Henry Ford with Westinghouse Portable Steam Engine, Dearborn, Michigan, 1922

THF96847 / Henry Ford with Westinghouse Portable Steam Engine, Dearborn, Michigan, 1922
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Artifact Overview

Portable steam engines could be hauled from farm to farm to power grain threshers, sawmills, or corn shellers. While working on a farm in 1882, nineteen-year-old Henry Ford powered a portable Westinghouse engine - similar to the one seen here - more effectively than his boss. The accomplishment had a lasting effect--Ford continued to restore and operate portable steam engines well into the 20th century.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Photographic print

Subject Date

1922

Location

By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center

Object ID

00.1334.169

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford. Gift of Ford Motor Company.

Material

Paper (Fiber product)

Technique

Gelatin silver process

Color

Black-and-white (Colors)

Dimensions

Height: 4.25 in
Width: 6.25 in

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    Portable steam engines like this powered grain threshers, sawmills, or corn shellers. Horses pulled them from farm to farm. In 1882, 19-year-old Henry Ford was able to make this engine run well when an older man could not; his first accomplishment in the adult world. Thirty years later Ford tracked down the engine, bought it, and returned it to operating condition.
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Related Content

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    Westinghouse Portable Steam Engine No. 345

      Learn how a portable steam engine convinced Henry Ford that his future was in engineering, not farming — and how he tracked that same engine down 30 years later.