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HENRY FORD Ml SEUM AND
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Origimil Photography by led Spiegel
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GREENFIELD VILLAGE
B\ .James S.
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HanyN.Abmms.
Im., Publishers,
New\hrk
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Capturing the essence of the first-flight year ut
1903. a one-cylinder Cadillac of that year passes the
Greenfield Village home of OrviUe and Wilbur Wright.
Pages 2-i.
K-.wrttfiii'iltntJir liti
1:
[BruiiM. Ill till' /I'iny ^'^'Uilr
IfHiitnl wilh nul
Burns
H-" Unn'Mn/c,
Sprains.
move the Wright home and shop
Dearborn m 1937. Such early Cadillacs, low-pnced and
smal\, were the creation of Henry M. Leiand
Orville helped Henry Ford
to
Titl page
The
Torch Lake
manufactured by the Mason
is
Mason
Fairlie
Fairlie
[hlutni \ril/i vlrr\
lC>U.
Sweliinjs./i/ H.iliitH-. S}nlt.
locomotive
Works of Taunton. Mas-
linih uMie timili
sachusetts, in 1873
Copynghi
made
page.
sfniffii' tin- .hiis.
This solid-gold presentation trumpet was
and Quinby of Boston for Rhodolph
'j^ol era
'iiir.
in 1866 by Hall
Proprietary medicine beetles display the labeling and
packaging of 1850-60. At left are obverse and reverse of
Righl
the same product,
De
7rtiAjjmi/i /iit
1fi\eumi.^smMitf/ii' /Miffs fr/f,'iYi'i}
^IN REMOVER
Cholic:. Jiih
j
Witt's Pain Reliever
These nineteenth-century cast-iron toys
and banks probably found their first owners in shops much
like the Elias Brown General Store, built in Waterford,
Michigan, in 1854. Today, its wirulows overlook The Green
of GreenfieU Village. With some one hundred structures,
'!
/ni//'7i'fmn/t>rii/'Hrti_^
Hall
*:8.eilii''^]
^ChilbU In
'^11111011''!'
/I'lit/iit/n'/niits
ili/litt'll
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li,', ,V//]
ittdllirvw
i\i
FrAlfjuing pages
the village offers ideal perifKj settings for a wide range of
artifacts
i'i{>vnKKn.
r.
ijl
h-ice 2Scrs. a SoUtA
Contents
/?
Foreiuord:
Treasures o/
Henr}) Ford
Museum
aruf
Greenfield Village
By Harold K.
S>kramstad, ]r
IH" Introduction:
Henry Ford's
KNOWN,
IS
Amazing
Time Machine
30
The
Quest
for
Power
6Z
The Age of
Noah Webster
102
Lights
Come
on at
Menlo Park
IOLi
Triumphs
of Road
and Sky
Price
*J6
Cel
LtL'D Acknowledgpxents
and Credits
206
Index
'
S'^v
'f
z^
'-
Foreword:
uming the pages of this hook
m
#/
The Edison
Institute
treasure chest of tradition
ev
every
reader can find
some
is
like
opening a vast
and experience
rare
in
which
and valued personal
heirk)oms.
he:
Henry Ford Museum and
Greenfield Village
indeed a treasure, but of a uniquely American kind.
Our
is
treasure was not
created by kings and hoarded in royal vaults to be seen at a distance by
respectful subjects.
sents the
common
No,
it is
one in which we can
communities and discovered new ways
and
all
share since
it
repre-
experience of Americans as they worked to build
of
new
doing things that have changed
impr(.)ved our lives.
It is
important to remember this as you explore the wonderful objects
ot
and described by Jim Wamslcy in the
following pages. These objects, which delight and inform over a million visitors to Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village each year, are impor-
American
history that are pictured
tant not just in themselves but also in the grand stories they can
est of these stories
in
is
that of
tell.
Cjrand-
American change. No matter where one
kioks
our great treasure chest, from carriages to airplanes, from primitive pk)ws
from early printing presses to televisions, the.se objects
immediacy and eloquent power the ways in which America grew
to giant reapers,
reveal with
and changed
as
it
moved from
the rural, agricultural society of the colonial
period to the industrial, urban nation that surrounds us today.
Treasures of
Henry FordMuseum
and Greenfield Vdlage
theme of a changing America that guides not only our vast
many educational programs as well. This theme was part
of the vision of our founder, Henry Ford, and this book is a reminder that
in. addition to his industrial innovations he invented a new kind of
museum one that would collect and interpret things not generally associated with traditional museums. Ford recognized early on that the uniqueIt is
this large
collections but our
ness of America was to be found in the power of new ideas to shape our lives,
began a collection of objects and structures which would embody that
The result is a museum complex that offers us the new as well as the
the future as well as the past. To quote Ford, "The farther you look
so he
vision.
old,
back, the farther you can look ahead."
We
at
The Edison Institute
rearranging,
American experience
work adding
are constantly at
and reinterpreting our great
to speak in
to,
preserving,
historical treasure trove of the
new ways and
to tell
new
stories to
new
audiences.
and text, can show only a
Henry Ford Museum and
Greenfield Village. We invite not only all Americans but all who have an
interest in this country to visit us and discover the deep spirit of America
This book, rich
as
it is
in
both
illustrations
small part of the great national treasure that
that
is
held here in trust for us
is
all.
Harold K. Skramstad,
Jr.
The Edison
President
Institute
"Y-^=
Introduction:
Henry Fords
Amawig
Time Machine
rom the
front yard of
Noah
Webster's Connecti-
cut town house, the eye discerns a plantation
.
home, dozing
in
its
tobacco
land. Shift perspective
field,
and encounter the Ontario
to look,
mobile may
and focus
flicker at
patiently
beyond the bridge, a new experimental auto-
high speed across a distant
too fast to reveal a single detail, the silent
Motor Company's
test track,
is
more
hill. Tcio far
car, flashing in
surreal accent
away and moving
sunlight
on the Ford
than twentieth-century
intrusion.
Seen or unseen, the automobile is never far from Greenfield Village or
Henry Ford Museum, which together form The Edison Institute of Dearthe
born, Michigan. Mr. Ford's stupefying collection of Americana
initially began with the autoworld's largest indoor-outdoor museum
mobile. The great tycoon's original car, the very keystone of his empire, was
itself the first artifact he collected. Ford had built and successfully demonstrated the little Quadricycle in 1896; he then sold it and moved on to newer
the
experimental models. But in 1904, the year he established a new world
speed record in one of his cars, he repurchased the Quadricycle for $65.
With Ford
barely into his forties, his
of the marvelous
Model Ts
company only
a year old, and the
four years in the impenetrable future,
it
first
was
stream in
Greenfield Village, was originally built in the 1830s above
a
\i
from early Mary-
homestead of Thomas Edison's grandparents, the Massachusetts birthplace of
Luther Burbank, and a covered bridge from early Pennsylvania. If you know
where
Oppome. The Ackley Covered Bndge, crobsmK
branch
of
wheeling Creek
in southwestern Pennsylvania
hardly the time for gathering up memories. But already Ford had the
Opposite. William
would widen into a collecting passion. He began
assembling Edisonia in 1905 and McGuffey Readers in 1914. By 1919 he
essayed his first building restoration, the old family home at Dearborn,
Eclectic Readers,
instinct for saving that
Ford's own birthplace.
The job required removing
new highway was about to be
Henry
tions about
return
two hundred
the building from
feet away.
Here began
original site,
ordered an archeological sifting of the
soil,
it
to
where a
new founda-
a precise restoration to
when Ford was
to the condition of the 1870s,
it
its
constructed, and moving
a child.
He even
producing such discoveries as his
was an exercise in nostalgia in which few people are
and Ford, as usual, attacked the project with fervor.
He personally searched from rural Michigan to New England until he found
a duplicate of the 1867 Starlight stove that once warmed the Fords's parlor.
About the same time he began the homestead restoration, Ford became
the center of a newspaper tempest in which he was ridiculed as an ignoramus who believed "history was bunk." The point he had been trying to
make, and which had inadvertently stoked the adverse publicity, was that
orthodox history dealt with politics, wars, and treaties, and that historians
childhood
ice skates.
It
privileged to indulge,
actually
knew
or taught
precious
ished eras actually lived. Ford
history that
trial
little
about
how
the people of van-
began forming the idea of a museum of indus-
would help correct the imbalance. By 1922,
his prelimi-
nary collecting of tools and machines had broadened to include the totality
American antiques. He was hooked. In 1924 came an exercise that
expanded Ford's interest in historic restoration and fine antiques as well: he
bought the historic Wayside Inn in South Sudbury, Massachusetts. Soon he
was devoting as much as two days per week to collecting, and boxcar loads
of antiques started arriving at the Ford industrial complex in Dearborn for
of
storage in a former tractor plant.
any
for
relics
"We have no Egyptian mummies
of the Battle of Waterloo, nor do
everything
we have
not prove to be
strictly
is
literally true,
we have any
American," Ford
but Henry did
hew
said.
to
here, nor
curios from Pompeii,
The claim would
an overwhelmingly
American theme. American craftsmanship, inventiveness, engineering,
and work habits never had a better champion.
In about 1926 Ford conceived the idea for a two-part "Edison Institute"
A great museum would display the artifacts of American culand out the door a village would preserve the community setting of
long ago. Pushed along by Ford's relentless energy and stupendous
at
Dearborn.
ture,
resources, matters
moved
quickly.
arrived at Dearborn in 1927,
The
first
and he made
old building, a general store,
a key decision; to reconstruct a
cluster of buildings central to the career of Thomas
a significant portion of the
from Menlo Park,
Edison,
Alva Edison, including
famous Edison research and development
facility
New Jersey.
who was
still
alive
and
in relatively
good health, journeyed
to
cabin,
Holmes McGuffey, author of McGu//c'
was horn in 1800 in this one-room
originally
Pennsylvania
located
in
Washington
Coun
New Jersey
with Ford to inspect what remained of the Menlo Park
lab.
photograph of the event captures the hlade-slim Ford, neatly dressed as
always, and Edison, in an equally characteristic state of dishevelment,
standing in the ruins of the laboratory as Ford was bellowing something into
the ear of the deaf old genius. Most of the buildings had vanished, hut Ford
obtained the original Sarah Jordan boarding house, where many of Edison's
crew had
blown.
lived, plus a small building
He
where the
first
glass lightbulbs
were
also retrieved tons of fragmented materials, including original
boards and bricks, fused masses of buried debris (such as broken bottles,
crucibles,
and experimental wiring), and the rotted stump of a
Edison once tied a pet bear. More than a dozen
clay that surrounded the buildings were sent.
Francis Jehl, agreed to
come
tree
where
with the red
former Edison assistant,
to Greenfield Village to direct the reconstruc-
September 1928, Edison came
tion. In
rail cars filled
to
Dearborn
to inspect the
comple-
tion of another of his reincarnated laboratories, the long-time winter head-
quarters in Fort Myers, Florida. Construction was beginning
museum
son plunged the spade of the
Then
late
Luther Burbank into a cube of wet cement.
the old inventor scratched his
One
on the new
building that would adjoin the village, and at Ford's bidding Edi-
name
later,
on October
the fiftieth anniversary of the invention of incandescent lighting. Henry
President and Mrs. Herbert Hoover, and Mrs. Ford and himself the last few
miles to Greenfield Village, a mid-nineteenth-century train was newly
restored to duplicate one
on which Edison had served
as a newsboy.
Steam-
ing to the village, the passengers dismounted at the very railroad station
moved from Smiths Creek, Michigan
on
where Edison had once been
ejected from the train for setting
it
evening included Orville Wright,
Madame
and Will Rogers, who would
fire.
The
guests for the events that
Eve Curie, John D. Rockefeller,
say afterward that
he was disappointed:
"I
thought they would give out Lincolns as souvenirs. Shoot, they didn't even
pass
around Fords."
Edison and Francis Jehl had the previous day made a duplicate of the
successful lightbulb,
two
full
1929, Edison returned for the dedication
21,
spared no expense and ignored no detail, lb carry Mr. and Mrs. Edison,
complement of horse-drawn
the yellow omnibus
year
of the Edison Institute, a star-studded event fixed by Ford to coincide with
Jr.
Opposite.
and
after
scientists in the upstairs
event of
fifty
McNamee,
first
dinner Ford and President Hoover joined the
Menlo Park
years before. Pioneer
laboratory for a reenactment of the
NBC
radio
newsman Graham
broadcasting from the scene, barked the description in his then-
familiar staccato: "Mr. Edison has the two wires in his hand;
reaching up to the old lamp;
now he
is
making the connection.
now he
It
is
lights!"
In a prearranged, elaborate national ceremony, lights switched on, bells
pealed, and horns sounded.
The grand evening would always be the key event in the particular hismuseum and village. "Think of it," said Harold K. Skramstad,
tory of the
vehicles en-
hances the Greenfield Village scene, and some
deeply into the surface.
such
as
are used for visitor sightseeing
Above. Philadelphia's Independence Hall was copied
for
Henry Ford Museum, and the structure's
central tower became the chief landmark ot The Edison Institute. Behind the Georgian front, most ot the vast museum followed the lines of Ford's factory buildings of rhe
the faijade of the
late
1920s
opposite. Mrs. Daniel
Cohen
the late nineteenth century.
the shop
operated her Detroit store in
Moved
to Greenfield Village,
actively interprets a typical city millinery of the
time, demonstrating clothing and accessory styles, retail
president of Edison Institute in 1984, "how many times can you get the
same people hack for a dedication fifty years later? It was like getting George
Washington hack to re-create crossing the Delaware."
jr.,
techniques, the distribution of manufactured goods, and
the success of
women
in trade, all at a time
the critical years of the Wright brothers,
across the street
approximating
whose shop
is
It
was also the
last
national extravaganza of unalloyed happiness in the
week the stock market crashed and the nation began
Great Depression. Edison died less than two years later,
eulogized by Henry Ford as a great man who changed the world, and whose
every work was beneficial to mankind. "Mr.' Edison himself did not grow
1920s. In less than one
to sink into the
old.
He was
loss
is
young driver
like a
believe, to get
new
facilities to
in a
worn-out
has just gone,
very heavy. There was only one Edison."
Ford had revered Edison as a boyhood
idol
and gone on
nearly forty years. But other Americans amply
ments
if
He
car.
continue his work. But the sense of personal
for
enshrinement in his
possible,
razed in
some associated
New
village,
filled
to
know him
and he sought
their relics also and,
structure. Webster's house
was already being
Haven, Connecticut, when Ford learned about
patched experts
for a
hairbreadth rescue.
place of his educational hero, William
for
the car maker's require-
He obtained
it
and
dis-
the log cabin birth-
Holmes McGuftey, and
a former
where young Abraham Lincoln practiced law. Ford
even rebuilt the one-room schoolhouse where he received his own .short,
but cherished, formal education. The Wright brothers' home and shop,
courthouse from
moved
Illinois
to the village
with the assistance of Orville Wright himself, ranked
with the Menlo Park complex
ity.
first
Some
in significance,
buildings, such as the brick
and were
home where
of greater original-
H.J. Heinz created the
of his varieties, were added after Ford's death.
The
presence of the buildings and
relics
associated with such famous
Americans does create, inevitably, a pantheonic aspect which under other
circumstances might have been twerpowering but which is subdued by several restraints. One is implicit in the sorts of people Henry Ford admired,
whether renowned or humble: practical problem-solvers, men
o\ plain
speech and hard work, with generally low quotients of pretension and cant.
The ghosts of Thtimas Edison, George Washingttm Carver, or the Wrights
are
more inclined
to
Moreover, there are m)t
Village shades.
appear
ail
that
work clothes than in radiant tt)gas.
many famous names among the Greenfield
in
The former occupants
of these hundred-odd buildings
tended to be the middling kind, such as innkeeper Calvin
WhkI
t)f
the
and lively Eagle Tavern, or Mrs. D. Cohen of the millinery shop,
or a smudgy legion of namele.ss machinists, blacksmiths, and millers.
The village's complex interpretive program, .spanning four centuries,
puts its emphasis squarely on the changing lives of ordinary Americans
while keeping the famous in healthy perspective. The coiirthou.se where
restored
Abraham Lincoln
no longer presented as a shrine of Linci)ln
as a spotlight.
and as distracting
community's heart of legal and ^^overnmeiit
practiced law
is
memorabilia, which was as riveting
Now
20
it
is
interpreted as a
22
action.
Such changes
among
visitors.
The
in village tradition
curatorial staff
Lincolnize the Logan
can create unexpected reactions
was asked,
in effect,
how
dare
it
de-
County Courthouse?
More and more, Greenfield Village is perceived by the public as a living
community with its own sanctified traditions. A few visitors have come regularly for more than fifty years, a period longer than the span from Edison's
first bulb to the great re-creation in 1929. People who came as children in
the 1930s and '40s now bring their grandchildren. For such champions the
village becomes a sort of hometown of the soul. President Skramstad is convinced that such
owning
surrogate for
about the village
visitors develop a sense of proprietorship
and museum. "One buys
into the
whole American experience here.
historical objects. Unfortunately,
changes we're violating history as
far as they're
cept of the possession of history here
is
It is
when we make
concerned.
Still,
the con-
one of our greatest strengths."
Some of Ford's prejudices showed through in his disposition of the vilwhen he decreed three clock and watch shops (reduced now to one)
lage, as
but no banks. Regionally, the buildings and exhibits heavily favor the
northeast quarter of the United States. Yet such a basic range of American
life
spreads across these cunning 240 acres that
no
visitor
can depart with-
out a better understanding of the massive changes lived through by our
the Eagle Tavern again approximates
ancestors.
The
last
building to be
moved
to the village in Ford's lifetime was,
moving safely
from the highway's path, the house had served through the 1920s and '30s
as an occasional social retreat for Henry and Clara Ford and their friends.
Donning period costumes, the group gamboled through American country
strangely, the first
one he
restored: the family farm. After
dances under the direction of Ford's private dancing master,
for the
unabashedly enjoyed the music and steps of America's past.
