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- "Buckling Up" Clip from Interview with Jeanine Head Miller, 2011 - Seat belts are the single most important safety device in an automobile. Nevertheless, drivers were slow to use them. State laws, public education campaigns, and short-lived ignition interlocks -- which prevented a car from starting unless seat belts were fastened -- all promoted seat belt use. By the 1990s, buckling up was a habit for American motorists.

- 2011
- Collections - Artifact
"Buckling Up" Clip from Interview with Jeanine Head Miller, 2011
Seat belts are the single most important safety device in an automobile. Nevertheless, drivers were slow to use them. State laws, public education campaigns, and short-lived ignition interlocks -- which prevented a car from starting unless seat belts were fastened -- all promoted seat belt use. By the 1990s, buckling up was a habit for American motorists.
- "Henry Ford Loved Violins and Fiddling," 2014 -

- 2014
- Collections - Artifact
"Henry Ford Loved Violins and Fiddling," 2014
- "Playing Henry's Violins," 2014 -

- 2014
- Collections - Artifact
"Playing Henry's Violins," 2014
- Mo Rocca and Jeanine Head Miller in Greenfield Village, September 2019 - In 2019, The Henry Ford's staff and production partners filmed a story about tintype photography for the weekly television show, <em>The Henry Ford's Innovation Nation</em>. A modern-day tintypist used traditional methods to create this tintype photograph of Mo Rocca, the show's host, and Jeanine Head Miller, curator of domestic life. They struck a pose typical of the mid-1800s outside the Greenfield Village Tintype Studio.

- September 13, 2019
- Collections - Artifact
Mo Rocca and Jeanine Head Miller in Greenfield Village, September 2019
In 2019, The Henry Ford's staff and production partners filmed a story about tintype photography for the weekly television show, The Henry Ford's Innovation Nation. A modern-day tintypist used traditional methods to create this tintype photograph of Mo Rocca, the show's host, and Jeanine Head Miller, curator of domestic life. They struck a pose typical of the mid-1800s outside the Greenfield Village Tintype Studio.