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- Ford Motor Company Employees Waiting in Line at a Wartime Blood Drive, February 1943 - Ford Motor Company and its employees contributed to Allied efforts in World War II in many ways. The company built trucks, tanks, aircraft engines, gliders, and B-24 bomber airplanes. Ford workers participated in blood drives by donating blood and plasma for use stateside or overseas.

- February 24, 1943
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Motor Company Employees Waiting in Line at a Wartime Blood Drive, February 1943
Ford Motor Company and its employees contributed to Allied efforts in World War II in many ways. The company built trucks, tanks, aircraft engines, gliders, and B-24 bomber airplanes. Ford workers participated in blood drives by donating blood and plasma for use stateside or overseas.
- Blood Donor Receiving a Certificate at the Ford Motor Company Rouge Plant, November 15, 1943 -

- November 15, 1943
- Collections - Artifact
Blood Donor Receiving a Certificate at the Ford Motor Company Rouge Plant, November 15, 1943
- World War I Poster, "Red Cross Christmas Roll Call," 1918 -

- 16 December 1918-23 December 1918
- Collections - Artifact
World War I Poster, "Red Cross Christmas Roll Call," 1918
- "Save a Life This Week," Window Sign, 1917-1918 -

- 1917-1918
- Collections - Artifact
"Save a Life This Week," Window Sign, 1917-1918
- 25,000th Blood Donor at the Ford Rouge Plant Pressed Steel Building, May 1943 -

- May 27, 1943
- Collections - Artifact
25,000th Blood Donor at the Ford Rouge Plant Pressed Steel Building, May 1943
- Unisys Employee Blood Drive, March 1991 -

- March 01, 1991
- Collections - Artifact
Unisys Employee Blood Drive, March 1991
- Donating Blood at Ford Motor Company Willow Run Bomber Plant, November 1944 -

- November 27, 1944
- Collections - Artifact
Donating Blood at Ford Motor Company Willow Run Bomber Plant, November 1944
- Notal Design Chair, "Notal Donor Chair," 1979-1980 - By the mid-1970s, with a growing elderly population, American disability rights activists advocated for equitable care and accessible environments for all people. Designers, too, began to explore creating objects that worked well for everyone. Michigan-based furniture company Herman Miller embarked upon the Notal project, its first foray into designing specifically for older adults, researching how their day-to-day lives were affected by ill-suited environments.

- 1979-1980
- Collections - Artifact
Notal Design Chair, "Notal Donor Chair," 1979-1980
By the mid-1970s, with a growing elderly population, American disability rights activists advocated for equitable care and accessible environments for all people. Designers, too, began to explore creating objects that worked well for everyone. Michigan-based furniture company Herman Miller embarked upon the Notal project, its first foray into designing specifically for older adults, researching how their day-to-day lives were affected by ill-suited environments.
- Blood Donors at the Red Cross Blood Bank, Ford Rouge Plant Pressed Steel Building, March 1943 -

- March 29, 1943
- Collections - Artifact
Blood Donors at the Red Cross Blood Bank, Ford Rouge Plant Pressed Steel Building, March 1943
- Letter from Edsel Ford Inviting Paul Ste. Marie to a Red Cross Blood Drive at the Rouge Plant, October 29, 1942 - Ford Motor Company and its employees contributed to Allied efforts in World War II in many ways. The company built trucks, tanks, aircraft engines, gliders, and B-24 bomber airplanes. Ford workers participated in blood drives by donating blood and plasma for use stateside or overseas.

- October 29, 1942
- Collections - Artifact
Letter from Edsel Ford Inviting Paul Ste. Marie to a Red Cross Blood Drive at the Rouge Plant, October 29, 1942
Ford Motor Company and its employees contributed to Allied efforts in World War II in many ways. The company built trucks, tanks, aircraft engines, gliders, and B-24 bomber airplanes. Ford workers participated in blood drives by donating blood and plasma for use stateside or overseas.