1944, the old
the
man
decided the time had
come
tycoon
Finally, in
to gather his birthplace into
American town of his dreams.
Greenfield Village, through
its
human
scale, skilled interpretation,
and
undeniable charm, speaks in a different vocabulary from that of the Ford
Museum
next door. There, the
full force
of
Henry
reveals itself indoors across twelve acres of artifacts.
are the world's best
and
largest.
Ford's collecting fever
Many of the collections
Automobiles, furniture, watches and
clocks, agricultural implements, musical instruments,
devices, lighting,
power equipment, ceramics,
communications
glass, metals,
domestic
appliances of every kind are deployed to the horizon.
Ford backed his omniverous collecting with vast wealth and his far-flung
staff, many of them with engineering
Thus Herbert F Morton, an English engineer, was able
to comb the British Isles for such rarities as the museum's eighteenth-century Newcomen steam engine from England. Most of the objects Ford col-
organization of clever and resourceful
or mechanical
lected were
Above and uppuMc. The Bnak- Tavern was built m the 1830s
at Chnton, Michigan, and served stagecoach passengers on
the Detroit-Chicago road. Moved to Greenfield Village,
skills.
American, however, and dated
after 1800,
with the greatest
23
War
its
years of pre-Civil
hospitality. "Living History" interpreters serve period
food and beverages in a
lively setting
strength in the years from 1850 to the very early 1900s.
therefore
and
fall
change
social
The
collections
naturally through the peak years of America's technological
as
we moved from the
traditional, agricultural society of
the eighteenth century to the urhanized, techntilogical world that endures
today.
No hetter exhibit on
the Industrial Revolution can be found, but the
Ford collections go beyond technology to address the entire subject of
changing America.
Henry
on those changes was altogether
Ford's viewpoint
positive;
he
believed that innovation and technology would lead inevitably to a better
As one
future.
of the world's mightiest influences for change, having done
more than anyone
Ford
else to give mobility to the average person,
is
often
pictured as concerned by the rapidity with which his works were altering
the face ot older,
more
America. That might explain some of his
traditional
interest in old buildings.
Much
what he collected was,
ot
at the time, of
no
such significance, but merely twenty- to fifty-year-old merchandise: obsocarpet sweepers, milk bottles, steam engines, reapers, printing
lete stoves,
presses.
It
was an astonishing performance. Only
ing such things.
works by French Impressionists, Ford
"the
common
a few others
were collect-
While other wealthy men indulged themselves by amassing
objects, the things that
one
at least
bound
side of Ford
gathered
us together, rather than the
things that separated us," in Skramstad's description.
Another
side of the tycoon, however,
went
was remarkable,
Winterthur and Colonial Williamsburg. Amer-
ican antique furniture was not as coveted as
Israel
it.
declarative arts. That, too,
1920s was a pioneering time for major antiques col-
for the
lecting, before the days of
about
straight for the finest tradi-
and
tional, pre-Industrial Revolution furniture
it is
today,
and
was known
little
Ford received rock-solid help from a visionary antiques dealer,
Sack, ot Boston and later ot
New
York. Ford bought
many
ot the best
antiques from the Sack firm for decades, but initially there were
awkward
Henry Ford ordered his
staff to strip the old finish and apply shiny new varnish on his acquisitions,
even on a piece in good original ctmdition. "He started to refinish things,
moments,
as recalled by
and my father
told
him, 'Don't you do
Nobody
to Mr. Ford like that.
'He's taking off
Harold Sack, son
ot Israel.
His secretary
that!
said, 'Don't talk
talks to Mr. Ford like that.'
one hundred and
fifty
My
father said,
years of patina; I'm telling him.'
And
so he stopped."
Harold Sack recalled Ford's many
the 1930s. "Every time he
eyelid, pull
it
down,
leading a clean
clocks.
father
footraces.
Then
It
trips to the
Sack establishment early
into the store, he'd
and
say, 'Well,
young
was
very
good
fellow,
see you're
he'd go around and stick his head in
the ckick doors and looked
friends.
a different era, a
They used
nine vvlun
in
come up and grab my
in.
He had
was sure he was going to get his head stuck
became
ple -to -people."
24
l(K)k ck)se,
He opened up
head, but
my
life.'
came
...
the
small
Henry Ford and
to race together.
ol lee turs
all
a very
They'd run
and dealers were peo-
The scope
of Ford's collections challenges the
museum
produce
staff to
meaningful interpretive techniques. Ford believed that almost any
could he read
study
like a
He was
it.
book, conveying
its
story to
personally familiar with
much
artifact
anyone taking the time
to
of what he collected. Later
generations of the public would not understand what they were seeing.
These
days, the pleased cry of
"Look
there,
we had one
of those,"
often in the galleries. For each generation, the need
less
to
is
is
heard
convey the
meaning and excitement of certain key artifacts, even introducing the
new vocabularies and systems of thought. On the other
hand, collectors
whose enthusiasms are already fixed and stimulated,
whether for old radios, cars, furniture, or whatever want to see as many
artifacts as possible crammed into the smallest space. "If we're to do our job
viewer to entirely
well, history
we have
to
must speak
Harold Skramstad
to a large audience,"
make people aware
says,
that whether they've thought about
"and
or not,
it
they live in a world that was a result of this transformation."
of
With collections spanning four centuries and ranging from masterpieces
Queen Anne furniture to a power plant from Henry Ford's main Model
factory, the interpretive techniques vary There isn't much that can be
done with the
mammoth Highland
Some
there.
artifacts
Washington's portable
seem
Park factory generator of 1912 but
own ad hoc
let it
on an
exclusive plane, such as the Indian spinning wheel presented to Henry Ford
(in an exchange of mutual admiration) by Mohandas K. Gandhi, or George
sit
to
have their
existence
camp bed from the Revolutionary War.
the broader stories emerge majestically.
One
In other areas
of the most successful, the
museum's big chronological display of furniture masterpieces, creates
sense of heightened awareness not possible in period settings.
the sort
It is
of exhibit that Ford himself might have loved; rich, encyclopedic, not gussied
up with
artifice.
Ford never threw anything away, and the written records of his long
documents of his world-wide manufacturing empire, piled
Meanwhile, he became interested in collecting rare
books and documents, a logical extension of his original trove of McGu^e^i
career, plus the
up
in a dense mass.
Readers.
The Edison
combined archives and research
Institute's
library
today holds (in addition to Henry's original 250 different McGu^e^^s) thou-
sands of rare books, including more than
fifty
New England Primers,
English Bible printed in America, and such later rarities as a
Wizard of Oz- While emphasis
is
on American imprints, the
the
first
first
edition
library has
two
sets of Diderot's ErKyclopedie.
Priceless as
hend
such items may be, books are nevertheless easier to compre-
as artifacts
than the
institute's holdings in still
more
exotic ephemera.
Consider a group of some three thousand trade catalogues, mostly of the
nineteenth century, with related gatherings of posters, trade cards, and
advertisements, together forming a core study of the early history of American advertising.
Add thousands
of old almanacs, complete
files
of once-
25
26
prominent periodicals, hundreds
of yellowed broadsides,
about one thou-
sand Currier and Ives lithographs. The music collection includes a com-
opposite.
It
plete
ot
file
Stephen
Foster's first editions.
The map
collection, beginning
with the sixteenth century, includes the supremely important 1755 John
Mitchell plan of North America used at the Treaty of Paris negotiations
ending the Revolutionary War. Less glamorous, hut perhaps no
tant, are tons of business
H.
J.
and personal records from, among
Heinz, the Boston
brothers.
And, of course,
& Sandwich
less
impor-
others, Edison,
Glass Company, and the Wright
the incomparable records of
Henry Ford and
his
company.
"We're going to start something," he said in 1919. "I'm going to
start
up
museum and give people a true picture of the development of the country."
He also promised that "When we are through, we shall have reproduced
American
as lived." Building a gerfect time machine was too great a
Henry Ford, but no one ever made a nobler effort, and it is
fairly certain that no one ever will. How well did he succeed? In the case
of one visitor, at least, perhaps too well. On departing Greenfield Village
he wrote on a visitor's comment card: "I never knew that Henry Ford,
Thomas Edison, and the Wright brothers all lived on the same street."
They didn't, of course. And yet they did.
Sometimes, the Brobdingnagian scope of the institute's properties can
be downright overwhelming to a visitor. What are we to make of these endlife
task even for
less
ranks of artifacts?
What
is
the message of
all
these silent survivors of
untold years, vanished processes, forgotten needs, and long-solved prob-
lems?
The
questions are those
common
to historical
museums everywhere,
but here they assume heroic proportions.
Take the
from the
cars.
Packard that
from
Gleaming
like
Greek
infinity of hazards that
won
pastry,
safe
now
the great transcontinental race of 1903 bears no scars
for it has been restored at least twice. As perfect,
Model Ts, the various editions that put America on
mighty exertions,
its
too, are all the perky
wheels across a span of
less
than twenty
of assorted Overlands, Stutzes, and
highway
travel in the 1920s.
they encountered
Village,
years.
We
Marmons
But we cannot
is
search the shiny flanks
for clues to the reality of
really
the boglike roads, incessant
incompetent service. The closest we see
car, its
row on row, they are
claimed their brethren. The primitive
imagine the struggles
flat tires,
and scarce and
out on the streets of Greenfield
where chuckling along with a load of tourists
is
Model
T touring
black enamel lightly smudged by curious, friendly hands.
Well, what do
tive support.
we expect? Hazards
counterproductive reactions.
ranging from
lie
in seeking too
much from
interpre-
and it can even invoke
"Living History," where staff actors take parts
Interpretation has practical limits,
New England
colonials to 1850ish tavern servers,
is
presented
Most visitors like it, yet some consider it gimmickry
the multitude. Such a division merely underlines one of the potential
in Greenfield Village.
for
11
The Grimm
ated hy EnKclberg
Jewelry
Grimm
Shop was owned and oper-
from 1886
to 1930; ten years later
was m<ived from Michigan Avenue
held Village, with
much
in Detroit to
ot its inventory intact
Green-
Henry Ford designed and manModel T was his masterpiece.
it was clearly a triumph
from the day it was introduced in 1908. More than any
other car, the Model T went on to change the face and habits of America, and thus ultimately played a role in Ford's
opposite. In his long career,
ufacrurcd
many
cars, hut the
'R>ugh, serviceahle,
and
che.ip,
establishment of The Edison Institute. In this picture from
museums: the misalliance of a few consecrated scholand the cursory public swarm.
The latter class wants to enjoy itself, hut here it seems surprisingly
knowledgeable, too. Along the museum aisles at any given moment, dozens
conflicts of historical
ars
and
experts,
of elderly
men
are explaining to their grandchildren the arcane mysteries of
in California
beveled gears and poppet valves, the force of compound levers, and the pro-
demonstrates the Flivver's useful mobility by hauling a goat
duction miracles of 1947; grandmothers ar^ exclaiming as they recognize
the institute's vast archives, a "T"
on the running board
owner
and remember
not always
flour bins like the
fondly
laundry
wringers, parlor organs,
and
ones in their mothers' kitchen cabinets. Such universal
seem etched in dignity and pathos.
museum's collections create a sort of cosmic elecof the American domestic and industrial past. Visitors may dis-
reactions often
Taken
all
trical grid
together, the
cover that they are already part of the circuit, or they
they can plug
in.
personal recollection
tion gives
way
may
find points
where
But, inevitably, as the years pass, the factor of a visitor's
is
of ever-diminishing importance.
As each
genera-
remembered from its youth pass
Few people today can recall a factory-fresh
to another, the artifacts
it
from nostalgia into history.
Model T or a new kitchen cabinet with a flour dispenser.
If there is a single theme resounding through this amazing treasury, it is
change in American life. Nowhere else can we trace it so completely. Here
we view homes and furnishings from the 1600s to the 1900s. We see our
forebears' shops, power sources, inventions, products, and diversions. We
learn how we fed ourselves. We perceive the awesome force of the Industrial
Revolution. All of that
and confusing
is
here and, even
to grasp, a majestic
if it
chronology
sometimes appears too vast
is
present, too.
The
chapters seek to illuminate that chronok)gy, by relating selected
folkiwing
museum
and village exhibits to their places in the national past, and by exploring
some of their interk)cking rt)les. We are embarking on a walk through history,
28
with a cast of
five-star artifacts guiding the way.
29
'
^
>V^^:m
'%ss
la
'^M li
>*V
I;
..r'
^> *
The
Quest
for
Power
h
1
y the final decade of the seventeenth century,
Great Britain was wresting world financial
c
ship h-om the
and
neurs.
rA
Dutch with
structure
a quick-rising society of capitalist entrepre-
Abundant natural resources flowed in from the empire's far-flung
The labor pool was large and capable. Growth and the profit
dominions.
motive received the blessings of government.
ture, trade,
and
crafts
A traditional country of agricul-
was about to begin the boundless innovative cycle that
would change the world
forever.
Not only did eighteenth-century Britain give birth to the Industrial Revolution, she would be transformed by it far faster and more completely than
her other old rival across the English Channel, France. Britain's new, fluid
economy stimulated and rewarded
huge
royal, aristocratic,
and
inventiveness. France, topheavy from
clerical superstructure,
had a
its
different view-
point on the profit motive. Furthermore, Britain had already gained the
edge in commercial warfare and thus owned a wider trading universe than
France.
\et, for all that, the irrepressible
mark
French genius
for invention
Opposite. Greenfield Village's windmill, said to date from
'^^'
'^'^ '"''^'^''^
s^^nd
grain near West Yarmouth on
Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Such
new banking
leader-
made
its
Nothing could be more crucial to the Industrial Revolution than the steam engine, and a French mathematics professor, Denis
Papin, may have been present at the creation. After performing significant
at key points.
experiments in the influence of atmospheric pressure on boiling points.
t,n their
sails against
lage in 1936
mills were revolved to po-
the wind.
It
was moved to the
vil-
Papin designed, in 1690, a steam-operated, piston-driven pump.
He may
By 1698, steam was up
in
boiler, built
of bringing forth the world's
by
Thomas Savery But
first
commercially successful steam
upon Englishman Thomas Newcomen, around 1711, sharing Savery's patent. Newcomen, an iron merchant from Dartmouth, was a
little-known figure despite his incalculable legacy. His engines went
engine would
fall
pumping the vexatious water from English coal mines.
Having set free the genie of power, Newcomen died in 1729, but his
engines worked so well that others continued building them. Around 1750,
an unknown maker installed a Newcomen at a colliery in Lancashire's Fairbottom Valley Until 1827, when the mine closed, the big pump's eighteenfoot-long rocking beam nodded back and forth on its tall, cut-stone base,
pumping fourteen strokes per minute from a depth of 240 feet. Then the
pump sat unused for more than a century until the Earl of Stamford presented it to Henry Ford in 1929, exactly two hundred years after Newcomen
died. Re-erected in the Ford Museum, the ancient machine looks for all the
straight to work,
world
tings
like today's
automatic
oil field
pumps. But
and original stone mounting are
its
is,
perhaps, the primal
relic
pitted, massive iron
clear testimony to
believed to be the oldest such engine in existence.
men
The
its
antiquity
fitIt is
venerable Newco-
of the Industrial Revolution.
James Watt, the man who usually gets the credit for the invention of the
steam engine, was a University of Glasgow instrument maker. In repairing
a teaching
model of a Newcomen engine, Watt perceived the route
to
some
important improvements, and by 1765 he invented the separate condensing
chamber and
air
spheric," with
its
pump. Technically, Newcomen's engine was "atmopower stroke
assisted by atmospheric pressure.
Watt received the financial backing of wealthy merchant Matthew Boulton in 1774, and the new firm of Boulton and Watt set about building
engines. In 1796 they established a new power plant for the Warwick and
Birmingham Canal Navigation Company in Birmingham, England, where
it pumped water to locks on the Bordesley Canal until it was judged obsolete
and
retired in 1854, although
it
could
still lift
134,000 gallons of water per
hour with
its
giant, ninety-six-inch stroke. Ford obtained the engine in
1929 from
its
original foundations; at Dearborn, joined by other Watt-type
engines and the incomparable
the
dawn
These
rare
examples of sream-power equipment
ground, the round device of riveted plates
an English
Savery's big effort failed because the boiler could not stand the pressure.
The honor
Opposite.
are primal relics of the Industrial Revolution. In the fore-
have even tried to build a steamboat.
Newcomen,
it
completes a rare glimpse into
of the age of steam.
Fully as important as Watt's other innovations
was his success, early
in
Thus appeared
for the first time the principles of planetary crank, rotating flywheel, and
speed-controlling governor. Such a breakthrough meant that steam could
at last be harnessed to factory equipment. Until then, the basic power
in many ways the leading edge of the Industrial
source of textile mills
the 1780s, in adapting his engines to deliver rotary motion.
33
holler of c. 1780;
behind
it
a "haystack"
is
stands the tilted
beam
of Fair-
bottom Bobs, a Newcomen-type engine that successfully
pumped water from English coal mines. Dating from about
1760, it is the senior entry in the Ford Museum's large collection of steam engines
34
Revolution
carried
The
its
was water power,
own
which worked reasonably well hut always
built-in geographical restraint.
had advanced quickly since John Kay invented in
shuttle," which trebled a loom's production. In 1769 Rich-
textile industry
1733 the "flying
ard Arkwright invented the
water-powered spinning machine, the
water frame, and Edmund Cartwright unveiled the power loom in 1785.
With such mechanized
first
assistance, unheard-of fabric production flowed
through the hands of cheap, semiskilled
neer,
Samuel
Slater,
modem American
Slater's Mill
labor.
A clever British textile engi-
migrated to the United States in 1789 and founded the
textile industry, at
Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
was powered by water, but the
colonies were powered by wind.
Some were
earliest mills in the
American
patterned after the post mills
developed in twelfth-century Germany; other colonial millwrights adopted
the Netherlands style of tower mills. Both were equally subject to the wind's
maddening capriciousness. In the middle 1600s, a tower gristmill was
it somehow survived not
only the hazards of time but also those of at least three moves to more promising locations. Henry Ford moved it again, for the last time, to Greenfield
erected at West Yarmouth, Massachusetts, and
Village.
