The Henry Ford Museum was more of a cultural institution than I'd imagined, containing furniture, tools, and other quotidian elements of American life from throughout the 20th Century and before.



The cars were, as expected, great. Unlike the Chrysler museum, which only displayed vehicles from that company and it's brands, the Ford Museum contains cars from all sorts of makers: vehicles donated by GM and Ford; one of the first (or THE first) Honda Accord assembled in the U.S.; a VW Beetle and Westphalia Camper Bus; Toyota's first model in the U.S.; etc. It even has the only original 1962 Weinermobile!



A hightlight is the display of limousines that have carried every president from Roosevelt to Reagan. Curiously, the bullet-proof windows on the Reagan Lincoln have gone entirely white, while all the earlier vehicles' glass has remained clear. No one knows why.
There were some remarkable exhibits in a "Liberty" section of the museum, which covered civil rights issues. These included the bus that Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of (you could get on board and sit in the seat she occupied!), and a lot of good demonstrative exhibits relating to womens rights.

The aircraft collection was a bit cramped, and the planes somehow didn't get me too excited. There was one aircraft -- the first one ever flown over the South Pole -- that was quite remarkable. Fun, also, to see an old Ford Trimotor.
The Rouge Factory Tour was great fun. The plant, the site of terrible Labor unrest in the '30's and a birthplace of the United Auto Workers, now makes about 1100 F-150 pickup trucks a day. We were shown two movies, one about the history of the plant and another about assembling the F-150 specifically. We then went to an observation deck to view the plant from above and so Ford could tout its environmental efforts (grass on the factory roofs, special rainwater collection devices in the parking lot, etc.). We then toured the assembly operations on an overhead walkway. The plant was remarkably quiet, impeccably clean, and smelled pretty nice. The assembly operations were smooth and the workers' movements in putting the trucks together appeared smooth and ergonomically thought-out. Still, I was impressed by how brutally hard the repetition must be for the workers -- installing , say, windshield wipers and plastic windshield trim pieces on 40 identical trucks per hour for 8 - 10 hours in a row, day after day. That's gotta be tough. No pictures were allowed in the assembly hall, so you'll just have to go see the place yourself!

I had an easy drive from Dearborn down to Auburn, Indiana. My first time in the state! On the road, the license plates read "In God We Trust," just like our money.

5 comments:
Awesome weenie-mobile! Richard Scarry wasn't so far off afterall. How are you managing to take such great indoor pictures?
This is truly awsome.
i love the little car with the orange caterpillar on top and Lincoln's chair.. The museums are much more than car/air museums as they include alot of colorful American history. You must ne learning a ton. I love pictures of the highway from your car and how you showed your speedometer in the state with sensible truck speeds. xx
What great pictures! What great cars!
Great Weenie wagon! Waiting for the video shot now that this is looking so professional!
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