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- Moving the 15 Millionth Ford Model T Into "Henry Ford: A Personal History" Exhibit, February 1953 - Henry Ford himself was the focus of <em>Henry Ford: A Personal History</em>. Opened in 1953 during Ford Motor Company's 50th anniversary, the exhibit included artifacts like the fifteen millionth Ford Model T. The exhibit's second-floor location meant lifting the Model T with a crane and moving it on its side through tight doorways.

- February 01, 1953
- Collections - Artifact
Moving the 15 Millionth Ford Model T Into "Henry Ford: A Personal History" Exhibit, February 1953
Henry Ford himself was the focus of Henry Ford: A Personal History. Opened in 1953 during Ford Motor Company's 50th anniversary, the exhibit included artifacts like the fifteen millionth Ford Model T. The exhibit's second-floor location meant lifting the Model T with a crane and moving it on its side through tight doorways.
- Quotation Sign from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961 -

- 1960-1961
- Collections - Artifact
Quotation Sign from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961
- Quotation Sign from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961 -

- 1960-1961
- Collections - Artifact
Quotation Sign from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961
- Moving the 15 Millionth Ford Model T Into "Henry Ford: A Personal History" Exhibit, February 1953 - Henry Ford himself was the focus of <em>Henry Ford: A Personal History</em>. Opened in 1953 during Ford Motor Company's 50th anniversary, the exhibit included artifacts like the fifteen millionth Ford Model T. The exhibit's second-floor location meant lifting the Model T with a crane and moving it on its side through tight doorways.

- February 01, 1953
- Collections - Artifact
Moving the 15 Millionth Ford Model T Into "Henry Ford: A Personal History" Exhibit, February 1953
Henry Ford himself was the focus of Henry Ford: A Personal History. Opened in 1953 during Ford Motor Company's 50th anniversary, the exhibit included artifacts like the fifteen millionth Ford Model T. The exhibit's second-floor location meant lifting the Model T with a crane and moving it on its side through tight doorways.
- Quotation Sign from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961 -

- 1960-1961
- Collections - Artifact
Quotation Sign from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961
- Quotation Sign from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961 -

- 1960-1961
- Collections - Artifact
Quotation Sign from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961
- "The Random Walk" from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961 -

- 1960-1961
- Collections - Artifact
"The Random Walk" from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961
- "Multiplication Cube" from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961 -

- 1960-1961
- Collections - Artifact
"Multiplication Cube" from Mathematica: A World of Numbers and Beyond Exhibition, 1960-1961
- Mattox Family Home Installation Opening Celebration in Greenfield Village, August 1991 -

- August 08, 1991
- Collections - Artifact
Mattox Family Home Installation Opening Celebration in Greenfield Village, August 1991
- Mattox Family Home in Greenfield Village, 1991 - Amos and Grace Mattox -- descended from enslaved African Americans -- raised their two children in this rural Georgia farmhouse during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Amos farmed, cut hair, made shoes, and preached at the local church, while Grace sewed, canned, cooked, and helped needy neighbors. Although life was hard, the family proudly affirmed that there was "always enough."

- August 28, 1991
- Collections - Artifact
Mattox Family Home in Greenfield Village, 1991
Amos and Grace Mattox -- descended from enslaved African Americans -- raised their two children in this rural Georgia farmhouse during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Amos farmed, cut hair, made shoes, and preached at the local church, while Grace sewed, canned, cooked, and helped needy neighbors. Although life was hard, the family proudly affirmed that there was "always enough."