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- Toolbox and Tools, Used by Phil Remington - Phil Remington was one of racing's greatest fabricators and metalworkers. He worked alongside innovators like Lance Reventlow, Carroll Shelby, and Dan Gurney throughout his 70-year career. Remington got this toolbox while still in high school, and he used it for the rest of his life. Always resourceful, "Rem" often made his own tools suited to the job at hand.

- Collections - Artifact
Toolbox and Tools, Used by Phil Remington
Phil Remington was one of racing's greatest fabricators and metalworkers. He worked alongside innovators like Lance Reventlow, Carroll Shelby, and Dan Gurney throughout his 70-year career. Remington got this toolbox while still in high school, and he used it for the rest of his life. Always resourceful, "Rem" often made his own tools suited to the job at hand.
- Kitchen Canister Set, 1960-1965 -

- 1960-1965
- Collections - Artifact
Kitchen Canister Set, 1960-1965
- Silverware Case Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama -

- circa 1958
- Collections - Artifact
Silverware Case Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama
- Erector Set Storage Box, 1933-1940 -

- 1933-1940
- Collections - Artifact
Erector Set Storage Box, 1933-1940
- Film Reel Transport Case, 1890-1920 -

- 1890-1920
- Collections - Artifact
Film Reel Transport Case, 1890-1920
- Cake Box, 1850-1875 -

- 1850-1875
- Collections - Artifact
Cake Box, 1850-1875
- Chemistry Set Storage Box, 1925-1935 -

- 1925-1935
- Collections - Artifact
Chemistry Set Storage Box, 1925-1935
- Candle Box - Tin-plated iron, commonly called "tin," was the dominant material for utilitarian items in 19th-century America. Local tinsmiths produced an almost endless range of goods. But as more durable and lower maintenance materials emerged, handmade tinware came to be considered a folk art or heritage craft. This 20th-century example was produced in the Greenfield Village tin shop using historical tinsmithing tools and techniques.

- Collections - Artifact
Candle Box
Tin-plated iron, commonly called "tin," was the dominant material for utilitarian items in 19th-century America. Local tinsmiths produced an almost endless range of goods. But as more durable and lower maintenance materials emerged, handmade tinware came to be considered a folk art or heritage craft. This 20th-century example was produced in the Greenfield Village tin shop using historical tinsmithing tools and techniques.
- Archivist Richard Ruddell Working in Ford Archives at Fair Lane Estate, Dearborn, Michigan, 1953 -

- 1953
- Collections - Artifact
Archivist Richard Ruddell Working in Ford Archives at Fair Lane Estate, Dearborn, Michigan, 1953
- Film Reel Transport Case, 1890-1920 -

- 1890-1920
- Collections - Artifact
Film Reel Transport Case, 1890-1920