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- Braille Map of the Evergreen School for the Blind, Made by Blind Veteran, April 1923 -

- April 14, 1923
- Collections - Artifact
Braille Map of the Evergreen School for the Blind, Made by Blind Veteran, April 1923
- Orchestra of Blind Veterans Playing at Weekly Dance, Dearborn Independent, April 1923 -

- 1922-1923
- Collections - Artifact
Orchestra of Blind Veterans Playing at Weekly Dance, Dearborn Independent, April 1923
- Chicken Yard Tended by Blind Veterans, Dearborn Indepenedent March 1921 -

- 1922-1923
- Collections - Artifact
Chicken Yard Tended by Blind Veterans, Dearborn Indepenedent March 1921
- Blind Veteran Plucking a Chicken, Dearborn Independent, October 1919 -

- 1922-1923
- Collections - Artifact
Blind Veteran Plucking a Chicken, Dearborn Independent, October 1919
- Dearborn Independent Newspaper for April 14, 1923 - Henry Ford purchased <em>The Dearborn Independent</em> and published it under his name from 1919 to 1927. It served as a forum for Ford's views, free from other media outlets that had attacked his work and values and were outside his control. <em>The Dearborn Independent</em> covered world events, business and economic news, and fiction from noted authors. Sadly, it also served as an outlet for Ford's anti-Semitic sentiments. Between 1920 and 1922, the weekly paper ran a series of front-page articles that denounced all things Jewish. Even after this series, many articles contained anti-Jewish language. Though Ford later apologized and printed a retraction, these notoriously anti-Semitic editorials and articles forever tarnished the influential automaker's reputation.

- April 14, 1923
- Collections - Artifact
Dearborn Independent Newspaper for April 14, 1923
Henry Ford purchased The Dearborn Independent and published it under his name from 1919 to 1927. It served as a forum for Ford's views, free from other media outlets that had attacked his work and values and were outside his control. The Dearborn Independent covered world events, business and economic news, and fiction from noted authors. Sadly, it also served as an outlet for Ford's anti-Semitic sentiments. Between 1920 and 1922, the weekly paper ran a series of front-page articles that denounced all things Jewish. Even after this series, many articles contained anti-Jewish language. Though Ford later apologized and printed a retraction, these notoriously anti-Semitic editorials and articles forever tarnished the influential automaker's reputation.