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- "Descriptive Pamphlet of N. F. Burnham's New Turbine Water Wheel for 1871" -

- 1871
- Collections - Artifact
"Descriptive Pamphlet of N. F. Burnham's New Turbine Water Wheel for 1871"
- Fitz Water Wheel Co. Catalog, "I-X-L Steel Overshoot Water Wheel," 1919 -

- 1919
- Collections - Artifact
Fitz Water Wheel Co. Catalog, "I-X-L Steel Overshoot Water Wheel," 1919
- Gristmill near the Wayside Inn, Sudbury, Massachusetts, circa 1928 - Henry Ford purchased the Wayside Inn, the setting for the poems in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's <em>Tales of a Wayside Inn</em>, in 1923. Over six years, Ford spent more than $2 million restoring the inn and several adjacent buildings, including this gristmill. In retrospect, the project was something of a dry run for Ford's Greenfield Village complex a few years later.

- circa 1928
- Collections - Artifact
Gristmill near the Wayside Inn, Sudbury, Massachusetts, circa 1928
Henry Ford purchased the Wayside Inn, the setting for the poems in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Tales of a Wayside Inn, in 1923. Over six years, Ford spent more than $2 million restoring the inn and several adjacent buildings, including this gristmill. In retrospect, the project was something of a dry run for Ford's Greenfield Village complex a few years later.
- Gristmill near the Wayside Inn, Sudbury, Massachusetts, circa 1928 - Henry Ford purchased the Wayside Inn, the setting for the poems in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's <em>Tales of a Wayside Inn</em>, in 1923. Over six years, Ford spent more than $2 million restoring the inn and several adjacent buildings, including this gristmill. In retrospect, the project was something of a dry run for Ford's Greenfield Village complex a few years later.

- circa 1928
- Collections - Artifact
Gristmill near the Wayside Inn, Sudbury, Massachusetts, circa 1928
Henry Ford purchased the Wayside Inn, the setting for the poems in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Tales of a Wayside Inn, in 1923. Over six years, Ford spent more than $2 million restoring the inn and several adjacent buildings, including this gristmill. In retrospect, the project was something of a dry run for Ford's Greenfield Village complex a few years later.
- Malden Machine Company Catalog, "The Porter Water Wheel," 1894 -

- 1894
- Collections - Artifact
Malden Machine Company Catalog, "The Porter Water Wheel," 1894
- Young Henry Ford, circa 1876, with Waterwheel, by Irving R. Bacon, 1935 - Henry Ford had his favorite artist Irving Bacon paint several scenes Henry remembered from his childhood. This painting depicts a dam and a waterwheel Henry and a group of friends installed in a small stream. Behind them is the Miller School building, which a grown up Henry had replicated at Greenfield Village.

- circa 1876
- Collections - Artifact
Young Henry Ford, circa 1876, with Waterwheel, by Irving R. Bacon, 1935
Henry Ford had his favorite artist Irving Bacon paint several scenes Henry remembered from his childhood. This painting depicts a dam and a waterwheel Henry and a group of friends installed in a small stream. Behind them is the Miller School building, which a grown up Henry had replicated at Greenfield Village.
- Case Wheel & Mill Co. Catalog, "National Turbine Water Wheel," 1898 -

- 1898
- Collections - Artifact
Case Wheel & Mill Co. Catalog, "National Turbine Water Wheel," 1898
- Swiss Oxen and Cheviot Sheep at Gristmill near the Wayside Inn, Sudbury, Massachusetts, circa 1928 - Henry Ford purchased the Wayside Inn, the setting for the poems in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's <em>Tales of a Wayside Inn</em>, in 1923. Over six years, Ford spent more than $2 million restoring the inn and several adjacent buildings, including this gristmill. In retrospect, the project was something of a dry run for Ford's Greenfield Village complex a few years later.

- circa 1926
- Collections - Artifact
Swiss Oxen and Cheviot Sheep at Gristmill near the Wayside Inn, Sudbury, Massachusetts, circa 1928
Henry Ford purchased the Wayside Inn, the setting for the poems in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Tales of a Wayside Inn, in 1923. Over six years, Ford spent more than $2 million restoring the inn and several adjacent buildings, including this gristmill. In retrospect, the project was something of a dry run for Ford's Greenfield Village complex a few years later.
- Lithograph by Currier & Ives, "Frozen Up," 1872 -

- 1872
- Collections - Artifact
Lithograph by Currier & Ives, "Frozen Up," 1872
- Gristmill near the Wayside Inn, Sudbury, Massachusetts, 1927 - Henry Ford purchased the Wayside Inn, the setting for the poems in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's <em>Tales of a Wayside Inn</em>, in 1923. Over six years, Ford spent more than $2 million restoring the inn and several adjacent buildings, including this gristmill. In retrospect, the project was something of a dry run for Ford's Greenfield Village complex a few years later.

- September 25, 1927
- Collections - Artifact
Gristmill near the Wayside Inn, Sudbury, Massachusetts, 1927
Henry Ford purchased the Wayside Inn, the setting for the poems in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Tales of a Wayside Inn, in 1923. Over six years, Ford spent more than $2 million restoring the inn and several adjacent buildings, including this gristmill. In retrospect, the project was something of a dry run for Ford's Greenfield Village complex a few years later.