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- View of Ford Rouge Plant from American Malting Co, May 1937 -

- May 01, 1937
- Collections - Artifact
View of Ford Rouge Plant from American Malting Co, May 1937
- Workers Using Hamilton Press at Murray Corporation of America, Used for Rotunda Mural, 1936 -

- 1936
- Collections - Artifact
Workers Using Hamilton Press at Murray Corporation of America, Used for Rotunda Mural, 1936
- William Clay Ford, Age 4, Riding a Tricycle at Fair Lane, 1929 - William Clay Ford (1925-2014) was Henry Ford's grandson and the youngest of Edsel and Eleanor Clay Ford's four children. He is shown here at age four, riding a tricycle on the grounds of Fair Lane, the Dearborn estate of his grandfather Henry and grandmother Clara Ford.

- June 17, 1929
- Collections - Artifact
William Clay Ford, Age 4, Riding a Tricycle at Fair Lane, 1929
William Clay Ford (1925-2014) was Henry Ford's grandson and the youngest of Edsel and Eleanor Clay Ford's four children. He is shown here at age four, riding a tricycle on the grounds of Fair Lane, the Dearborn estate of his grandfather Henry and grandmother Clara Ford.
- Mr. Coulton Presenting Trophy to Winning Ford Men's Basketball Team, Ford Rotunda, March 1944 -

- March 27, 1944
- Collections - Artifact
Mr. Coulton Presenting Trophy to Winning Ford Men's Basketball Team, Ford Rotunda, March 1944
- Testing Ford V-8 Engines, Ford Rouge Plant, 1935 - Henry Ford's last great automotive innovation was his introduction of a low-priced V-8 engine for 1932. Starting under $500, it was an exceptional value. Ford Motor Company's V-8 outsold its four-cylinder engine by a wide margin, and the four-cylinder unit was retired for 1935. The 1932 V-8 engine design remained in production until 1953.

- October 24, 1935
- Collections - Artifact
Testing Ford V-8 Engines, Ford Rouge Plant, 1935
Henry Ford's last great automotive innovation was his introduction of a low-priced V-8 engine for 1932. Starting under $500, it was an exceptional value. Ford Motor Company's V-8 outsold its four-cylinder engine by a wide margin, and the four-cylinder unit was retired for 1935. The 1932 V-8 engine design remained in production until 1953.
- 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
- Interior of J.R. Jones General Store in Greenfield Village, March 1998 -

- March 13, 1998
- Collections - Artifact
Interior of J.R. Jones General Store in Greenfield Village, March 1998
- Ford Women's Basketball Teams Playing at Lowery School, Dearborn, Michigan, February 1944 -

- February 15, 1944
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Women's Basketball Teams Playing at Lowery School, Dearborn, Michigan, February 1944
- Ford Basketball Team Playing at Lowery School, Dearborn, Michigan, March 1944 -

- March 17, 1944
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Basketball Team Playing at Lowery School, Dearborn, Michigan, March 1944
- 25,000th Blood Donor at the Ford Rouge Plant Pressed Steel Building, May 1943 -

- May 27, 1943
- Collections - Artifact
25,000th Blood Donor at the Ford Rouge Plant Pressed Steel Building, May 1943