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- Famous Early Movie Festival, Henry Ford Museum, 1962 -

- 09 March 1962 - 18 March 1962
- Collections - Artifact
Famous Early Movie Festival, Henry Ford Museum, 1962
- Film Fun Magazine for July 1919, "The League of Smiles" - From the beginning of the movie business, Americans wanted to know about the movies and their stars. In 1911, the first movie fan magazine appeared -- and others soon followed. By the early 1920s over a dozen more were being published. These publications supplied fans with stories and illustrations about film plots, moviemaking and popular film stars of the day.

- July 01, 1919
- Collections - Artifact
Film Fun Magazine for July 1919, "The League of Smiles"
From the beginning of the movie business, Americans wanted to know about the movies and their stars. In 1911, the first movie fan magazine appeared -- and others soon followed. By the early 1920s over a dozen more were being published. These publications supplied fans with stories and illustrations about film plots, moviemaking and popular film stars of the day.
- Advertising Button for IBM Personal Computers, circa 1985 -

- circa 1985
- Collections - Artifact
Advertising Button for IBM Personal Computers, circa 1985
- Movie Poster, "Warner Brothers Presents Charlie Chaplin in 'Police'," 1916 -

- 1916
- Collections - Artifact
Movie Poster, "Warner Brothers Presents Charlie Chaplin in 'Police'," 1916
- Edsel Ford, Charlie Chaplin, and Henry Ford Touring the Ford Motor Company Highland Park Plant, October 1923 - Edsel Ford (left) and Henry Ford (right) were photographed with Charles Chaplin while touring the actor-director through Ford Motor Company's Highland Park power plant in 1923. Thirteen years later, Chaplin satirized Ford's moving assembly line -- and the effects of its frantic pace on workers -- in his film <em>Modern Times</em>. Chaplin's pointed comedy examined the human cost of mass production.

- October 01, 1923
- Collections - Artifact
Edsel Ford, Charlie Chaplin, and Henry Ford Touring the Ford Motor Company Highland Park Plant, October 1923
Edsel Ford (left) and Henry Ford (right) were photographed with Charles Chaplin while touring the actor-director through Ford Motor Company's Highland Park power plant in 1923. Thirteen years later, Chaplin satirized Ford's moving assembly line -- and the effects of its frantic pace on workers -- in his film Modern Times. Chaplin's pointed comedy examined the human cost of mass production.