Millers
and spinners may have had power, but there was precious
little
power for the bench craftsman of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
One
partial exception
was the
lathe,
which had been around
for
thousands
of years and could be turned by a foot treadle, a big hand-cranked flywheel,
or
very rarely
by
a water wheel. Original lathes of the preindustrial era
museum displays a big one that was probably built
America about 1775, and was used for turning such major items as bedposts and newel posts as long as seventy-two inches. The treadle-powered
lathe was not for the weak of leg: its operator pumped power to a fifty-fourinch-diameter pulley that spun the headstock. Built primarily of wood, the
brawny old machine was reinforced at key points with heavy iron fittings.
are rare indeed, but the
in
Later in the eighteenth century, as the steam engine proved
its
mettle,
perceptive engineers and manufacturers grasped the potential of power-
driven equipment of greater size and complexity than anyone had ever seen.
Before that could occur, however,
build such paragons.
machine
came
the matter of
tool industry before getting
on with the
the required leadership emerged in England's
neers. In 1775,
making machines
to
world lacking in machines had to create an entire
Industrial Revolution,
first
and
generation of tool engi-
John Wilkinson devised a boring mill
to
produce steam
engine cylinders of unprecedented accuracy Henry Maudslay worked devel-
opmental miracles on metalworking
Western machine
tool
lathes,
and was
a primary influence
on
development and standardized precision manufac-
A Maudslay pupil, Joseph Whitworth,
is still better known: he left his
measurement system enduring to our own time, and became the
leading machine tool builder of the early nineteenth century. Representing
ture.
name on
35
About the beginning of the nineteenth centuty,
Enghsh designers and craftsmen made rapid headway in
Opposite.
producing tools of such precision and rehabiUty as never
seen before. Without such equipment as this screw-cutting
metal lathe of about 1828, the Industrial Revolution could
not have developed as it did. This rare, beautifully designed lathe was probably made by pioneer toolmaker Joat the works of Maudslay, Sons and Field
seph Whitworth
36
Whitworth's great work is a metal-turning lathe of 1828, not only a
superbly functioning machine tool but a lovely specimen of classical revival
design. Its key role was to make parts for other lathes.
The quest to harness electricity would prove infinitely more difficult than
bridling steam.
The
effort
began
on
released a scholarly study
Queen
early:
Elizabeth's court physician
electricity in 1600, a pioneering
work
for
William Gilbert is sometimes called the "father of modem electricity." Generations of patient, earnest, usually bewildered successors
added their layers of work, much of it, such as the discovery of the Leyden
which
jar,
Dr.
represented or demonstrated in
Musschenbroek captured current
1746, the results
rious.
his
museum
displays.
When
Pieter
in a jar at the University of
van
Leyden
in
were sensational. Electricity was provocative and myste-
Benjamin Franklin was among those fascinated by Leyden
jars,
and
consequent experiments produced original data on positive and nega-
tive charges, or polarity.
ment was the
Another key piece of eighteenth-century equip-
electrostatic generator, followed by
Alessandro Volta's inven-
tion of the electrochemical battery in 1800.
Despite such straws in the wind, eighteenth-century
life
remained essen-
many ancient unsolved problems. Consider the
plow. There it stands, a museum exhibit, gnawed by years and use, the very
symbol of tillage. We can afford to be sentimental about it, for no longer is
tially traditional,
preserving
the plow an instrument ot arduous
toil
and
with the forgotten millions of plowmen
frustration.
who
We can
sympathize
trudged endlessly along their
clodded furrows, yanking reins and clutching handles behind teams of
heaving oxen.
The
plow,
it
came
ingenuity
turns out, was always inadequate for the task. Mankind's
late to the farm, a lapse
Low Country
agriculturists
of plows and produced a
not wholly explained by cheap labor
We
and imperfect metallurgy.
had reached the 1700s before English and
interested themselves in improving the design
new model with a curved wooden moldboard.
many variants as there were local
Colonial America made almost as
blacksmiths and wheelwrights, the traditional makers of plows. Even the
great
wand
Thomas Jefferson, enthusing that "the plough
is
to the sorcerer," tried his
that would slip easily through the
hand
soil.
at
is
to the farmer
what the
designing a scientific moldboard
Predictably, Jefferson's
mathematics
were correct and his sense of design impeccable, but as a practical matter
his plow
was too exacting
nology of handcrafted
presented
him with
for the day's unreliable, or inconsistent, tech-
wood and
a gold
medal
iron.
The French
for his creation,
to wait for the Industrial Revolution to
Society of Agriculture
but farmers would have
catch up with Mr. Jefferson. T)day,
the museum's collection of eighteenth-century plows
share" specimens from
"hog" plow from
New
New England and
York
including
"bar-
Pennsylvania and a Dutch or
silently recall the tillers' years of struggle.
Rarer, even, than plows are surviving eighteenth-century vehicles. Built
37
opposite.
Any American-built
century
exceptionally rare, and the
is
of the best
vehicle of the eighteenth
museum
displays one
William Ross of New
Angelica Campbell of Schenectady, New
a 1797 "chariot." Built by
York City for
York, the handcrafted masterpiece
wretched roads of
its
time
somehow survived
the
38
wood, they shook apart and rotted out with distressing
largely of
The
rapidity.
exceptions were Europe's ornate carriages built for nobility: such rigs
were more prone to be sheltered, and the finest were saved for important
state occasions. Thus a good rate of survival preserved some of the most
ornate vehicles, but almost none remain from everyday life.
Compared to Europe, America had relatively few passenger vehicles of
any kind. The great distances within and between the colonies and the
poor condition of streets and highways rendered carriages generally
impractical save for a few urban areas.
a practical matter their use
more
efficient.
The
aristocracy
was limited. Horseback
owned them, but
travel
as
was quicker and
carts called "riding chairs," designed to carry
Two-wheeled
the driver in lonely prominence, were a popular alternative.
Two wheels
were often better than four in negotiating wretched roads, but "chairs" were
uncomfortable and prone to pitch the occupant out in even minor mishaps.
A rare example of the high level of work to which American coachbuilders
could
rise
a "chariot,"
its
is
museum
vehicle dating from about 1797 Called in
such a four-wheeled carriage would
short, half-coach configuration, with
The
its
day
be called a "coupe" for
one forward -facing
seat inside.
chariot was light, maneuverable, and could be ventilated in hot
weather by lowering
shield. Built
New
later
its
front
windows, the distant ancestors of a car's windskill and sophistication by William Ross of
with wonderful
York City, the chariot was originally
Schenectady, whose
initials still are
owned by Angelica Campbell
of
emblazoned with coats of arms on the
silver handles on the doors, and carpeted folding
welcomed riders to a plush interior of tufted buff
fabric, accented by red leather, and needlepointed window pulls in red,
gold, and white. Even the coachman's lofty seat was ornamented by a handsome needlepoint hammercloth, and the footman who rode behind
faded black exterior.
With
steps, the elegant chariot
cushioned his feet on a padded leather platform while he clutched needlepointed hand straps as the chariot jolted along Schenectady's streets in the
last years
Some
of the eighteenth century.
potent alchemy must have been present in the Conestoga River
Valley of Pennsylvania
between 1725 and 1750, when the Lancaster County
American of all designs: the long rifle
and the Conestoga wagon. The graceful Conestoga evolved from nothing
more grand than a German farm wagon, and indeed the earliest versions
region gave birth to two of the most
were used to carry farm produce into colonial
cities.
As
settlement pro-
ceeded west, so did the rugged Conestogas, hauling freight across the
mountains to Pittsburgh, and down the Shenandoah Valley from Philadelphia and Baltimore. Usually drawn by bell-decked six-horse teams, the
wagons carried up to eight tons of payload. Their characteristic curved bottoms, rising at each end, kept the loads from shifting and thus reduced
strain on the endgates. Massive, dished, twelve- and sixteen-spoke wheels
bore the gross burden, while the driver had several options of position: he
39
Opposite. Developed in southeastern Pennsylvania in the
middle 1700s, the Conestoga wagon was a familiar overland
freight hauler for about a century until railroads put
of business. But the big, graceful
wagon with
team was still king of the road when
ample was built in about 1840
its
it
out
six-horse
this blue-bodied ex-
40
could
left
rest
on the lazyboard projecting from the
front
behind the horses. Americans drive on the right
from a position on their vehicles'
set
left side;
he could ride the
wheel horse; or he could walk alongside. Never did he ride inside or up
left,
side of the road today,
because, legend says, the example was
by those vanished teamsters.
The museum's Conestoga wagon
body of faded powder
is
is
a still-more-faded red.
ironwork does not exhibit quite the ornamental
wagons
into showcases for the blacksmith's craft,
relatively late in the period.
vivor of a colorful
like its
ard but one: arrival of the railroad.
this
grand sur-
brethren, overcome almost any haz-
When
the iron horse crossed the
Alleghenies, the great wagons' work was done. Later, a substantially
ified
t is
how
well that "Pilgrim" furniture
we might grow too fond
Ml
furniture.
tury
American
stools;
and drop
wonder
The museum's
furniture
and Carver chairs
is
heavily
bristling
New
era
interest but usually with-
England in
origin,
and includes Brewster
with bulbously turned spindles; awkward-looking
balusters, bosses,
and covered with complex but crude geometric carvings. The
dawn of the eighteenth
century;
Englanders for so long repeated the old country's medieval and
Renaissance traditions.
by hand,
and discover
large collection of seventeenth-century
that such styles persisted to the very
is
New
it
museum collections,
cupboards and chests festooned with pointless
finials,
so homely; oth-
American-made pieces of the
where we can study them across the void of time, with
out covetousness.
is
of
unavailable are specimens of seventeenth-cen-
have become so rare and costly as to be largely confined to
that
mod-
descendant would become the prairie schooner of the American West.
erwise
hard
Its
made some
perhaps because it came
artistry that
Dating between 1810 and 1840,
epoch could,
example with
a beautiful, original
running gear
blue; the
when
And why
favor oak, that
most
difficult
wood
to
work
the forests were crying with better alternatives?
Yet the design of some seventeenth-century furniture
icans did not have nearly as
much
made
sense.
Amer-
furniture then, and they were often
for space as well. Multipurpose furniture thus was useful. The
museum's exceptionally rare chair-table combination from Massachusetts,
c. 1650, isoneof America's earliest-known space-savers. It still has its original drawer and, even more unusual, much of its original dark red paint.
From a bit later, about 1690, comes a boxy chest-over-drawer of the Con-
cramped
necticut River Valley of Massachusetts,
its
front chiseled with tulips, leaves,
and scrolls, and even the initials of the long-departed original owner, Maria
Wheelock. This striking design is often termed a Hadley chest.
A strange and welcome development occurred around the end of the seventeenth century: coincident with the advent of the new and more elegant
style of William and Mary, the skill standards of American furniture crafts-
Oppositc.
The
nui.seiim'sCDilcctiiM-, ol AiiK-ricin turniturc,
completeness and quality,
is amonj; the naThis rare oak chair-table, made in Massachusetts in the mid- 1600s, was useful as a space saver in
the era's frequently small, crowded homes
remarkable
for
tion's very best.
Above.
Two
rare chairs from early
contrasting forms.
New England
The oak armchair
Massachusetts, dates from 1650-80.
maple armchair below originated
in
at top,
display
from eastern
The New England
1700-25
men made
a giant leap forward.
their techniques to
With
surprising speed, craftsmen refined
accommodate the new
museum's high chest
(or highboy) that
ton's mother, a Virginia plantation
designs.
A prime example
once belonged
to
the
is
George Washing-
matron. With drawers faced in two
types of walnut veneer, six trumpet-turned legs, curving stretchers, and
brass fittings, the
Washington highboy seems
grim-era predecessors.
The
light-years
piece, attributed to
New
away from
its Pil-
England despite
provenance, has a secondary history. Exhibited at the enormously
its
influ-
Columbian Exposition at Chicago in 1893, it stimulated a
new interest in American antiquarianism.
The William and Mary style did not last long, but did its work as a technical and artistic bridge to the still more graceful design school of Queen
Anne, The museum's many examples indicate the range of artistry and style
ential World's
already introduced by 1730,
One
from that date, a linen press attributed
Ebenezer Hartshome of Charlestown, Massachusetts,
nut with rosewood and satinwood
broken-arch bonnet and urn
inlays.
is
to
constructed of wal-
Reeded columns, arch-top doors,
finial, butterfly brasses:
eaments of the balance of the eighteenth century were
many
of the lin-
firmly in place.
An
important cherry desk and bookcase of about 1730, probably from Connecticut,
beautifully carved with corkscrew finials, shells, and flowers.
is
Queen Anne chairs are coveted by collectors;
the museum's collection
illus-
trates their variety.
The ensuing Chippendale
ture, epitomized in the
ers.
Some
period was, to
many
lovers ot antique furni-
famed Philadelphia highboy, or high chest of draw-
experts believe that at least a few examples of the breed were
excessively large
A possible example of the latter category
and showy,
is
an
eight-foot-one-inch-tall walnut specimen with applied tendrils of carved
wooden
leafage crawling top
of this great
American
and bottom. Nearby, more restrained examples
classic allow the viewer to
make up
his
own mind,
Philadelphia indeed was one of America's polestars of fine eighteenth-century furniture,
Ann)ng
its
was Thomas Affleck, who made
practitioners
niture in the Chippendale style for the U,S,
the ct)urt sat in Philadelphia,
The museum
Supreme Court
in 1790,
displays a chair from that
fur-
when
cham-
ber along with other Affleck work, including an elegant card table from
1765-80,
Another major Chippendale piece
is
the
mahogany
blocktront desk of
about 1770 to 1800, attributed to Samuel Loomis of Colchester, ConnectAhott TIm
-nni-
til
Chippcn-
daUr iccms tf ir..iMi:cJ b\ ilicic ii, Philadelphia armchairs.
The Queen Anne
splat, dates
fraf
It
chair
from about 1750
(tiip).
aiul
is
with solid (iddlcback
made
of walnut.
Con-
with the open carved mahot>any back of the Chip-
petviale-style chair (boctum) that replaced
it
in ptjpularity,
The grace o<' American Chippendale shines from
mahoKany splat of this armchair of 1770-80
the carved
(detail of chair opposite), attributed to
of block and shell slant top and three blocked drawers,
American craftsmen had k)ng since achieved. Such
pieces could he afforded
only by the wealthy few; a 1785 middle-class success story would more
likely
have been marked by such acquisitions as the mu.seum's well-made Windsor
uartmi; about 1755
Opposite
icut. Its design,
seems incapable of improvement; the execution displays the mastery that
chair of hickory, maple, and pine,
black trim.
Thimias Affleck of
Philadelphia
42
still
bearing
its
original buff paint with
43
44
That minority of
early
American immigrants who came from Scandi-
navia or central Europe must have longed for the efficient ceramic heating
stoves of their
homeland. As
where the dominant culture was
settlers
Brit-
most Americans perpetuated the old country's use of inefficient fireplace heating, and endured the wretched service of fireplaces far longer
ish,
than necessary. In Pennsylvania the Germans sensibly were not buying that
masochism, and by the
variety of
they
demanded
The
first
quarter of the eighteenth century
iron stoves from local founders,
resulting "five-plate" or "jamb" stoves,
who were
usually English.
European in concept, were
not necessarily well suited for rustic colonial America, but they worked.
closed iron firebox, set into a wall containing a chimney, was tended from
on the other side. The plan was reminiscent of grand European
homes and palaces, where graceful corner stoves were stoked from hidden
a fireplace
service rooms.
The German
farmers of Pennsylvania ordered their iron
stoves cast with pious mottos.
plate stove
was too clear
for
it
By 1765, the basic impracticality of the
to continue,
five-
and new free-standing models
The
Thomas Maybury,
appeared, connecting to the chimney through sheet-metal stovepipes.
museum
has a handsome example from the foundry of
The device's operation
member of the modern back-to-wood-stoves
Hereford Furnace in Berks County, Pennsylvania.
would be instantly clear
to
any
movement; moreover, the handsomely proportioned rectangular appliance
contains the useful refinement of a bake oven. Like a number of rare artifacts in the
museum, the Maybury
Chicago Exposition,
stove begat
1893, at the
it
its
own
codicil to history: in
attracted wide interest as America's
oldest stove.
Opposite.
Benjamin Franklin
an
tried his
hand
at inventing a stove,
around
1742.
His
drawers.
which a system of air passages would save heat yet still provide the pleasure and utility of an open
fire
but in practice it quickly clogged itself with soot. Stove founders
idea
was good
iron fireplace insert through
began working, with some success,
to
life's
rigors
were succored by the comforts of tradition. Settlers in Virginia and Massachusetts began by trying to transplant
Old World domestic surroundings
One dream of what they left
but yielded in time to practical variations.
behind
is
embodied
in Greenfield Village's
Cotswold Cottage, a Glouces-
house and outbuildings dating from the early seventeenth century
in England. Its massive stone construction would not have been duplicated
in the early colonies, yet its sturdy oak cupboards, chairs, and tables of
tershire
Tidor and Jacobean
styles
were both imported and copied here.
better view of the early seventeenth-century
New England home
Plympton House, originally in South Sudbury, Massachusetts. Constructed around a massive central chimney, the one-room,
twenty-five-by-twenty-foot house with an upstairs loft sheltered Thomas
comes
at the village's
and Abigail Plympton and
their seven children.
The
setting of their
It is
attributed to
New
England, dating from very
early in the 1700s
Above. This walnut high chest of drawers
dale era, a type usually
known
life is
45
ot the
Chippen-
as the Philadelphia highboy,
was made between 1760 and 1780
improve on Franklin's design.
