Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The studio became the Signal Corps Photographic Center, later Army Pictorial Center, home to filmmakers and still photographers who covered the war and who produced countless training films. This is the story of the people who served there.

  2. Personnel Roster. Service at Signal Corps Photographic Center / Army Pictorial Center. Converting information, ideas, knowledge and beliefs into still and moving pictures and sound required the talents of countless artists, technicians and professionals, both in and out of uniform.

  3. In 1942, the US Army established the Army Pictorial Service (APS) with the goal of capturing still and motion pictures of the US Army for propaganda, publication, and training. The APS was responsible for supplying photographers to various commands on the home front and the warzones.

    • Malloryk
    • U.S. Army Pictorial Service1
    • U.S. Army Pictorial Service2
    • U.S. Army Pictorial Service3
    • U.S. Army Pictorial Service4
    • U.S. Army Pictorial Service5
  4. The Army Pictorial Service became the Army Pictorial Division for a short time during 1942, then was redesignated the Army Pictorial Service, a name which it carried throughout the greater part of the war and which will be used throughout the remainder of this chapter.

  5. Sep 14, 2022 · The Signal Corps formed the Army Pictorial Service, or APS, and soon thereafter purchased a motion-picture studio on Long Island, New York. During the course of the war, the Signal Corps had...

  6. The Army Pictorial Service (APS) administered all photographic matters for the Signal Corps which, as during World War I, was put in charge of all U.S. Army photography. The primary offices in the United States were the Signal Corps Photographic Center (SCPC) in Astoria, NY, and the Signal Corps Photographic Laboratory in Washington, DC.

  7. Jun 26, 2020 · The Photographic Division of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer became the Army Pictorial Service on June 17, 1942. Photographic training initially took place at Fort Monmouth, but was...