In October 1944, the
Post assigned Witman to its
Sunday supplement,
Pictures magazine, printed in higher quality
rotogravure with much in colour. For the supplement Witman produced picture essays to satisfy interest in local affairs. His prolific production spans
St. Louis and Missouri history from the Great Depression to construction of the
St. Louis Arch, and such historic events as U.S. presidential campaigns of
Roosevelt,
Truman,
Eisenhower and
Adlai Stevenson from the 1930s to the 1970s, inaugurations of Missouri governors
Lloyd Stark and
Phil Donnelly, speeches by
Charles Lindbergh,
A. Philip Randolph,
Carl Sandburg, and
Winston Churchill's 1946
"Iron Curtain" speech in
Fulton. He covered cultural occasions including concerts by
Igor Stravinsky,
Ella Fitzgerald, and
Duke Ellington. Such big stories were interspersed with his features on regional events such as local balls, carnivals and parades, county fairs, chowder festivals, national bird and dog field trials and
fox hunts,
Ku Klux Klan revivals in
Georgia, the
civil rights movement, a group of religious rattlesnake handlers in
Kentucky, and
R. Buckminster Fuller's geodesic
Climatron at the
Missouri Botanical Garden. His archive, chiefly 67,766 photographic negatives is now housed in the
State Historical Society of Missouri and includes his imagery of baseball, boxing, Produce Row, steamboats, early aviation, a Negro baptism, horse racing, the unemployed, the military, war workers, union strikes, the state legislature, the Symphony, schools, scouts, colleges, the Art Museum, musicians, the police court, the public library, the city hospital, the morgue, the Zoo, and the prison. Art Witman's photograph of a white American audience laughing at what is clearly a very funny show was one of curator
Edward Steichen's favourite images and the first one he selected for the world-touring
Museum of Modern Art exhibition
The Family of Man that was seen by 9 million visitors. ==St Louis Arch project==