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- Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944 - During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.

- 1930-1944
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944
During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.
- Renovating Ford Motor Company Highland Park Plant Buildings, 1940 -

- January 11, 1940
- Collections - Artifact
Renovating Ford Motor Company Highland Park Plant Buildings, 1940
- Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944 - During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.

- 1930-1944
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944
During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.
- Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944 - During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.

- 1930-1944
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944
During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.
- Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944 - During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.

- 1930-1944
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944
During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.
- Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944 - During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.

- 1930-1944
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Motor Company Employee Home Improvement Project, Inkster, Michigan, 1930-1944
During the Great Depression, Henry Ford and Ford Motor Company made efforts to improve living conditions in Inkster, Michigan, a primarily Black community near Dearborn that was hit especially hard by the economic crisis. Ford assisted Inkster residents with home improvements by providing money, materials, and labor. Homeowners contributed their own resources and efforts to the work as well.
- Drawing of Rainbow Diner, Paterson, New Jersey, May 7, 1957 -

- May 07, 1957
- Collections - Artifact
Drawing of Rainbow Diner, Paterson, New Jersey, May 7, 1957
- Renovating Ford Motor Company Highland Park Plant Buildings, 1940 -

- February 12, 1940
- Collections - Artifact
Renovating Ford Motor Company Highland Park Plant Buildings, 1940
- Norm Abram, Marian Morash, Julia Child, and Steve Thomas in Promotional Image for "This Old House: Milton," 1998 - WGBH-TV launched <em>This Old House</em> in 1979. Each season features the host and crew in a home repair. In 1998, Steve Thomas, host, and Norm Abram, carpenter, worked with two distinguished chefs and TV personalities, Julia Child and Marian Morash, to create a dream kitchen for a house in Milton, Massachusetts, built in 1724.

- 1998
- Collections - Artifact
Norm Abram, Marian Morash, Julia Child, and Steve Thomas in Promotional Image for "This Old House: Milton," 1998
WGBH-TV launched This Old House in 1979. Each season features the host and crew in a home repair. In 1998, Steve Thomas, host, and Norm Abram, carpenter, worked with two distinguished chefs and TV personalities, Julia Child and Marian Morash, to create a dream kitchen for a house in Milton, Massachusetts, built in 1724.
- Rendering of a Diner with Vestibule Designed by Erfed Corp., February 1962 -

- February 05, 1962
- Collections - Artifact
Rendering of a Diner with Vestibule Designed by Erfed Corp., February 1962