For Americans of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
Mary Ball Washington, mother ot the first presiowned this William and Mary high chest ot
dent, once
46
one we
strive to duplicate today in
to Pasadena;
it
dens and family rooms from Bridgeport
would not be so rich
charm
in
if
we were required
to live as
the Plymptons did, cooking above the coals in rough iron utensils, spinning
flax
and wool, weaving fabrics, rendering lard, boiling laundry, dipping
Such necessities of the hearthside, plus the punishing outdoor
candles.
farm work, were aspects of a
that changed
tury
little
may seem
tions as the
self-sufficient, traditional, preindustrial society
across the generations. Superficially, the eighteenth cen-
a bit
more polished
in
such Greenfield Village manifesta-
New Hampshire
Connecticut Saltbox House and the
Pearson House, both from around 1750. Yet the processes of
life
Secretary
were the
same.
Fireplace cooking was uncomfortable in hot weather but demonstrably
more
stove
than fireplace heating. The slow change to heating by
efficient
picking up speed
Atlantic states
move
if
not
at the
end of the eighteenth century in the Middle
was not accompanied by a similar
New England
to cooking by stove. Yet at least
one American started giving serious
thought to shifting food from the hearth to a more reliable heat source.
Benjamin Thompson was
whose checkered and
Opposite. "Living History" at the Saltbox House, per-
often distinguished career included high British government service during
formed by costumed Greenfield Village staff members,
takes the visitor back to domestic scenes of rural Connecticut in the mid- 1700s
a Massachusetts-born T)ry
American Revolution, major experiments with gunpowder, and becoming a German count, whereupon he chose the title "von Rumford" after his
wife's New Hampshire birthplace. In England, near the close of the eighteenth century, Rumford made original scientific studies into the nature of
heat and capped his work with radical new designs for cookstoves and roasting ovens. Rumtord's principles, which concentrated and enclosed heat,
were appropriated by American stovemakers and led to real breakthroughs
in cooking techniques. "Rumford roasters" became the rage in progressive
kitchens. The museum displays a Boston-made specimen of this handsome,
cylindrical device of skillfully worked iron and brass.
Progress toward adequate lighting in the seventeenth and eighteenth
the
centuries was,
cial light of
if
our
grease lamps.
anything, even slower than the quest tor heat.
first
The
artifi-
colonists flickered feebly from candles, rush lights,
Some even
Candles were expensive
to
used "light wood"
buy or trouble
to
and
slivers of resin-rich pine.
make, yet they were preferable
to the alternatives. Gradually, the smoky, smelly, rodent-attracting grease
lamp was improved by inventive blacksmiths, tinsmiths, and potters. Betty
lamps, spout lamps, peg lamps, Argand lamps, Phoebe lamps, pan lamps,
some of the forgotten light makers of our
on rank, in the museum.
Even the redoubtable Count Rumford experimented with lighting, as
well as with stoves and explosives, a not altogether irrelevant grouping. Fire
was such a pervasive danger that in many regions of America, the kitchen
was built under a separate roof in the backyard, so that when and if it
caught fire the damage would be restricted. Fireplaces and open-flame
lard lamps, pig lamps: such are
earlier years that are
now
displayed, rank
47
Above.
wildest
The Plympton House of 1638 is Greenfield Village's
American home. The one-room Puritan cottage
came from South Sudbury, Massachusetts
48
lamps took their
toll in
other structures as well.
One
of the hest-selling
products of colonial leatherworkers was the pitch-dauhed
fire
bucket that
hung in every hall.
Dutch inventors around 1700 produced the first fire hose for playing water
forth onto a fire. By the eighteenth century, London became the European
center of fire equipment manufacturing, and its best-known maker was
Richard Newsham. The museum's earliest pumper is probably a Newsham,
and may date from the 1760s, when it was used in New England. By the late
1700s,
fire
engines were made in the American colonies. Technological
and frequently the dating of such antiques is difficult.
New England machine, the inscribed date 1797
handily appeared, and other clues pointed to the Boston shop of Ephraim
Thayer as its manufacturer. In such establishments, the pool of mechanical
progress was slow,
But in restoring one early
began
skill
to
grow
faster.
Otters
and glassblowers could work almost any-
where, and they quickly set up shop in America's
m^'^
-^^
ea
earliest
colonies. Yet the archeological record
is
rjpar that
r
clear
our colonial ancestors relied overwhelmingly
on imports for tableware. English earthenwares arrived in America in prodigious
Dutch and German pottery is also found in the trash heaps of the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Chinese porcelains actually made their
quantities.
North American debut in the 1500s, via Spanish landings on the West Coast.
Chinese wares were coveted because of the superiority of hard-paste porcelain in both service
mentation.
and beauty, and
The Chinese were quick
for the oriental
to
refinement of orna-
accommodate western
taste in
and by 1725 the colonies were importers of porcelain through British traders. Direct trade between New York and Canton began after the
Revolution with the sailing of the Enxpxt^s of China on February 22, 1784.
designs,
The museum's
vast ceramics collection includes such select specimens of
the era as one piece from a set of Ching-teh-chen tea service with an unusually well-documented history,
whom
monogram and
the
naming the Massachusetts matron for
it. The prideful
the set was made, and even the ship that delivered
the classical painted scenes of goddesses and cupids suggest
upward-bound
The pedigree
cultural strivings of
New
England's merchants.
of another Chinese piece
George Washington
is
is still
more distinguished.
represented by a plate of about 1785, decorated with
The
plate
Mrs. Robert E. Lee.
Still
the iconography of the newly formed Society of the Cincinnati.
descended in the Custis family of Virginia
to
another Chinese plate of between 1758 and 1783 recalls the unsuccessful
social striving of William
title
Alexander of New York, who claimed the extinct
of the Earldom of Stirling, and ordered
its
handsome arms emblazoned
Opposite. This small, hand-carried
fire
pump
is
the
mu-
seum's oldest, and may have been made by Richard Newsham, a pioneer English manufacturer of fire equipment, in
about 1760.
It
once served
in Dudley, Massachusetts
This ten-plate stove was cast in 1767 at Hereford Furnace, Berks County, Pennsylvania; it was displayed in 1893
Top.
Chicago Exposition, attracting the
at the
interest of
antiquarians
on
his china.
The well-crafted "Rumford Roaster" was made by
Howe of Boston in about 1825. It was based on the
Bottom.
Joseph
1796 invention of Sir Benjamin Thompson, an American
loyalist
49
who became Count Rumford
so
The
potters of
England were not prone
abandon the game
to
to the
Chinese, and offered a staggering variety of competitive delftware, redware, creamware, and salt-glazed stoneware, some done to the
taste.
An early example
is
Lambeth
probably from London's
chrome crown, the
delftware drug
An
jar,
the museum's
area.
c.
American
1704 tin-glazed delftware plate,
With
its
bold
monogram and
poly-
plate has a perky, earthy quality of intense vigor.
dated 1723 and marked P:TARTAR, originated in Bristol.
Irish-made plate of 1750 features a baroque scalloped border and, com-
petitively,
an oriental landscape
in the center, all painted in blue
on the
tin
glaze.
Delftware was superseded in popularity by other bodies, chiefly refined
salt-glazed stoneware
by
and the
Thomas Whieldon.
development
colorful early
creamware pottery popularized
In the second half of the eighteenth century, the
of transfer-printed
creamware and pearlware resulted
in fab-
new export opportunities for the potters of Staffordshire. Ransacking
American publications for patriotically commercial images, potters created
ulous
such gems as the museum's 1800 pitcher from Liverpool's Herculaneum Pottery,
bearing a black transfer print of George Washington clearly taken from
another print, which in turn had followed a famous Gilbert Stuart portrait.
Awards and commemorations meant
example of a private
by Staffordshire's
profitable business.
citizen's recognition
Wood and
is
is
On
Caldwell Pottery.
the tools and products of his trade, a cooper
the legend wine/benjamin
An
elaborate
found in the museum's pitcher
is
one
pictured.
EMMONS/born
in
side,
working amid
Beneath the spout
BOSTON/May the
10th/
1762. Cartoons, maps, naval victories, eulogies, Indian maidens, political
songs, the glorious completion of canals
themes, often executed with great
artistry,
and
railroads:
such were the
adorning the transfer-printed
English ceramics destined tor America, a truly international expression of
the early Industrial Revolution.
The museum's renowned
glass collection
is
virtually all
begins with some English bottles of the seventeenth century
slow eighteenth-century development
ary figures as
pocket
mark
flask
in
Henry
Stiegel of
of about 1770
American
glass.
larger, slightly later (c.
is
American, but
The
industry's
traced by the work of such legend-
Mannheim, Pennsylvania.
Stiegel
only four and one-half inches tall, but is a landAlso rare and important is a similar, slightly
is
1785-90) bottle from the
New Bremen
Glass
Man-
c.
1785 was decorated in
Society of the Cincinnati.
ington, Custis,
Canton with
Its
the
emblem
associations with the
and Lee families
ot Viri^inia
add to
created tangible expressions of his clients' wealth. Silver was not for every-
made do with pewter, wooden, or earthenware vessels and
But by the end of the seventeenth century, prospering Massachusupported America's first galaxy of first-rate silversmiths. One was
one; the masses
utensils.
is
represented in a lovely tankard, like a
sloping ring-molded cylinder with a molded
flat
cover. Still rarer
is
a rather
ol the
Washits
his-
torical interest
Tnp. Masters of transfer printing, English potters cashed in
on such commemoratory American themes as the opening
ot the Erie
Canal
Massachusetts matron Abigail Goodwin, arrived
Part sculptor, part metallurgist, part salesman, the colonial silversmith
setts
of
Bottom. These three pieces of Chinese porcelain,
ufactory of Maryland.
John Noyes of Boston, whose work
Opposite. This hard-paste porcelain Chinese export plate
on
Ellas
Hasket Derby's ship, the Grtmd Turk
made tor
Salem
in
opposite.
quartet of teapots from the museum's silver
collection includes (clockwise from top) the work of Wil-
liam B. Heyer
Boston,
c.
of New
1805; Paul Revere of Boston,
Hutton of Albany,
modest-looking howl, only
to
he America's
York City, 1815-25; John B. Jones of
New
York,
c.
1800
c.
1785;
and
Isaac
the Kip
won
Cup was
presented to Jacob
a one-mile race at
little
Middletown,
repoussed drinking howl, with
slightly
museum believes
Made by Jesse Kip of New York,
and Maria Van Dorn when their colt
six inches in diameter, that the
earliest intact racing trophy.
New
its
Jersey, in 1699. In this pleasant
caryatid handles and fleurs-de-lis
all
reminiscent of the era's William and Mary furniture designs, we
discern not the
first
The museum's
herald of the gaudy trophies of the future.
silver collection includes a c.
1770 coffeepot by Paul
Rococo example with all the right details: pear-shaped
body, double-domed lid, acorn finial. Revere was a multitalented figure
whose primary craft silversmithing spanned all the best stylistic eras.
Around 1785 he made an extremely rare drum-shaped teapot; by 1790 he
was fully into the Federal theme with a classically straight-sided oval teapot.
In silversmithing, as in all crafts, a high standard of acquired competence was the orthodox requisite, hut some craftsmen simply were gifted
with greater design talent than others. Joseph Lownes of Philadelphia had
talent in lavish measure: a silver tankard he made c. 1790 is a dazzling work
with bold bands of horizontal grooves around a tapered cylinder, and an
Revere, an excellent
engraving of the brig Lavinia.
The
ship's insurance underwriters presented
the tankard to the captain, clearly a
man
And,
of probity and profits.
per-
haps, of luck.
Something
resist
in the deepest character of timepieces
must have struggled
to
the Industrial Revolution. Horology succeeded in remaining at least
partially aloof while passing
through the era
like
everything
else.
One
dif-
ference was that watches and ckicks had been mechanical successes tor centuries, k)ng before the Industrial
Revolution began. Few other devices, with
the exception of the pipe organ, could
make
that statement.
When
Re-
naissance kings craved mechanical miracles, they were essentially limited
to
what the best ck)ck and organ makers could cook up. Such craftsmen
possessed a high degree of mechanical sophistication and
artistry.
A watch-
maker of about the time that Thomas Newcomen's first crude steam engine
clanked and shuddered to life might not have been terribly impressed by the
invention; why, hadn't his lot for generations been making reliable
machines, drawing on the predictable power source of a coiled spring.'
The museum displays a watch of just that time. George Graham of London, early in the eighteenth century, fashioned this marvek)us open-face
example,
Roman
its
silver dial a
numerals. In style
mass of scallops, brass studs, and Arabic and
it
echoes the seventeenth century more than
it
accepts the eighteenth. But throughout any era, watchmakers expre.ssed
idiosyncracies of style. Their miniature, confined purlieu
demanded
per-
sonalized artistry. Appreciation of the museum's hundreds of antique
watches, twinkling silently in their gallery
ca.ses,
demands equally concen-
trated attention.
The
52
earliest cK)cks to reach
America were
brass-cased, wall-mounted
"BrnKrymssBmam
53
54
lantern clocks, whose weights and
pendulums hung in the open air. The
American tall-case clocks, spring-
type would soon vanish, displaced by
driven bracket clocks, and various other
styles.
Among
finials; a
setts
the best are a 1765
Hepplewhite clock of c. 1810 by Jacob
day banjo clock at
Eby of Manheim, Pennsylvania, justly noted for its all-American curly
maple case with marquetry eagle medallions; and a strikingly beautiful,
complex bracket clock of 1795 by Andrew Billings of Poughkeepsie, New
York. Several examples display the legendary skills of Simon and Aaron
Willard of Roxbury, Massachusetts. Toward the end of his distinguished
Thomas Harland
of Norwich, Connecticut,
made
clock of mahogany, inlaid with maple and ebony in perfect
a lovely Federal
harmony Har-
one of America's masters of the old eighteenth-century school, had
an apprentice whose name would soon be even better known: Eli Terry.
Like most serious artisans, Harland executed perfectly the design orders
land,
of his time, as dictated by the Messrs. Chippendale, Hepplewhite, and
Sheraton. Other Americans liked to improvise. That could work well
commanded
craftsman
a sense of line
and proportion.
One
if
the
such was the
anonymous maker of a "possibly Delaware" clock. Splendid marmahogany case, and the hood frieze is spanwith inlaid stars. Here, indeed, is a Hepplewhite-based clock made by
regrettably
quetry of satinwood covers the
gled
a daring, exuberant, sure hand.
One
of James Watt's engines was installed in a Manchester, England,
cotton mill in 1785. English water power was clearly inadequate to meet the
growing demand
for energy.
Within
fifteen years, by the
Manchester would have thirty steam engines running
end of the century,
its
cotton mills.
We
Americans had more promising water power, but otherwise the cotton mills
of New England resembled their English models, as translated by Slater's
installation at Pawtucket. The year 1785 was also the year of another portentous development in textiles: the
first
use of
roller,
or cylinder, printing
developed simultaneously in England and France. Eli Whitney's gin would
soon multiply the supply of cheap cotton. By the mid- 1800s, throughout the
West, the business of making cotton cloth
trialized,
As
taking the
first
early as 1830, the
Good
mills.
a consumer's
giant step toward
calico
was thoroughly
modem
United States counted some eight hundred cotton
printed cotton kept dropping in price
bonanza that
and
rising in quality in
lasted for the better part of a century.
example of the early period in the museum's collection of
piece of unused cotton dating
printed design
attractive
The
in the
dery.
and
is
indus-
factory production.
c.
1795.
Its
fabric
A
is
good
a long
complex, three-color wood-block
composed of blossoms, branches, and curling
ribbons, an
bright, polished design.
1700s ended in sartorial glory, at least for the wealthy, as indicated
museum's 1780 European frock court suit, refulgent in its embroi-
Women's
fashions ranged from the dainty to the dramatic, as seen by
55
left in
1815. In Manheim, PennEby crafted the eagle-inlaid
about
sylvania, in about 1810, Jacob
curly-maple tall-case clock. At right, nicely reflecting
pire tastes,
career,
Simon and Aaron Willard of'Massachu-
rank high in America's skilled fraternity of early-
nineteenth-century clockmakers. Simon made the eight-
Pennsylvania Chippendale clock with a masterfully-carved mahogany case
graced by rosettes and flame
Opposite. Brothers
of Boston
is
a lyre clock, c.
1825,
made by Sawin
&.
EmDyer
56
an authentic red cold-weather hoe)d, or cloak. But the new Republic
demanded more democratic haberdashery. Even the great and popular Jefferson soon greeted White House guests in drab, worn clothes and carpet
slippers.
Any
study of the museum's parade of antique fashions
elicits
alternating
one thing, and puzof the latter is mourning jew-
sensations; surprised recognition at the familiarity of
zlement at the alien nature of another.
elry.
One
gold ring with a black enamel band memorializes the departure of
in 1769. A ring remembering the late Elizabeth
mounted with an artificial jewel in the shape of a coffin, complete
with skeleton. On mourning pins, bereaved husbands, children, and mothers slump across the tombs of their beloved. Some of the museum's memo-
Stephen Van Rensselaer
Ropes
rial
is
pins and lockets incorporate
human
hair.
he eighteenth-century American of any class was
more inclined
to play a musical
instrument than
is
Ah.:
his modem counterpart. Violins, guitars, recorders,
9^ flutes, harpsichords, drums, jews harps: such were
tint
We had to make the music
the popular sources of music two hundred years ago.
we wanted to enjoy it, in most cases, as professional musicians were scarce.
The results could be elaborate, as when Thomas Jefferson led regular musicales
if
at Monticello. Auditors
mances,
for
were rarely surprised at the quality of those perfor-
high competence was expected. At a
lesser
range on the social
If an American colonist owned a watch, chances
was EngUsh. George Graham of London made this
handsome, silver-cased, open-face pocket watch in about
OpposiXi.
were
it
1740. Its silver dial has
Roman and
Arabic numerals; the
hands are of pierced brass. Repair papers, such as the one
tucked inside the case, give clues to a timepiece's later
travels
scale, there
is
ample testimony that
always so fine, at least
The
violin
it
was
if
the quality of fiddling in taverns was not
Ahone. Honoring departed loved ones by special mourning
lively
jewelry was an accepted practice in early America; this gold
was the eighteenth century's lead instrument
in all respects,
with expressive tone, tractable volume, and universal familiarity Even at
the start of the 1700s
even today
is
it
already had reached a stage of development that
deemed an apogee. That golden age
is
well represented in the
museum's collection of musical instruments. Oldest is a spectacularly rare
example from 1647 by Nicolo Amati, one of the masters of the Cremona,
Italy, school of violinmaking. He was the teacher of Antonio Stradivari,
who
is
represented by two violins, dated 1703 and 1709, in the collection.
