Martha-Mary Chapel during the Greenfield Village Restoration Project, September 2002

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Artifact Overview

By 2000, Greenfield Village began showing its age. Buildings and crumbling infrastructure desperately needed repair. Museum planners envisioned a revitalized village. They created themed "Historic Districts" by relocating and refurbishing the historic structures. Workers repaved streets and upgraded water, sewer, electric, and gas lines. In June 2003, nine months after restoration began, visitors passed through a new entrance into a reborn Greenfield Village.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Digital photograph

Date Made

17 September 2002 - 27 September 2002

Subject Date

17 September 2002 - 27 September 2002

Location

By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center

Object ID

EI.1929.4311

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Color

Multicolored

Dimensions

Height: undefined in
Width: undefined in

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    Artifact

    Martha-Mary Chapel

    Churches were a center of community life in the 1700s, a place where townspeople came together to attend services and socialize. The Martha-Mary Chapel, with its architecture inspired by New England's colonial-era churches, was built in Greenfield Village in 1929. This chapel was named after Henry Ford's mother, Mary Litogot Ford, and his mother-in-law, Martha Bench Bryant.