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- Burgess Meredith (center) While Filming in the Tintype Studio, Greenfield Village, 1976 - Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village have been locations for numerous television films and programs over the years. In 1976, crews from WJW-TV in Cleveland, Ohio, filmed <em>The Wandering Muse of Artemus Flagg</em> in Greenfield Village. Acclaimed actor and Cleveland native Burgess Meredith starred in the television production.

- October 13, 1976
- Collections - Artifact
Burgess Meredith (center) While Filming in the Tintype Studio, Greenfield Village, 1976
Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village have been locations for numerous television films and programs over the years. In 1976, crews from WJW-TV in Cleveland, Ohio, filmed The Wandering Muse of Artemus Flagg in Greenfield Village. Acclaimed actor and Cleveland native Burgess Meredith starred in the television production.
- Burgess Meredith at the Tintype Studio While Filming in Greenfield Village, October 15, 1976 - Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village have been locations for numerous television films and programs over the years. In 1976, crews from WJW-TV in Cleveland, Ohio, filmed <em>The Wandering Muse of Artemus Flagg</em> in Greenfield Village. Acclaimed actor and Cleveland native Burgess Meredith starred in the television production.

- October 15, 1976
- Collections - Artifact
Burgess Meredith at the Tintype Studio While Filming in Greenfield Village, October 15, 1976
Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village have been locations for numerous television films and programs over the years. In 1976, crews from WJW-TV in Cleveland, Ohio, filmed The Wandering Muse of Artemus Flagg in Greenfield Village. Acclaimed actor and Cleveland native Burgess Meredith starred in the television production.
- "The Dearborn Inn: Fifty Glorious Years at One of America's Greatest Inns...," 1981 - Edsel and Henry Ford conceived the Dearborn Inn as a business opportunity when it opened in 1931. Initially, the inn hosted pilots and travelers transiting through the nearby Ford Airport, but after the airport closed, it served visitors to Dearborn and Ford Motor Company. From the 1950s into the late 1980s, the inn was managed by the Edison Institute.

- 1931-1981
- Collections - Artifact
"The Dearborn Inn: Fifty Glorious Years at One of America's Greatest Inns...," 1981
Edsel and Henry Ford conceived the Dearborn Inn as a business opportunity when it opened in 1931. Initially, the inn hosted pilots and travelers transiting through the nearby Ford Airport, but after the airport closed, it served visitors to Dearborn and Ford Motor Company. From the 1950s into the late 1980s, the inn was managed by the Edison Institute.