Made in America: Power

Overview

Explore American manufacturing superpowers

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Daily Activities

Corliss Steam Engine in Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation

Corliss Steam Engine Demonstration

  • Made in America: Power
  • Daily
  • 2-3 p.m.
Our 1859 Corliss steam engine is the only engine built by the Corliss Steam Engine Company during inventor George Corliss’s lifetime to have survived. Generating 300 horsepower, it served more than 60 years as the central source of power for some dozen independent workshops in Providence. Learn how ingenuity was used to create an optimized power source. Watch it run! 
Girl experimenting with electricity and potatoes

Experiment with History

  • Made In America: Power
  • Daily
  • 10 a.m.-12 p.m.

E-Q-U-A-L-I-T-Y

Learn the story of young MacNolia Cox, one of the first African Americans to compete at the National Spelling Bee. Test your skills and see if you can match MacNolia's spelling prowess.

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About this exhibit

Explore the legacy of American innovators from the 18th to 20th centuries who made America a manufacturing superpower. The exhibit includes hundreds of artifacts such as the Newcomen Engine, the Highland Park Engine, and even Edison’s Last Breath.

Highlights

More to Explore

Exhibit

Dymaxion House

Step inside Buckminster Fuller’s circular aluminum home and discover a bold vision of the future — one that challenged how we design, build and live.
Exhibit

Presidential Vehicles

Trace the journey of presidential travel through five historic cars used by American icons like Franklin D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan.