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- Student Weavers in Plymouth Carding Mill (now Gunsolly Carding Mill), Greenfield Village, 1930 - Henry Ford believed in "learning by doing." Students enrolled in the Edison Institute Schools located on the grounds of Ford's Greenfield Village had ample opportunities for practical, hands-on training. Students, if they desired, could learn to weave. Beginners used small tabletop looms. As they progressed students created woven materials using larger looms located in Greenfield Village's Plymouth Carding Mill and Weaving Shed.

- July 10, 1930
- Collections - Artifact
Student Weavers in Plymouth Carding Mill (now Gunsolly Carding Mill), Greenfield Village, 1930
Henry Ford believed in "learning by doing." Students enrolled in the Edison Institute Schools located on the grounds of Ford's Greenfield Village had ample opportunities for practical, hands-on training. Students, if they desired, could learn to weave. Beginners used small tabletop looms. As they progressed students created woven materials using larger looms located in Greenfield Village's Plymouth Carding Mill and Weaving Shed.
- Edison Institute Schools Student Weaving, circa 1935 - Henry Ford believed in "learning by doing." Students enrolled in the Edison Institute Schools located on the grounds of Ford's Greenfield Village had ample opportunities for practical, hands-on training. Students, if they desired, could learn to weave. Beginners used small tabletop looms. As they progressed students created woven materials using larger looms located in Greenfield Village's Plymouth Carding Mill and Weaving Shed.

- circa 1935
- Collections - Artifact
Edison Institute Schools Student Weaving, circa 1935
Henry Ford believed in "learning by doing." Students enrolled in the Edison Institute Schools located on the grounds of Ford's Greenfield Village had ample opportunities for practical, hands-on training. Students, if they desired, could learn to weave. Beginners used small tabletop looms. As they progressed students created woven materials using larger looms located in Greenfield Village's Plymouth Carding Mill and Weaving Shed.
- Catalog for Thomas Halton's Sons "Jacquard Machines," circa 1927 -

- circa 1927
- Collections - Artifact
Catalog for Thomas Halton's Sons "Jacquard Machines," circa 1927
- Edison Institute Schools Students Weaving, circa 1935 - Henry Ford believed in "learning by doing." Students enrolled in the Edison Institute Schools located on the grounds of Ford's Greenfield Village had ample opportunities for practical, hands-on training. Students, if they desired, could learn to weave. Beginners used small tabletop looms. As they progressed students created woven materials using larger looms located in Greenfield Village's Plymouth Carding Mill and Weaving Shed.

- circa 1935
- Collections - Artifact
Edison Institute Schools Students Weaving, circa 1935
Henry Ford believed in "learning by doing." Students enrolled in the Edison Institute Schools located on the grounds of Ford's Greenfield Village had ample opportunities for practical, hands-on training. Students, if they desired, could learn to weave. Beginners used small tabletop looms. As they progressed students created woven materials using larger looms located in Greenfield Village's Plymouth Carding Mill and Weaving Shed.
- Drawing of a Jacquard Loom Punched Card, by Sidney Holloway, 1934 -

- January 24, 1934
- Collections - Artifact
Drawing of a Jacquard Loom Punched Card, by Sidney Holloway, 1934
- Farm Workers Shearing Sheep in a Barn, Cape Neddick, York County, Maine, circa 1890 -

- circa 1890
- Collections - Artifact
Farm Workers Shearing Sheep in a Barn, Cape Neddick, York County, Maine, circa 1890
- Student Weavers in Plymouth Carding Mill (now Gunsolly Carding Mill), Greenfield Village, 1930 - Henry Ford believed in "learning by doing." Students enrolled in the Edison Institute Schools located on the grounds of Ford's Greenfield Village had ample opportunities for practical, hands-on training. Students, if they desired, could learn to weave. Beginners used small tabletop looms. As they progressed students created woven materials using larger looms located in Greenfield Village's Plymouth Carding Mill and Weaving Shed.

- July 09, 1930
- Collections - Artifact
Student Weavers in Plymouth Carding Mill (now Gunsolly Carding Mill), Greenfield Village, 1930
Henry Ford believed in "learning by doing." Students enrolled in the Edison Institute Schools located on the grounds of Ford's Greenfield Village had ample opportunities for practical, hands-on training. Students, if they desired, could learn to weave. Beginners used small tabletop looms. As they progressed students created woven materials using larger looms located in Greenfield Village's Plymouth Carding Mill and Weaving Shed.