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- Dearborn Country Club, Dearborn, Michigan, 1927 - Henry Ford established the Dearborn Country Club, with an 18-hole golf course and a clubhouse designed by Albert Kahn, in 1925. Ford himself was not a golfer, but the club helped attract and keep executive talent at Ford Motor Company's Dearborn, Michigan, offices. Club members purchased the facility from Ford interests in 1952.

- November 06, 1927
- Collections - Artifact
Dearborn Country Club, Dearborn, Michigan, 1927
Henry Ford established the Dearborn Country Club, with an 18-hole golf course and a clubhouse designed by Albert Kahn, in 1925. Ford himself was not a golfer, but the club helped attract and keep executive talent at Ford Motor Company's Dearborn, Michigan, offices. Club members purchased the facility from Ford interests in 1952.
- AAA Souvenir Toy Suitcase, 1955-1975 -

- 1955-1975
- Collections - Artifact
AAA Souvenir Toy Suitcase, 1955-1975
- AAA Souvenir Toy Suitcase, 1955-1975 -

- 1955-1975
- Collections - Artifact
AAA Souvenir Toy Suitcase, 1955-1975
- Three Farm Girls Make All Their Own Clothes, Supervised by a Local Farm Woman, 1923-1924 -

- 1923-1924
- Collections - Artifact
Three Farm Girls Make All Their Own Clothes, Supervised by a Local Farm Woman, 1923-1924
- Kenneth Schwartz Interviewing Ladies in the Costume Judging at the 1960 Model A Restorers Club Meet in Greenfield Village -

- 09 August 1968-11 August 1968
- Collections - Artifact
Kenneth Schwartz Interviewing Ladies in the Costume Judging at the 1960 Model A Restorers Club Meet in Greenfield Village
- 8th Annual Kiwanis Ski Club Tournament, Iron Mountain, Michigan, February 1941 - Skiers at a tournament near Iron Mountain, Michigan, made a fine backdrop for this 1941 Mercury station wagon. Ford Motor Company built wood bodies for Ford and Mercury station wagons at a factory in Iron Mountain until 1952, when the automaker adopted all-steel wagon bodies.

- February 09, 1941
- Collections - Artifact
8th Annual Kiwanis Ski Club Tournament, Iron Mountain, Michigan, February 1941
Skiers at a tournament near Iron Mountain, Michigan, made a fine backdrop for this 1941 Mercury station wagon. Ford Motor Company built wood bodies for Ford and Mercury station wagons at a factory in Iron Mountain until 1952, when the automaker adopted all-steel wagon bodies.
- Dearborn Country Club, Dearborn, Michigan, 1925 - Henry Ford established the Dearborn Country Club, with an 18-hole golf course and a clubhouse designed by Albert Kahn, in 1925. Ford himself was not a golfer, but the club helped attract and keep executive talent at Ford Motor Company's Dearborn, Michigan, offices. Club members purchased the facility from Ford interests in 1952.

- October 14, 1925
- Collections - Artifact
Dearborn Country Club, Dearborn, Michigan, 1925
Henry Ford established the Dearborn Country Club, with an 18-hole golf course and a clubhouse designed by Albert Kahn, in 1925. Ford himself was not a golfer, but the club helped attract and keep executive talent at Ford Motor Company's Dearborn, Michigan, offices. Club members purchased the facility from Ford interests in 1952.
- 8th Annual Kiwanis Ski Club Tournament, Iron Mountain, Michigan, February 1941 - Skiers at a tournament near Iron Mountain, Michigan, made a fine backdrop for this 1941 Mercury station wagon. Ford Motor Company built wood bodies for Ford and Mercury station wagons at a factory in Iron Mountain until 1952, when the automaker adopted all-steel wagon bodies.

- February 09, 1941
- Collections - Artifact
8th Annual Kiwanis Ski Club Tournament, Iron Mountain, Michigan, February 1941
Skiers at a tournament near Iron Mountain, Michigan, made a fine backdrop for this 1941 Mercury station wagon. Ford Motor Company built wood bodies for Ford and Mercury station wagons at a factory in Iron Mountain until 1952, when the automaker adopted all-steel wagon bodies.
- Larkin Company Trade Catalog, "This Handsome Coat, Yours Without Cost," circa 1910 - John D. Larkin established a soap manufacturing company in 1875. He hired his brother-in-law, Elbert Hubbard, as a salesman. Hubbard developed "The Larkin Idea," a plan that sold goods directly to consumers through mail-order catalogs and offered incentivizing giveaways. It was a success. By the early 1900s, Larkin's catalogs contained pages of products and even more pages of premiums from which customers could choose.

- circa 1910
- Collections - Artifact
Larkin Company Trade Catalog, "This Handsome Coat, Yours Without Cost," circa 1910
John D. Larkin established a soap manufacturing company in 1875. He hired his brother-in-law, Elbert Hubbard, as a salesman. Hubbard developed "The Larkin Idea," a plan that sold goods directly to consumers through mail-order catalogs and offered incentivizing giveaways. It was a success. By the early 1900s, Larkin's catalogs contained pages of products and even more pages of premiums from which customers could choose.
- Henry Ford Trade School Students in Their "Exploration Club," 1925 -

- December 01, 1925
- Collections - Artifact
Henry Ford Trade School Students in Their "Exploration Club," 1925