A third Olympian name
represented
ment named The Doyen from
1741.
is
Joseph Guamerius, with an instru-
More
violins
from the same era round
out a supernal collection of early strings.
Few Americans would have had such instruments,
even the
common
violin
clarinets, oboes, viola da
guitar, favorite of
yet the
odds were that
was European-made. The same could be said
gambas, and
guitars.
The pear-shaped
for
English
eighteenth-century lady instrumentalists, was a form of
medieval cittern, whose iron strings, tuned in an open chord, sounded
clear but melancholy.
Meanwhile the
modem
guitar evolved, a bit smaller
than today's, and often distinguished by a bowed-out back formed of slender
staves, like a barrel.
Because of that back, the guitar was hard to make, but
57
locket recalls the
who
died in 1795
memory
of a young
man
of
twenty-four
Charles Taws, a Scottish immisrant, made beautiful pianos
in Philadelphia.
One
of
them was
1794, with an inlaid Hepplewhite
61
this lovely edition ot
mahogany case and
-note English action
58
The harpsichord was another popwhich most were made approached
factory size and specialization, such as Jacob Kirckman's of London.
Another great harpsichord maker of the time was London's Thomas Hitchcock, whose work is represented by the museum's 1733 specimen, one of
spoke with a wonderfully mellow voice.
ular
if
expensive import.
The shops
in
only about twenty surviving today. Orchestral music of the eighteenth cen-
had a much softer, mellower tone than today's counterpart. Brilliant
would arrive in the nineteenth century.
Some musical-instrument makers moved to the population centers of
tury
brasses
eighteenth-century America. Charles Taws, a Scottish piano maker,
arrived in
New
and successful
York in 1786 and moved to Philadelphia in 1788 for a long
career. In 1794,
Taws made the small square piano that
of the museum's rarest artifacts.
manufacture,
is
Its
is
one
sixty-one-note keyboard, of English
contained in a splendid Hepplewhite case of mahogany
with satinwood panels. Floral flourishes, both painted and inlaid, confirm
the
is
skill
of Mr Taws's shop.
attested by the
The
liable.
That the piano was
number of repaired ivories.
and not just admired,
used,
firearms to reach the New World were clumsy, heavy, and unreMost were probably matchlocks, an ancient firing device that
first
plunged a smoldering "match" (more properly, a fuse) into the weapon's
The matchlock worked reasonably well unless one's match
became damp, whereupon the weapon would not fire at all. Early militiamen were armed with such pieces. The first settlers also brought a few
wheellocks, which were far more expensive and inclined to be used by the
priming pan.
gentry for sporting purposes.
lighter,
The wheellock worked
like a giant cigarette
with a serrated wheel which, upon being cranked into readiness,
would spin sparks into the priming pan. Both wheellock and matchlock
were voices of the Middle Ages; another type, which a few of our early seventeenth-century ancestors carried off the boat at St. Augustine, James-
town, and Plymouth, was the snaphance. Also called the doglock, the
snaphance was an
flint
early
On
of the system.
carried in
its
form of flintlock that already had the basic features
triggering, the "cock" (or
hammer) smacked
a piece of
jaws into a steel "frizzen," or "battery," to create a shower
of sparks. By the middle of the seventeenth century, the
flint
system was
standard almost everywhere.
Around
the middle of the eighteenth century,
American gunsmiths
introduced a
new weapon
hunting
rifles
brought to Pennsylvania and Virginia early in the eighteenth
century.
The
beautiful
of almost magical accuracy, based on
rifle
German
that would help tame the trans-Appalachian
and make life miserable for the Redcoats, has been variously called
the Kentucky rifle, Pennsylvania rifle, American long rifle, or just long rifle.
frontier,
The
best term
is
American
rifle,
as
range and reflected a variety of local
lection contains
many examples
it
was made across a wide geographic
styles,
of this
or schools.
American
The museum's
classic in
its
col-
various
59
America were imported, yet rare
an instrument ot this quality. It was
made in Cremona, Italy, in 1647 by Nicolo Amati, who
trained Antonio Stradivari and who was the most imporMost
in
violins used in early
any age or country
tant
member
is
of a famed instrument-making family
60
The German
phases, beginning with the import that served as prototype.
Jaeger (or hunter)
rifle
American
the
first
ing
wood patch
dates from around 1750, the year usually assigned to
rifles.
With
its full
walnut stock, octagonal
indication of parenthood. Yet in building their great
can makers borrowed from other
With such
barrel, slid-
box, hickory ramrod, and engraved flintlock, there
new gun,
is
some
the Ameri-
styles as well.
sporting guns, as with coaches, clothing, furniture, and
tableware, people tended to take care of the expensively
made
items, use
and then treasure them as heirlooms when they became obsolete.
Therefore the homely, handy tools made for hard use, such as an Americanmade fowling piece of 1758, rarely survived to fall into the hands of collec-
them
less,
tors or
is
museums. The
flintlock fowler (today
it
would be called
shotgun)
unusual for other reasons, as well. Eighteenth-century American gun-
smiths were reticent about signing and dating their work. But in this case,
maker Medad Hills signed the piece, added the date and his address of
Goshen, Connecticut, and inscribed the name of the customer, Noah
North. Rare
is
the antique that carries
One gunsmith
he helped
start
it.
its
own
pedigree so completely
not only participated in America's Industrial Revolution,
Whitney has hardly been
Eli
forgotten by history, but he
scarcely ever gets sufficient credit for both of his
mighty contributions that
changed the western world. In 1793, as the guest on a Georgia plantation
just after his graduation from Yale, young Whitney invented the cotton gin.
The ability to mechanically separate seeds from cotton fiber proved a mixed
blessing.
While
mills,
also created
it
word, slaves.
it
The
resulted in cheap,
an
irresistible
abundant cotton
demand
for
institution of slavery grew like
for the world's fabric
cheap
field
an incubus
hands
in the
in a
wake of
the cotton gin.
Whitney had
1798 he built a
difficulty protecting his patent for the cotton gin,
new
factory at
New
and
in
Haven, Connecticut, to manufacture
military muskets for the U.S. government. This was the setting for his sec-
ond great contribution. Prior to Whitney's plunge into musket manufacturing, gunmaking had been a bench craft where each weapon was made individually of component parts formed and fitted for it alone. Whitney's
master stroke was to make gun parts of such precision that the parts were
interchangeable with minor fitting in assembly. The principle may seem
obvious today, but it was a fundamental change in the way manufacturers
looked at things.
The Age of
Noah lUbster
is
name
is
synonymous with one of the indispens-
able tools of scholarship, but
became
Opposite. In this upstairs study of his
Connecticut,
work,
a curiously neglected figure in
history as his personal
He
Noah Webster
American
fame somehow slipped away.
deserves a refurbished reputation. Descendant of colonial governors,
com-
An
lawyer, educator, editor, politician,
legislator, professor, administrator, linguist, loving father,
and family man,
Webster would have been a remarkable national treasure even had he not been
the most prodigious lexicographer and philologist in the history of America.
His comfortable home, standing in Federal serenity in Greenfield Village,
and
seems to
reflect the
his wife, Rebecca,
man. Although he was already
moved
to their
sixty-five
new house (then
in
when he
New
Haven,
Connecticut), he would spend another two decades working there, and
complete in 1828
life.
An
American
in his upstairs study
Dictioruxr-j of the English
most ambitious of Webster's distinguished
When the two-volume,
the most important work of his
Language.
life,
and
The
it
prc^ject
was the
took twenty years.
seventy-thousand-word dictionary reached market,
became one of the great landmarks of erudition, helping impose authority on American word usage, as well as indexing thousands of words never
it
seen in dictionaries before. Yet long before his great dictionary appeared,
Webster had made a vast contribution toward the standardization of American spelling
and pronunciation. His three-part Grammatical
Institute of the
63
home
in
New Haven,
1828 completed his great
American Dictionary of the English Language.
Henry Ford saved the home from demohtion, and reconstructed
it
in Greenfield Village in the 1930s.
study furniture, including the desk-hookcase,
the house
American Revolution,
bat veteran of the
Noah Webster
Much
is
of the
original to
He was no
polished master from sophisticated Philadel-
phia, Baltimore, or Newport, but Godfrey Wilkin may he
said to represent a body of capable American artisans who
made
furniture for the average citizen. Clearly, this
tain craftsman
had a sense
of
moun-
humor
MARCH*! JACOB i^^lLKLNHl
Ol
CODFREyPV/LKiNHARDyCOL'NTy AND5TATEOFV/RC/N/A
LJ"
64
^1
fv
C:
<
English Language, appearing
American
culture.
The
first
first
in 1783-85,
had
on
more than
a profound influence
book, the Blue-backed
Speller,
sold
100 million copies over more than a century of use, gradually being replaced
by McGuffey Readers.
rest on a work table and desk in
home. The 1790 Hepplewhite desk-bookcase is the
very one where he did much of his work, and the room is where he died in
1843, his amazing fount of scholarship stilled at eighty-four years.
Copies of Webster's historic publications
the upstairs study of his
Noah Webster, who was a scion of New England's old patrician
William Holmes McGuffey was born in a one-room log cabin in
western Pennsylvania. The rustic little structure, built in about 1780,
stands today in Greenfield Village and is furnished in the rough-hewn
Unlike
culture,
charm of the
early nineteenth century,
much
as
it
probably looked around
the time young McGuffey arrived in 1800. Despite their frontier surround-
McGuffeys were ambitious and intelligent, and William received
good education. He became a professional educator in Ohio, helped
organize that state's public school system, and went on to a long career as
ings, the
professor of moral philosophy at the University of Virginia. But his incal-
on the mind of nineteenth-century America was based on
first published in 1836, the McGuffey Eclectic
With one reader for each elementary grade, McGuffey's illustrated
culable influence
his series of six textbooks
Readers.
books conveyed solid
literary instruction in stories of
common
sense, patri-
and morality based on upbeat pragmatism, not doctrinaire theology.
The books dominated American education for generations, and helped
mold the minds of young Henry Ford, the Wright brothers, and most of
their contemporaries. Ford's high regard for McGuffey led the great mogul
of Dearborn into gathering a complete set of Readers, which led to Ford's
broader passion for collecting the entire mosaic of American life.
Around the year of McGuffey's birth, 1800, the Federal era of design was
at its peak. In Salem, Massachusetts, a furniture maker named Samuel
Mclntyre summed up the Federal theme perfectly in a handsome Hepplewhite sideboard with skillfully carved grapes, leaves, baskets, and rosettes.
The museum also has a Recamier Grecian sofa attributed to Duncan Phyfe,
made between 1810 and 1820 in New York. The full force of America's
otism,
revived flirtation with French design
ably
made by the
of gilded eagles, rosettes,
skill,
is
clear in a c. 1815 card table. Prob-
Honore Lannuier, it is a stirring spectacle
and animal-paw feet. With such extravagant
gifted Charles
the Empire style was ushered in by trend-setting
who had no way
New
York masters,
knowing that their final orders would lead straight to
those Empire adaptations seized upon (and, critics say, sadly degraded) by
of
pioneering factories in the antebellum age.
Not
all
the Federal era's output was of such
confident expansion
demanded
bon
ton.
sturdy furniture of
unsung cabinetmakers, often working
all
That time of selfkinds, and many
in walnut, created a
body of early
65
^3^x^hJ!^;z-4
nineteenth-century furniture from which collectors
Any
still
choose many desir-
Americana would be delighted to find a duplicate of the museum's blanket chest from mountainous Hardy County, Virginia, made by Godfrey Wilkin, a man of obviously irrepressible drollery.
The front of this big, complex walnut and pine chest bears the self-congratulating legend "WEL DON" (twice) and then the vertical commands "read
THES up" and "and read THES DOWN." We even know the first owner:
"JACOB WILKIN HIS CHEAST." Jacob must have been pleased.
The new century's rapid improvement in foundry technology began paving the way for a dramatic upgrading in household hardware. First came a
proliferation of variants on the original Franklin stove. Despite the design's
original drawbacks, the combined Franklin name and fireplace-stove idea
enjoyed wide appeal (as it does, indeed, in our own time) and was essayed
endlessly by various founders. The museum displays an I8I6 Franklin by
James Wilson of Poughkeepsie, New York, who was first to patent under the
Franklin name. A Federal design with an eagle, stars, urn-shaped brass finials and pierced brass fender, the Franklin sprouts a towering conical heat
chamber, shaped like a wizard's cap, whose function was to trap and radiate
heat in the lucky owner's parlor. Its efficiency was doubtful, but it was a
resplendent creation for the hearth, and something to brag about. It was
clear proof of a manufacturer's willingness to experiment, and a customer's
able pieces.
fancier of
Opposite.
As
iron founders
enhanced
their skills early in
the nineteenth century, there was a great urge to create
more
efficient
home
heat sources. Early efforts, such as this
James Wilson, struggled
improvement over the regular fireplace
1816 Franklin fireplace unit by
attain marginal
to
inclination to try anything once.
Foundryman Wilson's
refulgent Franklin
was not the stove of
Above. By 1845,
destiny.
Vastly improved free-standing box stoves, descendants of the eighteenth-
century six-plate stoves beloved of German immigrants,
bers of
warmed the chamAmerica during the administrations of John Quincy Adams and
Andrew
New
Jackson.
York State became the center of the stove industry; Troy alone
counted some two hundred stove manufacturers prior to the Civil War. In
becoming
a factory center, the
Hudson River city symbolized the
Industrial
Revolution's rapid shift from scattered, small, traditional craft shops.
Moreover, Troy's iron founders had a handy
new resource for technical
mation: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, founded in 1824,
oldest school of engineering
and
is
infor-
America's
science.
Modern stoves are drab imitations of their nineteenth-century ancestors.
Fashion demanded that parlor or heating stoves, whether coal- or woodburning, complement the architectural and decorative themes of the day
fruits, morning glories, and little
and M. Peckham parlor stove from Utica. Virtually every shape of the Rococo revival writhes across its black surfaces.
Another of the museum's stoves, Troy-made by G.
Eddy in 1853, sums
up the Gothic revival movement in its stars, diamonds, arches, and castle
crenellations. Precisely the same well-developed design themes appear elsewhere in the same era, in seemingly unrelated artifacts like the museum's
Consider the ensemble of grapes, roses,
girls
adorning the 1845
J.
S.
67
whenJ.S.&M. Peckham
of Utica,
New
York, patented this elaborate parlor stove, such units
worked well
68
patented in America in 1815, cook stoves
opposite.
First
appeared
in quantity in the 1830s
and
forties, gradually
displacing the fireplace and hearth for household cooking.
good early example
coal or wood.
Its
is
the 1832 Stanley, which burned
four-hole cooking surface revolved with a
crank, thus permitting quick adjustment of heat. Twin col-
umns supported
the oval, cylindrical oven and vented the
smoke
Left.
Vose
& Company of Albany,
New
York, patented the
elaborate parlor stove called the Temple in 1854
1
toy
banks and machine
1853 by
J.
encircling the flue,
Like
many
tools.
Another antebellum Troy
stove, patented in
C. Fletcher, features a huge round wreath above the firebox and
all
supported by an equally
leafy,
sinuously
bowed
base.
of its brethren, the stove was dished out at the top to hold a con-
tainer of humidifying
perfume or water. The museum's stove collection
the best in the world, and nowhere are the examples richer and
is
more exu-
berant than in the wonderful parlor stoves of America's early Victorian
period.
The museum's oldest full-fledged cook stove was patented in 1832 by M.
N. Stanley of New York City. Stanley's ingenious creation grafted a large
rotating top with four lids onto a firebox, and vented itself through two ver-
69
70
tical
columns
Odd
as the stove
which supported and heated
at the rear,
may seem,
a cyhndrical oven.
heralded the clear outline of
it
all
future cook
Opposite. This "friendship" quilt was
square
whose shapes would
stoves,
nearly a century
last
and
and electricity.
Acceptance of the cook stove was gradual, and
persist into the era of
gas
average
American
ended with
still
a rapid shift to
changes presaged a new era
brightly painted
as late as the 1840s the
cooked tm the hearth. But the
began
first
half of the 1800s
newly improved stoves. Meanwhile, other
in the kitchen. Light, efficient tinware
replacing heavier,
pans early in the century. By 1825, helpful
often
more expensive iron pots and
and popular books on cooking
and home management appeared with increasing frequency. One of the
best was written by an aristocratic Virginia matron, Mrs. Mary Randolph,
whose The Virginia Housewife, or, Methodical Cook appeared in 1824. It was
a national best-seller for
more than
of 1825 she presented her
was
own
seventy-five years; in her second edition
excellent design for a refrigerator.
The home
definitely attracting attention.
Aesthetics played a large role in the acceptance of another ubiquitous
household device, the sewing machine, which, contrary to folklore, was not
invented by Isaac Singer. Like
many comparable
eighteenth century) are obscure, and
American
Elias
Howe made an
its
devices,
its
origins (in the
development was by committee.
important contribution around 1840
he built a pioneering machine that provided a basis
for things to
when
come.
Competition was intense by the 1850s. Sewing machines, and the strategy
to sell
them, provided one of the
first
major battlegrounds of capitalist con-
sumerism. Curiously, there was some formidable
machine
for reasons
beyond
its
necessarily
woman's function was more
domesticity, wherein
initial resistance to
A machine
most ancient
roles
in the
home would
slave to the needle
that sewing
machine
on such
users
and that they would gain
uplifting
examples
in
men? Ducking
would benefit
leisure
time
their health via lessened drudgery,
for rest
It
Innovations in weaving wool fabrics
tition
volleys of
subjects, manufacturers cleverly advertised
for their children.
an attachment
at
woman's
what way? Would it affect
and refinement and
was a potent and
came soon
for setting
effective appeal.
after the first floods of
cheap, printed cotton calico. In 1804, French innovator].
fected
than
apogee of elaborate
certainly alter one of
but
her femininity or corrupt her moral superiority to
moralistic gibberish
its
the
Victorian cult of
precisely defined
any other point in Western history, was approaching
refinement.
