The Henry Ford - Gallery

Gallery

  • Wilbur and Orville Wright's house and bicycle shop

  • The Wright Brothers house relocated from Dayton, Ohio

  • The Wright Cycle Company building

  • The bus on which Rosa Parks was arrested triggering the Montgomery Bus Boycott

  • Interior of the "Rosa Parks" bus

  • Noah Webster's home from New Haven, Connecticut

  • A steam locomotive on the Weiser Railroad

  • A garden and the Ackley Covered Bridge in Greenfield Village

  • The Burbank cottage (left) and Garden House Shop in Greenfield Village

  • Upper level of Thomas Edison's Menlo Park Laboratory

  • Three crucibles in Thomas Edison's Menlo Park Laboratory. At the left is a boiler and a small steam engine.

  • Charles Proteus Steinmetz owned this small cabin that overlooked the Mohawk River near Schenectady, New York.

  • The 1896 Ford Quadricycle

  • A 1916 Apperson Touring Car

  • Fordson Tractor No. 1

  • A 1949 Volkswagen

  • The first 1965 Ford Mustang

  • A Ford Model T giving rides at The Henry Ford

  • A Northwest Airlines Douglas DC-3

  • The Fokker F.VIIa/3M flown over the North Pole by Richard E. Byrd

  • 1950's era Oscar Meyer Wienermobile

  • Chesapeake & Ohio 2-6-6-6 "Allegheny" Type Locomotive

  • 1928 Model A Ford driven 22,000 miles, leaving from Chile in Oct 1992 and arriving at the museum in Dec 1994

  • 1939 Texaco tanker truck by Dodge on display at the Henry Ford Museum

  • The SS-100-X used by John F. Kennedy

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Famous quotes containing the word gallery:

    Each morning the manager of this gallery substituted some new picture, distinguished by more brilliant or harmonious coloring, for the old upon the walls.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    It doesn’t matter that your painting is small. Kopecks are also small, but when a lot are put together they make a ruble. Each painting displayed in a gallery and each good book that makes it into a library, no matter how small they may be, serves a great cause: accretion of the national wealth.
    Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (1860–1904)

    I never can pass by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York without thinking of it not as a gallery of living portraits but as a cemetery of tax-deductible wealth.
    Lewis H. Lapham (b. 1935)