Print Showing Norman Rockwell's "Henry and Clara Ford with Quadricycle"
THF727022 / Print Showing Norman Rockwell's "Henry and Clara Ford with Quadricycle"
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Artifact Overview
As part of their seventy-fifth anniversary in 1978, Ford Motor Company commissioned a set of four posters representing the life of Henry Ford and the impact of the automobile. These scenes were originally created by Norman Rockwell as part of Ford's fiftieth anniversary celebration in 1953. This print presents Norman Rockwell's vision of Henry Ford creating his first automobile--the Quadricycle.
Artifact Details
Artifact
Print (Visual work)
Date Made
1978
Subject Date
1896
Creator Notes
Commissioned by Ford Motor Company for their 75th anniversary, 1978. Illustration from a 1952 painting by Norman Rockwell.
Collection Title
Location
By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center
Object ID
78.300.1389.4
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Material
Paper (Fiber product)
Technique
Printing (Process)
Color
Multicolored
Dimensions
Height: 19.625 in
Width: 19.563 in
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Related Artifacts
ArtifactHenry and Clara Ford in 1896 with Quadricycle, by Norman Rockwell, 1951-1952
In this painting Norman Rockwell gives us an idealized view of Henry Ford building his first automobile in 1896. In a small brick shed behind the Fords' rented home on Bagley Avenue in Detroit, Henry fine tunes a part of the car while his wife Clara looks on, darning socks. The reality was somewhat different. Henry built the little car with the aid of several friends, and much of the work was done in a shop near Ford's place of work, an electrical generating station. This is one of a series of eight paintings Ford Motor Company commissioned Rockwell to do in anticipation of the company's 50th anniversary in 1953.
ArtifactBagley Avenue Workshop
Henry Ford transformed the storage shed behind his family's rented duplex at 58 Bagley Avenue in Detroit into a workshop. Here, in 1896, he built his first car -- the "Quadricycle." In 1933, Ford reconstructed the shed in Greenfield Village. The original shed had been torn down, so he reportedly used bricks from a wall of the Bagley Avenue residence instead.
Artifact1896 Ford Quadricycle Runabout, First Car Built by Henry Ford
The Quadricycle was Henry Ford's first attempt to build a gasoline-powered automobile. It utilized commonly available materials: angle iron for the frame, a leather belt and chain drive for the transmission, and a buggy seat. Ford had to devise his own ignition system. He sold his Quadricycle for $200, then used the money to build his second car.