The Henry Ford, a
National Historic Landmark, (also known as the
Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village, and more formally as the
Edison Institute), in the
Metro Detroit suburb of
Dearborn,
Michigan,
USA, is the nation's "largest indoor-outdoor history
museum" complex.America's Story, Explore the States: Michigan (2006).
Library of Congress Named for its founder, the noted
automobile industrialist Henry Ford, and based on his desire to preserve items of
historical significance and portray the
Industrial Revolution, the property houses a vast array of famous homes, machinery, exhibits, and
Americana. The collection contains many rare exhibits including
John F. Kennedy's presidential limousine,
Abraham Lincoln's chair from
Ford's Theatre,
Thomas Edison's laboratory, the
Wright Brothers' bicycle shop, and the
Rosa Parks bus.
Henry Ford said of his museum:
History
The Edison Institute was dedicated by
President Herbert Hoover to Ford's longtime friend
Thomas Edison on October 21, 1929 – the 50th anniversary of the
invention of the
incandescent light bulb. Of the 260 people in attendance, some of the more famous were
Marie Curie,
George Eastman,
John D. Rockefeller,
Will Rogers, and
Orville Wright. The dedication was broadcast on radio with listeners encouraged to turn off their electric lights until the switch was flipped at...
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