The
stiff price.
M. Jacquard per-
power looms that automatically guided the repeof a given pattern. Such a technique did not immediately displace the
ancient
home
the end of the
for
tradition of carding, spinning, dying,
first
and weaving, but by
half of the nineteenth century such activities had gen-
erally disappeared. Later, in the fabric-short
Confederate
states,
women
dusted off their grandmothers' spinning wheels and looms with a resigned
sense of pioneering.
The museum's
collection of antebellum fabrics covers
made
delphia area in about 1844; each block
is
in the Phila-
eleven inches
72
the
range of styles and techniques.
full
tern dating around 1820
is
a mosaic
One familiar American coverlet pat-
weave of blue wool and natural cotton,
About two decades later, a promuseum's handsome Jacquard coverlet of red
quatrefoil medallion alternating with a diamond,
the once-familiar "summer-winter" pattern.
fessional weaver created the
and indigo wool, with
each containing
as
women's
flowers.
fashion,
is
The technique
of roller printing on cotton, as well
illustrated in a striking dress of navy blue, yellow,
and
gold print.
Quilting, sometimes perceived as one of the last bastions of
today,
The museum's quilt collection
ton.
handwork
was paradoxically stimulated by the avalanche of machine-made cotis
a rare treasury of Americana.
"friendship" quilt of 1844 contains forty-nine squares bearing the
friends
and contributors. Some
undulating
big
quilts contain one-of-a-kind designs, as in
Susan McCord's 1880 masterpiece from Indiana, with
strips of
One
names of
its
five-inch-wide
floral displays.
In men's fashions, trousers replaced knee breeches,
and boots paradoxi-
buckled shoes, which had been very comfortable
cally superseded low-cut,
despite their neither-left-nor-right construction.
The
accretion of years
brought changes in cut and silhouette of coats and trousers, a century-long
and
proliferation of hats,
a free attitude toward waistcoats, as expressed in
the museum's star vest specimens; a sporting vest of red plush, another of
embroidered moosehair.
when the Industrial Revolution struck the carpet
American carpets were woven by hand. Ten years later, a
Before the 1840s,
industry, all
power-driven carpet loom was producing at
flat-woven carpet per day.
The
intricately patterned floor coverings
many. Such carpeting came in
any
size,
least thirty yards of ingrain,
plummeted, and
price, naturally,
colorful,
were suddenly within the reach of
strips that
could be joined to cover space of
often wall-to-wall.
'oward the end of the eighteenth century
become apparent
that
it
had
some glazed earthenware
#/ve
vessels were dispensing lead poisoning to their users.
One type of reliable pottery with a clear safety record
was stoneware, which had been manufactured in Europe since the Renaissance.
German and
English potters introduced salt-glazed stoneware to the
and after 1785 there was a conscious
Most production was concentrated in the Northeast,
was used exclusively on stoneware. Yet a curious anomaly
colonies early in the eighteenth century,
effort to
encourage
where salt-glazing
its
use.
occurred in the South, where an entirely different technique
or other alkaline material
found only in the Orient.
whether
plays
somehow emerged.
It
isn't
known whether
using
wood
ash
there was a connection or
isolated southern potters reinvented the technique.
handsome examples of this southern
Elsewhere, the process was
The museum
dis-
style.
73
Opposite.
American porcelain maker William Ellis Tucker
made this soft-paste pitcher in 1828
of Philadelphia
Above. This earthenware pitcher,
the Salamander
made
c.
1836-42, came from
Jersey. It was
Works of Woodbridge, New
for a hotel or tavern called Kidd's
Troy House
Most stoneware, however, resembles the museum's Liberty
New
1807 in South Amboy,
New
Jersey, or
the
little
made
jug
in
1805 Crolius inkwell from
has the
name and
New
address of a
water.
Cobalt was
went
is
combination of clay and
form of embellishment on the
gray,
hard ware;
and endured the necessarily high firing temperaSuch stoneware reached its peak of popularity about 1840, yet would
a little
ture.
a favorite
York City grocer and a cobalt slip dec-
flight. ("Slip"
a long way,
be used well into the twentieth century as a standard vessel for food storage
and preparation.
Moravian immigrants brought Germanic traditions of pottery to North
Carolina in the middle eighteenth century. A deep-dish example from
about 1800 displays a flattened rim decorated in
by scrolls and leaves.
feathers in green, red,
with a tulip surrounded
slip
nine-inch-tall tankard bears tulips and stylized
and yellow slip. A Moravian pitcher is covered with
and dots in yellow, brown, and green.
a design of capricious scrolls
The Moravians' northern
cousins, the
Germans
of Pennsylvania,
made
slip-decorated redware as well, but also employed the scratched or "sgraf-
technique in decorating. An eleven-inch pie plate dated 1818, from
Bucks County, seems the very picture of Pennsylvania decoration: its
maker, Andrew Headman, scratched in an assured eight-pointed star surrounded by tulips and other blossoms.
Craftsmen enjoyed writing all sorts of legends on their wares. Some were
fito"
some were obviously by commercial
personal expressions;
redware plate,
"Cheap
for
c.
1825,
is
slip
request.
One
big
decorated with the provocative message,
Cash/only Vi." Another
is
emblazoned, "Plum Pudding."
stoneware jug carries the legend, in a slightly tipsy hand, "Here's to
Good
Old Rum/Drink Her Down."
The nineteenth century
delivered a rich harvest of glass bottles and
Masonic emblems caparison a deep amethyst flask made in New England around 1820. A greenish-yellow, violin-shaped pint flask from Pittsflasks.
burgh
recalls the days of 1835. Still
color: the c. 1836 bottle
glass. Its patriotic
c.
one
is
considered unique in
eagle, stars, shield,
1850, from Lancaster,
New
steam locomotive
and
is
flag,
molded
York, with the toast, "Suc-
A baffling Philadelphia-made quart bottle of 1851
uniformed image of Louis Kossuth, an exiled Hungarian
side,
Steam
ornaments include an
early
cess to the Railroad."
plays a
another pint
& Hay of New Jersey made of opaque
OUR COUNTRY." An
and the motto, "FOR
into a blue flask,
from Coffin
dis-
patriot,
on
while the other side displays a side-wheeled steamer labeled "U.S.
Frigate Mississippi."
A wealth of commercial and utility jars and bottles speaks to the viewer
with near-universal appeal.
Some
still
bear ancient paper labels, such as
the pepper sauce bottle of about 1850, a Gothic shape of aquamarine glass.
Perhaps the contents
bottled by Boston's
W K. Lewis were too hot
for
75
American
dates from 1820 to 1860.
slip
York, or the big six-gallon crock of the mid-nineteenth century that
oration of a free-form eagle in
white
Opposite. This group of
is
The
lead-glazed earthenware
dishes in front and at
left
are
decorated; the Pennsylvania-made dish at upper right
ornamented by the
sgraffito
technique
76
human consumption,
remains are
for the dried
fate befell the cargo of
still
in the bottle.
No
such
another bottle, which cleverly reproduces a log
chimney comprising the neck, through which was decanted
"e. G. BOOZ's old cabin whiskey." But most bottles of the
Civil War era were more restrained, even elegant, such as the antebellum
cabin,
its
(around 1860)
pickle bottle that richly displays the features of high Victorian Gothic.
Pittsburgh was a major center of cut and engraved glass production from
about 1820 to 1850. That early talent
with a deep cut panel and
flutes,
Clinton in the bottom and his
is
and
initials
confirmed by a glass tumbler of 1825
a jewel-like sulfide bust of
engraved on the
side.
The
De Witt
glass
was
one of a presentation set for the popular New York politician celebrating the
Erie Canal opening. An elaborately cut Pittsburgh punch bowl dates from
about the same time, as does a heavy blown and cut decanter with applied
rings. Pittsburgh also was in the vanguard of the first major application of
mass production
to the glass industry
pressing glass into molds.
nique enabled glassmakers to provide inexpensive, matched
The
sets of
tech-
ware
for
and business alike. The clever, inventive
production spirit thus released was even applied to windowpanes, like the
museum's c. 1840 high Gothic five-by-seven-inch pane from Bakewell of
the
first
time, a
boon
to society
Pittsburgh.
It
was the Boston and Sandwich Glass Company of Massachusetts whose
name "Sandwich" glass came to mean almost all lacy pressed
glass. Plainly, much good pressed glass was made by other manufacturers,
although Sandwich tended to get the credit. The museum's wealth of
shortened
authentic Sandwich-made glass includes a showy covered dish,
with complex Gothic designs.
tiny
cup
plate, less
diameter, pictures the just-finished Bunker Hill
c.
1830,
than four inches in
monument
at Boston,
and
wondered why so
knobs, the Sandwich
gallantly adds, "Finished by the Ladies 1841." If you ever
works, with
much American Empire-period furniture has glass
many others, turned them out in quantity.
A pair from about
1830 reveals the ingenuity of Sandwich's great founder,
Deming
The need
for
lamps meant good business
Jarves.
for the glass industry. Pioneers
like Thomas Cains, at his South Boston Flint Glass Works, turned out
handsome whale-oil lamps by a combination of free-blowing with pattern
molding. A technique called "pillar molding" came a bit later in the nineteenth century, and produced such museum standouts as a pair of c. 1845
green vases, more than a foot high.
With Ohio in the lead, the Midwest developed surprisingly early as a
glassmaking center. An anonymous early nineteenth-century Ohioan had
the skill to make a handsome, aquamarine one-gallon bottle with thirty
glo-Irish style.
would-be porcelain makers must have envied the far
greater success of the nation's potters and glassmakers. In 1770, two Philadelphians had attempted the eighteenth century's only commercial output
first
77
The
pitcher at
lett is
An-
attributed to England,
while the smaller one probably came from Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
Top.
Three pitchers
illustrate early
century American styling.
and middle nineteenth-
The example
at left, pattern-
molded with twenty-four ribs, was probably made in the
Midwest, 1815-35. The center pitcher, footed and loop
decorated, probably was made in New Jersey, 1830-70. The
larger amethyst, pillar-molded
in capacity
swirled ribs.
America's
Opposite. Both these cut-glass pitchers are incised in
example
may have originated
about two quarts
in Pittsburgh,
1840-70
Bottom. This oval covered compote of pressed pattern glass
was made by Gillinder & Sons of Philadelphia, 1876-80.
Originally termed "Pioneer," it is now called "Westward-
Ho" by
collectors
These figured
flasks came from the eastern United States
1815-55. Themes of these pint and quart containers
included patriotism, politics, fraternity, and even pride in
corn distribution
in
80
of porcelain, though production ended after two years. In 1826, another
Philadelphian, William Ellis Tucker,
ful, try at
making
soft-paste,
mounted
and more success-
a major,
bone-ash porcelain.
He
followed the styles of
the enormously popular English and French porcelain of the day, and
made
and
foot,
such deft pieces as the museum's 1828 pitcher with a gilded
and flowers of
blue, red,
and
The
gold.
collection of Tucker's
standing, presenting clear proof of his quality and
lip
work
is
out-
But despite the
skill.
manifest abilities of Tucker and later American porcelain makers in the
middle nineteenth century, their countrymen preferred to import from the
Continent and Britain.
About
1825,
on schedule with many other
and manufactures,
crafts
The
versmithing was overtaken by the Industrial Revolution.
first
sil-
major
change replaced the very heart of the craft, which had always been the
hammering of a shape from sheet silver. The smith customarily and
noisily
"raised" hollow vessels on small anvils called "stakes." But a new
technique called "spinning" used the lathe to accomplish the same end in
a fraction of the time. Electroplating arrived in the 1840s.
When
that tech-
nique was combined with mass-produced base-metal castings and stamp-
matched
ings,
sets of beautiful
The new technique
last.
Sheffield plate
silver
tudes. Pewter's uses
far
and
styles paralleled
ware
for the multi-
those of silver, but the handy alloy
silver
through the new
spinning process around 1825, and meanwhile was improved and hardened
in a
new
generation of metallurgy called "britannia." Ironically, early elec-
troplaters discovered that britannia
was
a perfect vehicle
on which
to plate
silver,
and thus pewter's
silver.
After the 1840s, pewter virtually disappeared from the scene.
final
form was swallowed up in the rush
museum's collection of American and English pewter
is
among
for plated
The
the world's
best, affording a definitive study of such pieces as early seventeenth-century
flagons to a tea set by Josiah Danforth
made
rashing chords
was
first
in
about 1830.
on the piano
(or pianoforte, as
Cz
nineteenth century began.
The harpsichord was
Another instrument on its way
obscurity was the serpent, part woodwind and part brass, which despite
already passe.
bass part since the 1600s.
it
called) heralded the future of music as the
unfortunate (and altogether descriptive)
The museum's
name had been
oldest
to
its
playing the orchestral
example of this curious
instru-
made of wood, leather, and brass, with
six fingerholes and three flat keys. Another English import, dating from 1840,
shows the rapid sophistication trfkey action, as it was made with fourteen brass
ment
keys.
is
an English serpent from
c.
1800,
Two examples
of nineteenth-century
American
stoneware display an exuberant, earthy character.
jug at left
The rum
dates from 1865-85; the water cooler from 1835-
Above. These two graceful pieces were made hy William
and copper.
cheaper and easier to work. Pewter followed
Opposite.
60
quickly drove out an earlier mechanical process
which combined
also drove out pewter, hitherto indispensable as
It
was
but inexpensive tableware were possible at
Ellis
Tucker in about 1830. Despite such native talent,
however, Americans would prefer European porcelain for
many decades
to
come
<i-'
r: .i
//^r/X/
M/A
,^
..r
ikr
B.limHn<IU>J
Woodwinds
made and
of the early nineteenth century were handsomely
rather modem-looking; to the casual observer, the chief difference
their construction materials, typically a
is
in
mellow blonde boxwood, trimmed
and brass, with brass keys. Two good museum examples are a c. 1812
made by Uzal Miner in Hartford, Connecticut, and a c. 1840 clarinet
in B-flat, made by Graves & Co. with great sophistication.
The nineteenth century began with clarinets and oboes playing the
musical lead, and with wind instrument technology much as it had been for
more than a century. But enormous changes were coming. The keyed bugle,
in ivory
oboe,
arriving after 1810, had a dramatic influence in at last permitting the
soprano brass to play the melody. Keyed and valved brass instruments
became the
rage in the 1830s,
bands. By 1834
came
the
first
and with them came the
known trumpet
rise
of all-brass
battle (at Niblo's Pleasure
Garden in New York), a genre that would create almost hysterical excitement. Soon America had a new class of heroes, its virtuoso brass soloists.
The keyed
bugle was their instrument of choice, with
ophicleide a strong second.
its
Handsome Edward (Ned)
gloriously forth in 1835 at the
larger relative the
Kendall,
who
burst
head of the twenty-man Boston Brass Band,
was a famous antebellum horn man. The museum, which has the world's
finest collection of
American
brass instruments (anchored
on the famous
D. S. Pillsbury Collection), has the actual horns used by the Boston Brass
Band
in
its
verted to
electrifying debut, after
which most bands
in the country con-
all brass.
Not only were the new-style horns impressive in performance, they
looked resplendent. Many were made of copper, like Ned Kendall's 1837
model by Graves & Co., but others employed brass, silver, and even solid
gold. Manufacturers strove to secure the endorsements of the new class of
hero-maestro, and admirers lavished the soloists with presentation instruments. Some of the finest keyed bugles were made by E. G. Wright of Boston. The museum displays several Wrights, one of them, c. 1850, made ot
silver
with a beautifully engraved
bell garland.
But the ultimate
is
a solid
Already, by that year, the day of the key system for brass was growing
horns were becoming popular. In 1856, a great battle
occurred in Salem, Massachusetts, between Kendall on the keyed bugle and
Patrick
upstart,
Gilmore on the valve cornet.
Gilmore, seeking
judged a draw.
It
was
a classic case of the
young
was
to overturn the great veteran; the contest
When Kendall died
in 1861, his old
band played
at his funeral
while the master's silver bugle lay atop his coffin.
The
popularity of brass bands can be explained in terms of the vast range
of events where they played: circuses, dances and halls, concerts, funerals,
military
The
1866 by Hall
and firemen's musters, pleasure gardens, parades, political events,
and picnics. Star bandsmen made good incomes and traveled
theatricals,
widely.
83
solid-gold presentation trumpet
& Quinby
dolph Hall (second from
brother David (far
left)
was made
in
RhoHall and his
of Boston and presented to
left)
by his friends.
were prominent musicians and in-
strument makers. (Lithograph, c. 1855, courtesy Lyme
Historians, Inc., Lyme, New Hampshire)
Above. American-made woodwinds ot the early nineteenth
century include (from
flute, c.
left): fife, c.
1812; flageolet, c. 1845;
c. 1840; and bassoon, c. 1814. Until
American bands consisted mostly of woodwinds
1840; clarinet,
the 1840s,
gold example of 1850.
short. Valve-operated
Opposite.
84
By the Civil War's outbreak, brass hands were armed with
a multitude of
sophisticated valve instruments. For a time, "overshoulder" horns were the
sound backward into the following marchers. The
museum's musical collection is rich in many areas, but from the period
around 1865 it is overpowering. We can see precisely how a band was
rage, blasting their
equipped, with such instruments as a brass Isaac Fiske valve bugle, a John
E Stratton alto horn, a German silver baritone horn by J. Lathrop Allen,
and
a brass
and German
silver
America's fascination with
tuba by Moses Slater.
its
town bands
lasted
throughout the nine-
teenth century, and well into the twentieth. Popular as they were, brass
bands and their instruments did not supplant other types of music. At big
dances, a brass band would alternate with a strings and reeds ensemble. But
it
was
in helping
produce music
for the
home
that
American manufacturers
had their greatest opportunity. Pianos, pump organs, music boxes, dulcimers, guitars, banjos; such instruments of mechanical ingenuity were very
One
important in the pre-electronic age.
touching artifact
is
a guitar
once
used by Stephen Foster, a spruce and rosewood instrument of the 1840s
made by C.
