A Look Back: Salt Lake City female bus, taxi drivers in 1942

This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2014, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Each Friday, The Salt Lake Tribune presents historic images in a special series called A Look Back. This week's installment features photos that were shot in Salt Lake City by the Farm Security Administration in 1942. Specifically these photos highlight a group of women who were trained to drive buses and taxis in the city.

None of the people in the photos are named so if you happen to have any information about who any of these people are, please let us know by emailing photo@sltrib.com.

Every gallery of the series is available at www.sltrib.com/topics/lookback. Here is a sampling:

Utah's funeral rites and processions

The YMCA in Salt Lake City

Baseball in Utah around 1900

Black pioneers and settlers in Utah

Women's fashion from 1949-50

Key moments in Utah Jazz history

Historical images of Sugar House

Past Sundance Film Festival parties

Utah firefighters at the turn of the 19th century

Historic bars and saloons in Utah

Early settlers in Idaho

The 1988 Yellowstone fire

Early Utah mansions and homesteads

Pony Express, postal service and telegraph in Utah

The mining ghost town of Mercur

Construction of the Salt Lake Tabernacle

Historic buildings in Utah

30 years of iconic rock and roll in Utah

Hunting and fishing in the early 1900s

BYU, Utah football programs

Saloons, brewing companies in Utah around 1900

Historic photos of Temple Square