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- Horse Registration Tag from the Hewitt Estate, Ringwood Manor, 1918 - Abram Hewitt and Edward Cooper formed the Trenton Iron Works in 1847. Hewitt married Cooper's sister, Sarah Amelia Cooper, in 1855. The Cooper and Hewitt families co-owned several subsequent businesses, and they shared a summer estate, Ringwood Manor, in northern New Jersey. This registration tag was a sort of "license plate" for one of the Hewitts' horses.

- 1918
- Collections - Artifact
Horse Registration Tag from the Hewitt Estate, Ringwood Manor, 1918
Abram Hewitt and Edward Cooper formed the Trenton Iron Works in 1847. Hewitt married Cooper's sister, Sarah Amelia Cooper, in 1855. The Cooper and Hewitt families co-owned several subsequent businesses, and they shared a summer estate, Ringwood Manor, in northern New Jersey. This registration tag was a sort of "license plate" for one of the Hewitts' horses.
- Horse Registration Tag from the Hewitt Estate, Ringwood Manor, 1918 - Abram Hewitt and Edward Cooper formed the Trenton Iron Works in 1847. Hewitt married Cooper's sister, Sarah Amelia Cooper, in 1855. The Cooper and Hewitt families co-owned several subsequent businesses, and they shared a summer estate, Ringwood Manor, in northern New Jersey. This registration tag was a sort of "license plate" for one of the Hewitts' horses.

- 1918
- Collections - Artifact
Horse Registration Tag from the Hewitt Estate, Ringwood Manor, 1918
Abram Hewitt and Edward Cooper formed the Trenton Iron Works in 1847. Hewitt married Cooper's sister, Sarah Amelia Cooper, in 1855. The Cooper and Hewitt families co-owned several subsequent businesses, and they shared a summer estate, Ringwood Manor, in northern New Jersey. This registration tag was a sort of "license plate" for one of the Hewitts' horses.
- Workers Lining up at the Ford Rouge Plant for Draft Registration, April 24, 1942 - Soon after America entered World War II, Congress required all American men 18 to 64 years old to register for the draft--though men 18 and 19 years old were not immediately liable for military service. This photograph shows Ford Motor Company employees lining up to register in April 1942.

- April 24, 1942
- Collections - Artifact
Workers Lining up at the Ford Rouge Plant for Draft Registration, April 24, 1942
Soon after America entered World War II, Congress required all American men 18 to 64 years old to register for the draft--though men 18 and 19 years old were not immediately liable for military service. This photograph shows Ford Motor Company employees lining up to register in April 1942.
- Horse Registration Tag from the Hewitt Estate, Ringwood Manor, 1918 - Abram Hewitt and Edward Cooper formed the Trenton Iron Works in 1847. Hewitt married Cooper's sister, Sarah Amelia Cooper, in 1855. The Cooper and Hewitt families co-owned several subsequent businesses, and they shared a summer estate, Ringwood Manor, in northern New Jersey. This registration tag was a sort of "license plate" for one of the Hewitts' horses.

- 1918
- Collections - Artifact
Horse Registration Tag from the Hewitt Estate, Ringwood Manor, 1918
Abram Hewitt and Edward Cooper formed the Trenton Iron Works in 1847. Hewitt married Cooper's sister, Sarah Amelia Cooper, in 1855. The Cooper and Hewitt families co-owned several subsequent businesses, and they shared a summer estate, Ringwood Manor, in northern New Jersey. This registration tag was a sort of "license plate" for one of the Hewitts' horses.