F.
Martin of New York.
A grand harmonicon
(or set of musical
In America, the minstrel show was an enormously popular entertainment form, beginning in the
1840s, peaking in the fifties and sixties, hut enduring wel
opposite.
glasses) further suggests the diversity of nineteenth-century music.
The
reed organ and piano collection, blending furniture with the appa-
ratus of musicianship,
music
gallery.
is
the most beautiful display in the museum's large
Reed, pump, or parlor organs came in with the nineteenth
and enjoyed more than a hundred years of popularity. By any exacting standard, their sound alternated between an asthmatic wheeze and an
century,
insipid whine. Yet they were cheaper
play,
than pianos, and not a
A degree of easy fun came in working the stops.
pianos, reed organs could be
meager
to magnificent.
made
in almost
There was even
accordion, that went by the grand
1840 Bartlet from Concord,
left
let
has both kinds; the rarest
Hampshire, with ivory button
himself go in producing a case for
ican cabinetry.
An
Peloubet, Pelton
& Co. supports
estals, all of
it
is
an
keys.
limited, the
maker
at the highest level of
Amer-
early nineteenth-century
its
instru-
forearm, while both hands played
While the musical performance of any reed organ was
could
Unlike
rooms from
a rocker lap organ, a sort of semi-
The museum
New
size, to suit
name "elbow melodeon." The
ment was rocked or pumped with the
the button or keyboard action.
any
New
classically plain
York-made organ by
box on
lyre-styled ped-
rosewood. In 1869, the Empire Organ Co. of Kalamazoo,
Michigan, produced a Rococo organ to rival the skill of a London cabinetmaker in the years of George III, a cabriole-legged masterpiece of rosewood
and curly maple, with
a six-octave range. In the later Victorian Renais-
sance revival and Eastlake eras, major organs grew pompously in tiered
lay-
ers festooned
with fretwork and turnings, but always to high standards of
famous Fort Wayne Organ Co. specimen dominates the
cabinetry.
scores.
collection.
85
Those elements
made: violin,
phen
c.
are
&.
present here, and
American
1860; bones,
1900. Ste
c.
De Banjo was
This square piano
made by Gibson
all
1840; hanjo,
Foster's Ring
Aboi'e,
bit harder to
once you mastered the technique of alternately pumping the carpet-
covered foot pedals.
into the twentieth century- Crucial to the minstrel show';
success were hanjo, fiddle, hones, and lively musica
in a
Davis of
published in 1851
Duncan
New
c.
Phyte-style case was
York City,
c.
1820
opposite.
necticut,
The wheels of time: Eli Terry of Plymouth, Conmade this thirty-hour, weight-driven movement
movements were used
and scroll mantel
clocks from about 1820 through 1840, when they were replaced by more satisfactory brass movements
in
about 1820. Such time and
extensively by
many makers
strike
ot pillar
Of all
the instruments enjoyed by our nineteenth-century forebears, the
and piano have the most relevance in our time. The
museum's piano collection reveals the rich variety that was available.
Pianos of the late Federal-early Empire period were small, but what a
violin, guitar,
wealth of
went
skill
into the execution ot such instruments as the
Phyfe (works by Davis and Gibson) of 1820!
Its
mahogany case
is
Duncan
accented
by a pierced fallboard, and satinwood and brass inlays; pedestals are heavily
The
carved and connected by a turned, reeded stretcher.
framed in wood,
piano's works are
what was termed the "English square action" of
in
sixty-
eight notes.
Pianos grew larger with the development of
1850s, the instrument
had reached the massive
heavy thumping ot the Civil War
of Boston
potamus.
is
typical,
The
with mighty, turned
key total was
Clockmaker
An
years.
now up
and
Eli Terry
full
iron frames. By the
scale that
1855
legs that
would endure the
&
Co. piano
would support a hippoGilbert
to eighty-five.
his slightly later
Connecticut contemporary
Seth Thomas spent the early years ot the nineteenth century producing so
many good, inexpensive mantel
clocks that soon the grand old
tall
case
column and cornice,
banjo, ogee: the clocks ot New England's factories surged across America
on waves of Yankee peddlers. One Seth Thomas column and cornice clock,
clock was rendered almost extinct. Pillar and
with
heavy "degraded Empire" look,
its
early Victorian
to
middle
class.
scroll,
offers a clear
Elsewhere, very few
tall
view of the taste of the
case clocks continued
be made, including dwarfs of approximately half
such the
which seemed
size
museum's 1820 example by Connecticut's Reuben Tjwer
to lose the grace, as well as the majesty, of the tall originals.
echo
ot the benchcrafted tall case era
comes
in a gigantic c.
as
A tinal raucous
1850 Soap Hol-
low, Pennsylvania, cUick ot painted pine.
watchmaking trade, manutacturers power stamped their moving
and by 1870 when knurled stems replaced the ancient keywind system
tactory standardizatii)n dominated the industry. But individual crattsmen endured, particularly those who made complex chronometers
and beautiful cases. In watchmaking, as in few other crafts, skill at the
bench survived the Industrial Revolution relatively intact.
On the farm, change arrived on the point of an excellent new cast-iron
In the
parts by 1850,
pk)w. Several fledgling manufacturers
cessful
was Jethro
Thomas
eastern
Wood
of Scipio,
produced them, but the most suc-
New
York,
Jefferson for his contributions to
American farmers could
till
who had
the grace to credit
improved pK)w design. By 1820,
their tields with reasonable satisfactiiin.
But the newly opening Midwest pre.sented a new problem: although the
black .soil gummed up the moldman. Responding to that challenge was young
blacksmith John Deere, newly moved troiii Vermont roCJrand Detour, Illinois. In 1838, Deere created a steel-tipped, pulishcd iron plow of beautiful
prairie lands
were
flat
board of every plow
86
and
tertile, their rich
known
to
87
simplicity,
much
like a
smoothly curving
hroke the Great Plains.
flat
diamond, and with
The museum's example
it
farmers
dates from Deere's early
he moved to Moline in 1847 and, armed with newly plentiful
from Pittsburgh, became one of the giants of agricultural
career, before
steel plate
manufacturing.
But
if
better plows increased the acreage
cycle's other end, harvest,
one
man
could
till,
the farming
remained a great bottleneck. The pattern of
mechanization was such that
as a
new
type of machine solved one problem,
other innovators leaped to improve on something
small grains with scythe and sickle
else. Harvesting hay and
demanded such timing and manpower
upper limit of crop acreage and animal population.
museum's collection of cutting tools, hay rakes, and turning
forks, and imagine the day of a field hand at harvest time. Haymaking,
which was particularly onerous, received America's first substitution of
horse for human power around 1800, with adoption of the drag hay rake.
Soon, a pair of clever Pennsylvanians invented the revolving hay rake,
called the "American flip-flop," one of the great labor-saving devices of all
time. One man and a horse could now do the work of eight field hands. The
museum's wooden-toothed example of this clever machine dates from about
as to control the farm's
Look
at the
1840.
Shifting the
of high
drama
human harvest burden to horse and machine reached a point
in the 1830s.
On
his farm in Virginia's
near Staunton, young Cyrus Hall
cessful grain reaper.
McCormick
Shenandoah
McCormick demonstrated
the
Valley
first
suc-
inherited the project from his father,
who
it up after two decades of tinkering. But after his initial
young McCormick's dilatoriness about seeking a patent allowed
had wearily given
success,
Obed Hussey
of Baltimore to register
reaper experimenters:
first,
Enoch Ambler
of
in 1833.
New
The
age seethed with
York produced his spike-
in 1834, and promptly mowed down one hundred acres
Montgomery County hay. That same machine, now displayed in the
museum, is believed to be America's oldest surviving harvester, a relic of
wheeled contraption
of
incalculable significance. Apparently,
Ambler
or his backers,
who
little
financial benefit accrued to
sold only a few machines.
By about 1850, reapers were mechanically
successful.
efficient
McCormick, whose machine combined
all
and commercially
the right elements of
on the prairies than in the
Shenandoah bluegrass, and moved to Chicago in 1847 to make the
famous machine that .solved the ancient dilemmas of harvesting.
But many others helped, and they are represented in the museum's rich
collection of mid-nineteenth-century farm equipment: Champion,
Empire, Kirby's, New Yorker, Peerless, and Triumph. They weighed around
1,000 pounds each, and cost about $100. Most could cut from twelve to fifteen acres of grain per day, compared to less than one by a man with a
scythe. Manny's Patent Reaper of 18S3 is a good example of the reliable
design, correctly foresaw a vaster future market
rolling
equipment available before the Civil War. The Manny was a rugged and
popular machine whose production totals, in only two years, forged past
McCormick promptly sued
those of the industry leader.
for patent infringe-
ment. Laboring in Manny's successful defense was a prairie lawyer
commencing
ham
second
his
effort at a political career:
just
ex-Congressman Abra-
Lincoln.
Lawsuits were merely part of doing business in the rough-and-tumble
world of mid-century manufacturing. Another major case
collection's prized
New
is
recalled in the
Yorker reaper of 1852, one of the most successful
That it bears a strong resemblance to McCormick's designs
may not have been entirely coincidental, for at that time
its manufacturer, Seymour
Morgan of Brockport, New York, was licensed
by McCormick to make his "Virginia Reaper." McCormick was successful
in throttling the 1852 New Yorker, whereupon the company brought out a
new, slightly more original model in 1853. It was a big success for almost
early machines.
of the late 1840s
&
twenty
years.
ndrew Jackson's riflemen shocked the
the accuracy of
CliNew
American
rifles at
British
with
the Battle of
Orleans. Meanwhile, the frontier of the
Old
Northwest was vanishing. As the novels of James
Fenimore Cooper began to flow, the legend of the brave, buckskin-clad rifleman
raged into vogue, creating a fresh
demand
for long rifles.
ornamentation, with more inlays of brass and coin
hex
signs.
Masonic emblems,
across the curly
They grew
hearts, acorns, stars, eagles,
fancier in
Deer, horses, dogs,
silver.
and
initials
maple stocks of early nineteenth-century American
marched
rifles like
museum even has one gunsmith's special set of
patterns for shaping such a menagerie. Many guns so garnished were clearly creparade of folk-art icons. Tlie
ated for ceremony
ish officers, after
American
it
rifle
more than
the
War of
actual use. But at least
1812,
bought long
of the handsomest in the
than average
museum
for its time, for as big
Brit-
fit
and
polish, but
use.
is
1830 attributed to Grant Scott of Coshocton.
ier
some duly impressed
and took them home. The
might not be the equal of British weapons in
was marvelously accurate and pleasant to
One
rifles
an Ohio-made
Its
rifle
of about
.52 caliber was a bit heav-
game receded with the advance of
more suitable for squirrel or var-
settlement, bores tended to shrink to sizes
mints.
The
Scott
rifle is
also unusual in having a walnut, rather than the
standard curly maple, stock. Lavishly bedizened with silver inlays, the gun
is
and patch box.
and the rarest of all
rare in flaunting also a silver buttplate, trigger guard,
Rarer than American
rifles
are
American
pistols,
is
matched pair. The museum's superb brace of .44 caliber twin flintlocks
made in the Bedford County style by Peter White of Uniontown, Pennsylvania, dates c. 1820. Each piece is skillfully set with fifteen engraved silver
a
inlays.
89
90
But such bench-made guns were almost things of the past. Gunmaker
John Hall was already taking the final step to a modern manufacturing process, and in a sense completing the broader basis for the Industrial Revolution.
Armed
with a government contract, Hall in 1819 established a
vate factory in the
shadow
of the big
government armory
Harpers
at
pri-
Ferry,
and produced breechloading muskets from parts that were comwithout hand fitting, finishing the phase begun by
Whitney. The museum displays two Hall muskets, tangible links with a
Virginia,
pletely interchangeable
Eli
singularly innovative development.
Apart from a few
is
significant exceptions, the
civilian, or sporting.
a preoccupation as
The need
museum's weapon collection
and straighter was
Gunsmiths had labored to make
to shoot faster, farther,
America headed
west.
successful repeaters for centuries but were frustrated by crude systems of
loading and ignition. After 1800, Scottish clergyman Alexander Forsythe
compounded a priming substance that would explode on impact. The
museum demonstrates that turning point with a rare Forsythe pistol.
After I8I5, the famous percussion cap was introduced by several inven-
and that little copper detonator soon displaced the flintlock and
opened the way for efficient, deadly repeaters. Among the first to manufacture was Samuel Colt of Hartford, Connecticut, who began making revolvtors,
ers in Paterson,
New Jersey,
mate
gun
1842,
desires of
in 1836.
The
collectors, for the
and "Patersons" were, and
specimen, rare even
first
are, few.
for a Paterson
Colts have long been the
ulti-
flamboyant Colt went bankrupt in
The museum
an 1837
revolving
displays a supernal
rifle.
With such
wonder, a rifleman could get oft eight shots before reloading.
Colt recovered his fortunes with the help of the settlement of Texas and
the
demands of the Mexican War. He
established his celebrated factory at
Hartford, producing a torrent of the potent "equalizers" that, for
all
their
stormy propensities, were also handsome examples of industrial design, and
among
the most successful early precision products of completely inter-
changeable parts.
The museum shows
wide selection of models and
shapes, from intimidating "Dragoon" .44s to graceful "belt" models.
Colt could not supply
all
the nation's
and other creative gunmakers had
demand
for
newfangled weaponry,
ideas. Colt's percussion
system was
loaded from the cylinder's front, with paper cartridges; Smith and Wesson
OppoiUe.
of Springfield, Massachusetts, outfoxed Colt by patenting cylinders bored
long
all
the way through, thus capturing for a critical time (the Civil
the market for revolvers that fired metallic cartridges.
in the 1850s,
Such
War years)
loads, invented
were clearly the future's ammunition, though
initially
they
were feeble and unreliable. Another early experimenter with metal car-
was the Volcanic Repeating Arms Co. of New Haven, Connecticut,
maker of the first lever-action gun. The museum displays a Volcanic levertridges
action pistol of 1854.
Not
surprisingly, in the fast-moving early days of
Yankee big industry, talent cross-pollinated. Both Horace Smith and Dan-
classic by
rifle (lelt)
an unknown hand, the American
dates from about 1820. Also
unknown
is
the origin of the powder horn, scrimshawed with the al-
phabet and with leaf and animal designs. The other rifle,
1825
came from a Pennsylonly its muzzle is visible
vania shop. The 1799 map evokes the old frontier, where
the long
Tup.
rifle
was indispensable
Two weapons
that loomed large in the
American
West's rambunctious final quarter were the Model 1876
Winchester
rifle
(left)
and the 1873 Colt Frontier Single
Action, the legendary "Peacemaker" (right)
Bottom.
Among
the century's
were (from top) the Henry
flintlock
more
Rifle,
significant long
arms
Sharps carbine, and Hall
92
iel
Wesson had served as plant superintendent for Volcanic, which hecame
New Haven Arms Company, maker of one of the 1860s' legendary arms,
the Henry Rifle. The name changed again in 1866 to one that would
Opposite.
the
this
endure: Winchester.
of maker William Wingert of Detroit.
Cased accouterments for the hunter: a detail of
handsome mid-nineteenth-century percussion sport-
ing weapon, twin barrels detached to demonstrate
muzzle-loading age
'whale
oil,
our
of plentiful (but never inexpensive)
late
eighteenth-early nineteenth-
^century predecessors enjoyed a reasonably bright
and smokeless lamp for the
and a reasonable
first
substitute. Patented lard lamps,
time. Lard was
much
and devices burning
turpentine-base fuel proliferated through the 1840s and '50s. But as late as
1852, a
new
whale-oil railway conductor's lantern was patented and
manufactured.
few visionaries demonstrated other alternatives: Sir
snapped on the
electric arc light in 1808. Independently,
Humphrey Davy
Michael Faraday
and Joseph Henry approximated the first electric generators around 1831.
Curiously, Faraday had hit upon the idea of an electric motor ten years
before; it had to wait for the generator. Vermont blacksmith Thomas Davenport began building electric motors in 1834. By the late 1830s, we had
the protoprocesses of electroplating and telegraphy.
The
telegraph, properly the electromagnetic telegraph, belongs in that
small and rare cluster of supremely important technical innovations. Like
the search for an efficient artificial light, the desire for rapid long-distance
communication was as old as humankind. By the end of the eighteenth century, we were scarcely further along than the ancient Greeks with their beacon fires. In 1790s France, a mechanical telegraph
a semaphore system
mounted on high towers offered some improvement. But already such
now-forgotten pioneers as Geneva's George LeSage had begun experimenting with the idea of electrical telegraphy. The names of such early nineteenth-century scientists as Volta, Ampere, Wheatstone, and Ohm
became lodged in the terminology of electrical science.
Yet it remained for an American professional artist, Samuel F. B. Morse,
to gather up the known elements, fuse them into a practical system, and
then produce the public-relations flourish to get telegraphy moving. Morse
patented his system in 1837, and squeezed an appropriation from Congress
to set up a line between Washington and Baltimore. In 1844, with his
assistant Alfred Vail at the other end, Morse transmitted the imperishable
"What hath God wrought!?"
was a simple system, requiring a single line (the earth completed the
electrical circuit), an electromagnet that would click when the circuit was
broken according to a code, and a switch or "key" to control the circuit.
rhetorical question,
It
The
con-
The lacquered powder flask, with measuring spout, was a fixture of the late
ith the arrival
cheaper,
its
figuration as a rifle-shotgun, attests to the considerable skill
1840s and '50s brought a frantic race to build a telegraphy network, and
Channel was spanned in 1851, American paper merchant
Cyrus Field began a long, generous, and difficult process of laying the first
after the English
93
^e ^o
18
George Clymer
Invented by Ph.ladelph.an
Br tarn than
better reception
lumb.an press received a
1857 model was made
States. The museum's
m
m
n"he Unued
London
in
94
transocean cable. After crushing setbacks, Field
finally
completed in 1858
between Newfoundland and Ireland. The first message, from Queen
Victoria to President James Buchanan, was received by a galvanometer,
a cable
used in laboratories to measure small electrical currents.
faced instrument, in a
standout
among
munication, as
wooden box
resting
on
Rococo
The
old brass-
revival base,
is
the museum's huge collection ot historic relics of early comis
a section of the original Atlantic cable.
tory's frustrating anticlimaxes, the cable
soon
failed.
