt signed an executive order that put 120,000 Japanese and Japanese-Americans into 10 isolated "war relocation centers." Minidoka was one of them.
People walking down the main street in Twin Falls, Idaho in 1941.
Funnily enough, this scene hasn't changed that much! A view of Stanley, Idaho, including the Salmon River and Sawtooth Mountains in 1942.
In Lemhi County, Idaho in 1942. To cross the Salmon River to the ranch house, you had to use this cable car to get to the opposite side.
The railroad station in Bonners Ferry and what looks to be an arriving train in the background.
An Idaho state employment representative (left) chats with farm workers living at the FSA migratory labor camp in Wilder, Idaho. The state employment service had offices at most FSA camps.
A group of kids and a chaperone enjoying their summer at a local swimming pool in Rupert, Idaho.
Some of the children of a family of 14 lived in this old chuck wagon in Oneida County, 1936.
Wow. These photos are truly incredible. Which of these historic photos of early Idaho stood out to you the most? Share your thoughts with us in the comments below.
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