Search
- Artifact -

- Collections - Artifact
Artifact
- Electrical Artifact -

- Collections - Artifact
Electrical Artifact
- Artifact -

- Collections - Artifact
Artifact
- Electrical Artifact -

- Collections - Artifact
Electrical Artifact
- "Surprising Artifacts," Clip for Interview with Jessica Robinson, August 28, 2020 - Jessica Robinson, co-founder of Detroit Mobility Lab, Michigan Mobility Institute, and Assembly Ventures, was the Spring 2020 Entrepreneur-in-Residence at The Henry Ford, funded by the William Davidson Foundation Initiative for Entrepreneurship. During her interview, Robinson describes how her organizations -- and her residency projects -- encourage technological education in the midst of dramatic new transportation technologies.

- August 28, 2020
- Collections - Artifact
"Surprising Artifacts," Clip for Interview with Jessica Robinson, August 28, 2020
Jessica Robinson, co-founder of Detroit Mobility Lab, Michigan Mobility Institute, and Assembly Ventures, was the Spring 2020 Entrepreneur-in-Residence at The Henry Ford, funded by the William Davidson Foundation Initiative for Entrepreneurship. During her interview, Robinson describes how her organizations -- and her residency projects -- encourage technological education in the midst of dramatic new transportation technologies.
- "Suspended Artifact" by William Morris, 1996 -

- 1996
- Collections - Artifact
"Suspended Artifact" by William Morris, 1996
- Artifacts Recovered from an Alamogordo, New Mexico Landfill, April 2014, Site of the 1983 Atari Video Game Burial - In 1983, rumors circulated: Atari was bankrupt, and was dumping truckloads of games into a New Mexico landfill. Victim to the "Video Game Crash," the company buried 700,000 cartridges in the desert. The story became an obscure pop culture legend -- until "The Atari Tomb" was unearthed in 2014. These images document the world's first video game excavation.

- April 26, 2014
- Collections - Artifact
Artifacts Recovered from an Alamogordo, New Mexico Landfill, April 2014, Site of the 1983 Atari Video Game Burial
In 1983, rumors circulated: Atari was bankrupt, and was dumping truckloads of games into a New Mexico landfill. Victim to the "Video Game Crash," the company buried 700,000 cartridges in the desert. The story became an obscure pop culture legend -- until "The Atari Tomb" was unearthed in 2014. These images document the world's first video game excavation.
- Artifacts Recovered from an Alamogordo, New Mexico Landfill, April 2014, Site of the 1983 Atari Video Game Burial - In 1983, rumors circulated: Atari was bankrupt, and was dumping truckloads of games into a New Mexico landfill. Victim to the "Video Game Crash," the company buried 700,000 cartridges in the desert. The story became an obscure pop culture legend -- until "The Atari Tomb" was unearthed in 2014. These images document the world's first video game excavation.

- April 26, 2014
- Collections - Artifact
Artifacts Recovered from an Alamogordo, New Mexico Landfill, April 2014, Site of the 1983 Atari Video Game Burial
In 1983, rumors circulated: Atari was bankrupt, and was dumping truckloads of games into a New Mexico landfill. Victim to the "Video Game Crash," the company buried 700,000 cartridges in the desert. The story became an obscure pop culture legend -- until "The Atari Tomb" was unearthed in 2014. These images document the world's first video game excavation.
- Pumping Gas at a Texaco Station, Kingston, Massachusetts, 1940 - Two friendly attendants service a customer's automobile in front of a Texaco station in Kingston, Massachusetts. The Henry Ford acquired the service station in 1987 and it became part of the institution's collection.

- 1940
- Collections - Artifact
Pumping Gas at a Texaco Station, Kingston, Massachusetts, 1940
Two friendly attendants service a customer's automobile in front of a Texaco station in Kingston, Massachusetts. The Henry Ford acquired the service station in 1987 and it became part of the institution's collection.
- One of Four Entrances to Henry Ford Museum Building K, West Elevation, circa 1928 - One of a series of views of the Museum as built, this black and white drawing shows one of the side entrances to the Museum exhibit floor. These grandly decorated entrances facilitate the movement of large artifacts in and out of the one-story gallery.

- 1928
- Collections - Artifact
One of Four Entrances to Henry Ford Museum Building K, West Elevation, circa 1928
One of a series of views of the Museum as built, this black and white drawing shows one of the side entrances to the Museum exhibit floor. These grandly decorated entrances facilitate the movement of large artifacts in and out of the one-story gallery.