In 1971, the Environmental Protection Agency created the DOCUMERICA Project, a program designed to document and catalogue the effects of the EPA in its efforts towards environmental conservation. After six years, the program was shut down, but the end result was a massive archive of images gathered by over 100 freelance photographers from all across America. A large part of these photographs are now housed on the US National Archives' online catalogue (as well as its Flickr page). These are my favorites.
View of Miners’ Homes in a Coal Company Town near Logan West Virginia. Next to the Railroad Tracks. They Are Across the Road from the Mine Supervisors’ Homes […], 1974
Photographer: Jack Corn
Group of Miners and Their Families Relaxing at the First Annual Company Picnic Sponsored by the Tennessee Consolidated Coal Company near Jasper and Chattanooga […], 1974
Photographer: Jack Corn
The Glow of a Miner’s Lamp Illuminates the Head of a Co-Worker as His Lamp Shines on His Work in a Mine of the Tennessee Consolidated Coal Company near Jasper and Chattanooga Tennessee […], 1974
Photographer: Jack Corn
Anxious Youngsters Begin the Chase in a Greased Pig Contest at the Tennessee Consolidated Coal Company First Annual Picnic Held at a Tennessee Valley Authority Lake near Jasper and Chattanooga, Tennessee […], 1974
Photographer: Jack Corn
The Wayne Gipson Family Says a Prayer Before Their Evening Meal in The Kitchen of Their Modern Home near Gruetli, near Chattanooga, Tennessee. They Has a Simple Meal of Stew, Iced Tea and Crackers […], 1974
Photographer: Jack Corn
Miner Wayne Gipson, 39, with His Daughter Tabitha, 3. He Has Just Gotten Home from His Job as a Conveyor Belt Operator in a Non-Union Mine […], 1974
Photographer: Jack Corn