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- "Morning's Catch," Fishing in the Adirondacks, New York, circa 1903 - From 1895 to 1924, the Detroit Publishing Company was one of the major image publishers in the world. The company's wide-ranging stock of original photographs documented life and landscapes from across the nation and around the globe. From the tens of thousands of negatives, the company created prints, postcards, lantern slides, panoramas, and other merchandise for sale to educators, businessmen, advertisers, homeowners and travelers.

- circa 1903
- Collections - Artifact
"Morning's Catch," Fishing in the Adirondacks, New York, circa 1903
From 1895 to 1924, the Detroit Publishing Company was one of the major image publishers in the world. The company's wide-ranging stock of original photographs documented life and landscapes from across the nation and around the globe. From the tens of thousands of negatives, the company created prints, postcards, lantern slides, panoramas, and other merchandise for sale to educators, businessmen, advertisers, homeowners and travelers.
- Close-up of Adhesive on Wood Veneer Door Frame Pillar for Ford Station Wagons, Iron Mountain Plant, March 1949 - Ford Motor Company built wood station wagon bodies at its Iron Mountain plant in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. For 1949, Ford eliminated wood framing from its wagons in favor of steel. Wood was still used on the wagons, but in the form of specially laminated paneling bolted onto the steel frames. Iron Mountain closed when Ford switched to all-steel wagons in 1952.

- circa 1949
- Collections - Artifact
Close-up of Adhesive on Wood Veneer Door Frame Pillar for Ford Station Wagons, Iron Mountain Plant, March 1949
Ford Motor Company built wood station wagon bodies at its Iron Mountain plant in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. For 1949, Ford eliminated wood framing from its wagons in favor of steel. Wood was still used on the wagons, but in the form of specially laminated paneling bolted onto the steel frames. Iron Mountain closed when Ford switched to all-steel wagons in 1952.
- Children Riding Donkeys, "Going to School," circa 1885 - From 1895 to 1924, the Detroit Publishing Company was one of the major image publishers in the world. The company's wide-ranging stock of original photographs documented life and landscapes from across the nation and around the globe. From the tens of thousands of negatives, the company created prints, postcards, lantern slides, panoramas, and other merchandise for sale to educators, businessmen, advertisers, homeowners and travelers.

- circa 1885
- Collections - Artifact
Children Riding Donkeys, "Going to School," circa 1885
From 1895 to 1924, the Detroit Publishing Company was one of the major image publishers in the world. The company's wide-ranging stock of original photographs documented life and landscapes from across the nation and around the globe. From the tens of thousands of negatives, the company created prints, postcards, lantern slides, panoramas, and other merchandise for sale to educators, businessmen, advertisers, homeowners and travelers.
- Oral History Interview with Mitchell Baker, September, 2008--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 40 - Mitchell Baker, chair of the Mozilla Foundation, envisions building internet resources that are open and accessible to all. In 2005, her efforts led to the release of the Firefox browser. Staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Baker in 2008 at the offices of Mozilla Foundation in Mountain View, California, as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- September 22, 2008
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Mitchell Baker, September, 2008--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 40
Mitchell Baker, chair of the Mozilla Foundation, envisions building internet resources that are open and accessible to all. In 2005, her efforts led to the release of the Firefox browser. Staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Baker in 2008 at the offices of Mozilla Foundation in Mountain View, California, as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Mitchell Baker, September, 2008--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 60 - Mitchell Baker, chair of the Mozilla Foundation, envisions building internet resources that are open and accessible to all. In 2005, her efforts led to the release of the Firefox browser. Staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Baker in 2008 at the offices of Mozilla Foundation in Mountain View, California, as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- September 22, 2008
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Mitchell Baker, September, 2008--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 60
Mitchell Baker, chair of the Mozilla Foundation, envisions building internet resources that are open and accessible to all. In 2005, her efforts led to the release of the Firefox browser. Staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Baker in 2008 at the offices of Mozilla Foundation in Mountain View, California, as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Mountain View Company Diner in Palmer, Massachusetts, November 1992 -

- November 01, 1992
- Collections - Artifact
Mountain View Company Diner in Palmer, Massachusetts, November 1992
- Mountain View Company Diner in Palmer, Massachusetts, November 1992 -

- November 01, 1992
- Collections - Artifact
Mountain View Company Diner in Palmer, Massachusetts, November 1992
- John Burroughs at Woodchuck Lodge, 1910-1915 - John Burroughs (1837-1921) was an internationally known naturalist and essayist who wrote about accessible and familiar landscapes. In 1913, with financial assistance from Henry Ford, Burroughs purchased the house built by his brother Curtis on land near Burroughs's birthplace in Roxbury, New York. Woodchuck Lodge, as Burroughs referred to it, became his summer retreat and its natural surroundings became the subject of his creative works.

- 1910-1915
- Collections - Artifact
John Burroughs at Woodchuck Lodge, 1910-1915
John Burroughs (1837-1921) was an internationally known naturalist and essayist who wrote about accessible and familiar landscapes. In 1913, with financial assistance from Henry Ford, Burroughs purchased the house built by his brother Curtis on land near Burroughs's birthplace in Roxbury, New York. Woodchuck Lodge, as Burroughs referred to it, became his summer retreat and its natural surroundings became the subject of his creative works.
- Woodchuck Lodge, Roxbury, New York, circa 1920 - John Burroughs (1837-1921) was an internationally known naturalist and essayist who wrote about accessible and familiar landscapes. In 1913, with financial assistance from Henry Ford, Burroughs purchased the house built by his brother Curtis on land near Burroughs's birthplace in Roxbury, New York. Woodchuck Lodge, as Burroughs referred to it, became his summer retreat and its natural surroundings became the subject of his creative works.

- circa 1920
- Collections - Artifact
Woodchuck Lodge, Roxbury, New York, circa 1920
John Burroughs (1837-1921) was an internationally known naturalist and essayist who wrote about accessible and familiar landscapes. In 1913, with financial assistance from Henry Ford, Burroughs purchased the house built by his brother Curtis on land near Burroughs's birthplace in Roxbury, New York. Woodchuck Lodge, as Burroughs referred to it, became his summer retreat and its natural surroundings became the subject of his creative works.
- John Burroughs Standing by Woodchuck Lodge, circa 1915 - John Burroughs (1837-1921) was an internationally known naturalist and essayist who wrote about accessible and familiar landscapes. In 1913, with financial assistance from Henry Ford, Burroughs purchased the house built by his brother Curtis on land near Burroughs's birthplace in Roxbury, New York. Woodchuck Lodge, as Burroughs referred to it, became his summer retreat and its natural surroundings became the subject of his creative works.

- circa 1915
- Collections - Artifact
John Burroughs Standing by Woodchuck Lodge, circa 1915
John Burroughs (1837-1921) was an internationally known naturalist and essayist who wrote about accessible and familiar landscapes. In 1913, with financial assistance from Henry Ford, Burroughs purchased the house built by his brother Curtis on land near Burroughs's birthplace in Roxbury, New York. Woodchuck Lodge, as Burroughs referred to it, became his summer retreat and its natural surroundings became the subject of his creative works.