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- Automatic Piston Pin Gauging and Sorting Machine Designed by Claude Harvard, Photographed in Henry Ford Museum, 1942 -

- January 15, 1942
- Collections - Artifact
Automatic Piston Pin Gauging and Sorting Machine Designed by Claude Harvard, Photographed in Henry Ford Museum, 1942
- Trade School Boys at Work, Ford Exposition, New York World's Fair, 1939 - Henry Ford firmly believed in the "practical educational value" of World's Fair exhibits. To help accomplish his education mission during the 1939-40 New York World's Fair, he highlighted the work of students attending his experimental schools. Here, boys from Henry Ford Trade School demonstrate machines inside Ford's massive fair building.

- October 04, 1939
- Collections - Artifact
Trade School Boys at Work, Ford Exposition, New York World's Fair, 1939
Henry Ford firmly believed in the "practical educational value" of World's Fair exhibits. To help accomplish his education mission during the 1939-40 New York World's Fair, he highlighted the work of students attending his experimental schools. Here, boys from Henry Ford Trade School demonstrate machines inside Ford's massive fair building.
- Electric Pin Sorting Machine Built by Students of Henry Ford Trade School, September 1932 -

- September 13, 1932
- Collections - Artifact
Electric Pin Sorting Machine Built by Students of Henry Ford Trade School, September 1932
- Electric Pin Sorting Machine Built by Students of Henry Ford Trade School, September 1932 -

- September 13, 1932
- Collections - Artifact
Electric Pin Sorting Machine Built by Students of Henry Ford Trade School, September 1932
- Claude Harvard with Other Radio Club Members and Teacher, Henry Ford Trade School, March 1930 -

- March 04, 1930
- Collections - Artifact
Claude Harvard with Other Radio Club Members and Teacher, Henry Ford Trade School, March 1930
- Henry Ford Trade School Students "Learn by Doing" at New York World's Fair, 1939-1940 - Henry Ford firmly believed in the "practical educational value" of World's Fair exhibits. To help accomplish his education mission during the 1939-40 New York World's Fair, he highlighted the work of students attending his experimental schools. Here, boys from Henry Ford's Edison Institute Schools demonstrate miniature machine replicas based on Thomas Edison's Menlo Park Machine Shop.

- 1939-1940
- Collections - Artifact
Henry Ford Trade School Students "Learn by Doing" at New York World's Fair, 1939-1940
Henry Ford firmly believed in the "practical educational value" of World's Fair exhibits. To help accomplish his education mission during the 1939-40 New York World's Fair, he highlighted the work of students attending his experimental schools. Here, boys from Henry Ford's Edison Institute Schools demonstrate miniature machine replicas based on Thomas Edison's Menlo Park Machine Shop.
- Henry Ford Trade School Football Team, 1922 - Boys who attended the Henry Ford Trade School learned by doing. The school, the brainchild of Henry Ford, trained teenage boys in a variety of skilled, industrial trade work. In addition to the manual training received, students attended traditional academic classes and could take part in athletic opportunities through a variety of sports like football.

- October 06, 1922
- Collections - Artifact
Henry Ford Trade School Football Team, 1922
Boys who attended the Henry Ford Trade School learned by doing. The school, the brainchild of Henry Ford, trained teenage boys in a variety of skilled, industrial trade work. In addition to the manual training received, students attended traditional academic classes and could take part in athletic opportunities through a variety of sports like football.
- Henry Ford Trade School Football Team, December 1925 - Boys who attended the Henry Ford Trade School learned by doing. The school, the brainchild of Henry Ford, trained teenage boys in a variety of skilled, industrial trade work. In addition to the manual training received, students attended traditional academic classes and could take part in athletic opportunities through a variety of sports like football.

- December 08, 1925
- Collections - Artifact
Henry Ford Trade School Football Team, December 1925
Boys who attended the Henry Ford Trade School learned by doing. The school, the brainchild of Henry Ford, trained teenage boys in a variety of skilled, industrial trade work. In addition to the manual training received, students attended traditional academic classes and could take part in athletic opportunities through a variety of sports like football.
- Henry Ford Trade School Football Team, November 1926 - Boys who attended the Henry Ford Trade School learned by doing. The school, the brainchild of Henry Ford, trained teenage boys in a variety of skilled, industrial trade work. In addition to the manual training received, students attended traditional academic classes and could take part in athletic opportunities through a variety of sports like football.

- November 13, 1926
- Collections - Artifact
Henry Ford Trade School Football Team, November 1926
Boys who attended the Henry Ford Trade School learned by doing. The school, the brainchild of Henry Ford, trained teenage boys in a variety of skilled, industrial trade work. In addition to the manual training received, students attended traditional academic classes and could take part in athletic opportunities through a variety of sports like football.
- Henry Ford Trade School Students at Great Lakes Exposition, Cleveland, Ohio, 1936-1937 - Cleveland celebrated its centennial with the Great Lakes Exposition. For two summers during 1936 and 1937, over seven million visitors came through the gates. Fair officials consigned Ford and the other automobile companies to the Automotive Building -- no separate corporate buildings were constructed. Ford supplemented its vehicle displays with other exhibitions, including demonstrations by students from the Henry Ford Trade School.

- June 29, 1936
- Collections - Artifact
Henry Ford Trade School Students at Great Lakes Exposition, Cleveland, Ohio, 1936-1937
Cleveland celebrated its centennial with the Great Lakes Exposition. For two summers during 1936 and 1937, over seven million visitors came through the gates. Fair officials consigned Ford and the other automobile companies to the Automotive Building -- no separate corporate buildings were constructed. Ford supplemented its vehicle displays with other exhibitions, including demonstrations by students from the Henry Ford Trade School.