It
(As one of
his-
would be 1866
before a permanent link with Europe was forged.)
The nineteenth century began with
berg had
left it
manned by
several centuries before.
the printing craft about as Guten-
The
crude, slow,
a "puller" at the bar (a big torsion screw)
ing ink to type from leather-covered balls) was
of the printed word.
Then,
still
wood-framed
and
press
a "beater" (apply-
the world's only source
an American carpenter and engineer,
in 1813,
George Clymer of Philadelphia, lifted the press out of the Middle Ages by
building a radically new machine. Clymer's all-iron press replaced the
clumsy screw with a power stroke delivered through compound
puller's stroke at the bar
sure
on the
was thus more
platen. Peculiarly,
and
in
efficiently
levers.
The
converted to vertical pres-
apparent contradiction to the era's
general acceptance of mechanical improvements, Clymer's
Columbian
press
yawns from tradition-minded printers, who thought it too expensive. Clymer moved to England, where his invention was so appreciated
that he died rich in less than twenty years. The museum's Columbian is a
masterpiece of voluptuous, ornate ironwork, proudly enhancing its
elicited
mechanical merits.
While Clymer's
was an improvement,
press
American, Richard Hoe of
the
modem
Hoe
age.
around 1846
built the
first
New
it
remained
for
another
yank the printing trade fully into
pioneered flatbed and cylinder presses, and then
first
York, to
rotary press in the United States, soon to print
the Philadelphia Public Ledger at quadruple the speed formerly possible.
dawned the age
of steam-powered, high-speed printing presses.
only the adoption of continuously feeding
around the time of the Civil War,
to
rolls ot paper,
It
Thus
required
which occurred
complete the revolution, a fundamen-
tal change in mass communications. The improvements in presswork
demanded comparable upgrading of composition techniques, but the agestill had a few years remaining.
would be the 1880s before a Baltimore watchmaker, German-born Ott-
old printer, hand-picking type at his "case,"
It
mar Mergenthaler, began building
his famous, indestructible, slightly de-
ranged-looking Linotypes.
The demand
made
for
small-shop printing equipment was strong, and
Hoe
popular hand press called the "Washington" in the years before the
Civil War.
tory. First
One example
displayed by the
museum
has a swashbuckling his-
used by a Louisiana newspaper to help elect Zachary Taylor pres-
ident in 1848,
it
was shipped
to California
during the Gold Rush (alter
95
dumped in a jungle stream, and
Panamanian newspaper) and hauled through a succession of Cal'
ifornia and Nevada hoom towns. One of its owners printed a newspaper so
stridently pro-Union, in a town of Confederate leanings, that the press
received an armed guard. In 1862, in Aurora, Nevada, the man at the Hoe
was young Samuel Clemens. Bret Harte was another pressman in the old
crossing the Isthmus of Panama, heing
printing a
machine's picaresque past.
Eastern America, with
its
many
chian uplands, was made to order
swift rivers
for
tumbling
oft
the Appala-
water-powered industry. Millwright
Oliver Evans of Delaware had succeeded as a late eighteenth-century industrialist
by applying innovative thinking to the flour-milling business.
ing to Philadelphia
first
and turning
great steam pioneer.
He
to
Mov-
steam power, Evans became America's
built our
first
successful high-pressure factory
engine, and thus pointed the way to far greater power generation than was
possible with the low-pressure units familiar since the days ot
and Watt. Evans even experimented with self-propelled
1805 built a steam dredge that moved under
considered to be America's
first
its
own
power, and
self-propelled vehicle. In
Newcomen
vehicles,
all,
The museum displays
is
and
in
generally
he built about
document
and operation terms for an
installation in Marietta, Ohio. The new Grasshopper beam engine was
rated at twenty horsepower, Evans said
"the power of a horse to be rated
at 150 pounds raised perpendicularly 220 feet per minute."
fifty
engines before his death in 1819.
on one of them, dated
a rare
1812, outlining sales
In the year of Napoleon's
first
exile, 1814, a
French chemist named Joseph
Nicephore Niepce began experimenting with the materials of photography.
was the key: its habit of turning dark in the sun seemed promand had lured many dabblers for almost one hundred years. As early
as 1822, Niepce produced his first positive image on an exposed metal
plate, and in 1829 joined forces with another Frenchman working along
Silver nitrate
ising
similar lines, Louis
J.
M. Daguerre,
a physicist
who
also painted popular
stage sets. Niepce died in 1833, but in 1837 Daguerre perfected their process wherein a polished metal plate, coated with silver iodide, was exposed
in a focused
camera and developed with mercury vapor
to
produce a
real-
istic
image. Daguerre sold his process to the French government, which
gave
it
to the
world in 1839.
An Englishman,
William H. F Talbot, meanwhile was making similar
some ways more sophisticated strides. Talbot, using paper soaked with
silver chk)ride, made negative images first, and from them, positives. Talin
bot's system
was actually reported before Daguerre's, but
it
did not catch
more clearly forecast the future of photography by its ability
to make any number of positive prints from one negative.
The Daguerreotype was an immediate sensation, and was enthusiastically piiineered in the United States by Samuel H B. Morse. Around 1851,
on, although
it
the wet-plate or collodion process introduced glass negatives capable of
astonishing sensitivity to detail, which in the hands of masters Hke
Brady and Alexander Gardner
B.
nineteenth century.
The museum
left
is
Mathew
us haunting reminders of the middle
deep
equipment from photography's
and necessary laboratory
in
cradle years, including a complete camera, tripod,
equipment made by A. Schurtz
in Paris. Early
surprisingly standardized, because the form
cameras tend
to look alike,
had been established long
before as the camera obscura, or dark chamber. Artists since the Renais-
sance had used
for precise
it
composition, or tracing.
{'
Such equipment was superbly made. Mid-nineteenth-century lenses are
masterpieces of machined brass, their inner optics moving smoothly to
focus by the twist of a knurled knob, driving a rack and pinion. Tripods and
wooden camera boxes were of high-quality cabinetry. Special posing chairs
featured a garrote-like head clamp to keep the squirm-prone subject from
-v^-^
_H
moving.
The
fascination of our ancestors with the
the device than by the works
it
new
produced.
process
is
examples of the portrait rage that swept the 1850s and
'60s,
ered each other with our pictures printed on cartes de
visite.
displays
less
by
many
when we showOther
portrait
framed in small, lidded gutta percha cases, which enjoyed an
prints were
explosion of popularity in the 1850s.
the genre
revealed
The museum
is
an
1851
One
graphed
of the museum's rarest relics of
Daguerreotype of a thoughtful-looking four-year-old,
the earliest likeness of
Thomas Alva
s
Edison.
the Conestoga
wagon entered
its
years of
decline, another type of horse-drawn vehicle was
in the
ascendancy.
The famous Concord coach
first
Cf^::
rolled out of the New Hampshire shop of Abbot &.
Downing
in 1827,
and soon was
in service across the
United States. Some
reached South America, South Africa, and even Australia. Rugged and
and perhaps
a bit less wretchedly uncomfortable
fast,
than most public conveyances
of the time. Concords carried between six and sixteen passengers, depending
on construction, and were pulled by teams of four or
nies (the "stage"
the
museum
and mail
Around
for
six horses. Stage
and used the
larger or mail-style
has a cokirful example. Built around 1865,
decades between
1910,
it
compa-
was any point where horses were regularly changed) competed
furk)usly for passengers,
became
\c)rk,
belows in gold, the old Concord
Concords, of which
it
Maine, and Portsmouth,
a hotel coach for the Kearsarge
shuttling guests from the dept)t. In
its
carried passengers
New
House
Hampshire.
in Portsmouth,
original faded red paint, with floral fur-
fairly
exudes the glamour that marked this
supremely American vehicle.
Not
all
the museum's horse-drawn conveyances have wheels: a selection
of sleighs
demonstrates the vanished world of Albany and Portland cutters,
Boston boobies and work sleighs, and even a pre-Revolutionary pung sleigh.
graceful
Albany cutter
of
Thcimas Edison would become one
1840 once glided through the
New England
97
men
of the
most photo-
of his time, but his 1851 sitting with a Da-
guerreotypist
at
age four
encounter with a camera
was
probably his
first
snows hearing Daniel Webster and John Greenleaf Whittier One of the
museum's most beautiful vehicles is an Albany cutter from the peak ornamental year of 1865, a masterpiece of elegance with
with yellow
and carved
floral trim,
birds'
its
curved red body,
heads thrusting forward.
curved dash with leather wings deflected snow tossed by a horse's
gilt
high
feet.
By the 1840s, American fire engines were handsome pumpers whose
elaborate ornamentation is repeated on their distant heirs to this day. The
museum is well stocked with such early, hand-drawn, hand-pumped
machines. A Hunneman of 1840 demonstrates the New England style of
pumper, while an
Agnew
Agnew
Such machines had long
style of
histories of use: the
Eagle was built for the city of Pittsburgh in 1843, and concluded
service in a small volunteer
pumped machines were
company
Ohio
in
in 1928.
hand-pumper, made by
served in a historic
L.
fire at
Button
streets,
towns long
after
1873
for small
& Son of Waterford,
New
York, that
Haverhill, Massachusetts, in 1882.
pumper and hose reel through firein American folklore. But the
brave firemen, trundling their
showered
its
Hand-drawn, hand-
The museum shows an
being manufactured
still
the debut of great horse-drawn steam pumpers.
The
pump
of similar age reveals the different
the Philadelphia school.
formed an enduring image
is
that tradition-minded firemen resisted innovative equipment.
Steam-powered
1841,
New
fire
pumps were
available as early as 1829 in England. In
York City firemen disputed the insurance companies' advocacy
of power equipment. But by the 1850s
pumps could no
is
longer be withheld.
Cole Brothers engine, made
classical
it
was
clear that the benefits of steam
One excellent example of the early type
in Pawtucket,
Rhode
Island, c. 1870.
beauty of mid- Victorian steam engineering, the horse-drawn Cole
would pump
We may
as
much
as six
hundred gallons per minute.
properly wonder
why our
ancestors required so
much time
to
invent even the crudest forerunner of the bicycle. Astonishingly, the French
had already been soaring the
skies for nearly ten years
countrymen, the Comte de Sivrac,
1791.
The
steering
ester
when one
of their
built the pioneering two-wheeler, in
count's riding pleasure was limited, for he neglected to include a
mechanism.
named
Little else
happened
until 1818,
when
German
for-
Karl von Drais built a steerable bike to help speed up his rounds
through the woods. Like the
earlier version, the Draisine (also called the
rider simply pushed the ground with
and coasted. Knowing a clever innovation when they saw one, the
style-conscious fops of England rushed to obtain hobby horses. But En-
"hobby horse") had no pedals, and the
his feet
made such savage sport of the new fad that it
Thus the first wave of biking aborted in embarrass-
gland's merciless cartoonists
lasted only
ment
as
two
years.
one of history's most complete
rare original
example of the
maker around
first
false starts.
The museum displays a
unknown European
type of bicycle, by an
1818. Its iron-tired, solid
wood wheels
are lightened by heart-
shaped cutouts.
99
and carved, gilded scrolls embelhand pumper, built by John Agnew in
Opposite. Polished brass
lish this detail
truth
of a
the Philadelphia style in 1843
Above. Firefighting equipment of early nineteenth-century
New England
featured lots of buckets
EngHsh example stands
In another way, too, the
The
for the
might-have-
went on a road-building
spree just after the Napoleonic wars, and in the 1820s and '30s a spectacular
congeries of steam-powered commercial highway coaches was chuffing
between many cities and towns. Some of the vehicles were reasonably sucbeens of nineteenth-century
cessful,
and
travel.
British
But savage opposition by
their safety record surprisingly good.
the railways, horse-drawn-coach interests, and suspicious farmers
bined to drive the steamers out of business, assisted by British
com-
satirical
cartoonists directing their genius for invective at the admittedly bizarre-
looking road monsters.
No
such developments enlivened the American road, which was simply
too long and in too wretched a condition. Canals, and then railroads,
received most of America's transportation devek)pment energy in the nine-
teenth century. After imported British locomotives proved unsuitable,
Americans began building their own around 1830, when the Tom Thumb
raced a horse at Baltimore, and the Best Friend went into service at
Charleston, South Carolina. America's third successful train was the De
Witt Clinton. In 1831, its festive first run, carrying five cars jammed with
passengers, was a round trip between Albany and Schenectady, New York,
Hudson Railroad. The locomotive was
on the fledgling Mohawk
&
designed by John B. Jervis, chief engineer of the West Point Foundry, and
David Matthew, who bravely manned the throttle on the maiden
built by
run and achieved the respectable speed of thirty miles per hour.
of that day
knew what
a railway passenger
As nobody
coach should he, the builders
took the practical expedient of clapping stagecoach bodies onto heavy
frames with flanged iron wheels.
Alas, the Clinton vanished in the last century, and the one displayed at
the
museum
1893, the
New
display at the
Central used
it
to the
career,
is
not original. But neither
is
York Central re-created the
it
modern reproduction. In
little
train very accurately for
Columbian Exposition. The new Clinton worked
it
for years for public-relations
museum
in 1935.
and already has
so well the
purposes before finally donating
Thus the reincarnated
train enjoyed
its
own
lived far longer than the original.
The
Opposite.
DeWitt Clinton
(not the original, but
a sharp contrast
C&O Allegheny
Top.
The
1818 Draisine
ing machine.
is
considered the
The maker
of the
first
steerable rid-
museum's example
is
unknown
Bottom,
The Albany
around
1819,
productions
101
1831
an accurate replica of the 1890s) provides
with its stahlemate of 1941, the mighty
cutter, whose development began
was one of the century's most gracetui
l'
.I -.i
Lights
Come on
at
MenloPark
arly Victorians liked their
machinery
the aesthetics of their time.
largest stationary
One
steam engines
is
to manifest
of the museum's
a masterwork of
such Gothic revival shapes as peaked arches, quatre-
fcjils,
and
fluted
cathedral.
columns, altogether forming a power plant in the image of a
When
installed at a Philadelphia factory
original deep green paint with red
its
indeed the altar of a
new
age.
Its
around 1855, glistening in
and gold trim, the great engine was
flywheel, eighteen feet in diameter, turned at
a stately thirty revolutions per minute. For almost eighty years the engine faithfully
generated
its
200 horsepower.
Tentative attribution credits the Novelty Iron
with the creation of this beauty.
machinery of the era
ers usually
is
emblazoned
Works of New York City
clouded birth certificate
for
major
unusual, as well as unfortunate, for the proud buildall vital statistics
once-famous names, forgotten by
all
on prominent
brass plates.
Some
but students of the history of power,
appear on the flanks of machines that powered American industry through
the Civil War.
Providence,
One
Rhode
names was George Henry Corliss of
who had patented one of the earliest sewing
of the greatest
Island,
machines before going on
to
become
built engines of cherished efficiency,
try,
and
after
1856 under his
renowned steam engineer. Corliss
the New England textile indus-
first for
own name. His innovations included an autoThe museum's Corliss-attributed engines
matic cut-off and a valve gear.
103
Menlo Park laboratory.
staff worked during the great inventor's
most productive period. Between 1876 and 1886 came
more than 400 patented inventions, including the incandescent lamp and the phonograph
Opposite. Here, in the heart of the
Edison and his
Nut only did they work
include specimens of 1859 and 1888.
liss
well, hut
Cor-
engines led the way toward clean, purposeful mechanical design.
Such stationary steam engines could be built in a wide range of sizes, and
most were meant to be firmly bolted down. But the need for semiportable
power was strong, and it was met by manufacturers like the Blandy Brothers
of Zanesville, Ohio. From the 1850s through the rest of the century, the
Blandys built an enormously popular line of "skid" engines, such as the
museum's 1860 model of five horsepower, a portable power plant especially
good
for sawmills.
The company
made the sawmill
also
to
go with their
engine.
Among
the demonstrations of period
that are regularly in progress in
life
number of steam engines
Greenfield Village, the actual operation of a
ates a sense of industrial verisimilitude. There, unlike the
of
museum
exhibits, old engines
Machine Shop,
ago whirs
work
The same
cre-
cold ranks
At the Armington and Sims
daily.
& Co.
C. H. Brown
engine from more than a century
butter-smooth way, cheerfully popping
its
ceral valves.
still,
pft-phffl
from
its
vis-
action occurs at the Loranger Gristmill, where an
1870 Davis powers the actual grinding of grain (demonstrating,
for
those
sensitive to the finer points of industrial history, the milling innovations of
the great Oliver Evans).
mill exhibit the
The
village's Tripp
power of steam
ican board-cutting, respectively, from up
Beautiful and rich in personality they
had
Sawmill and Stony Creek Saw-
as well as the
changing technology of Amer-
quency under
to circular saws.
may have been, but steam engines
They were
careless tending.
up with disturbing
also expensive.
In this general view of the
And for all
fre-
their
feet in diameter; the total
ingly
size,
they were relatively puny for the Western world's increas-
power-hungry
industries.
Other energy forms began
France's Etienne Lenoir created the
first
to
emerge.
production internal combustion
engine (fueled by illuminating gas) in 1860, but
it
failed.
Germany's Nico-
Otto and Eugen Langen built more than three thousand improved versions from 1866 to 1876, whereupon Otto hit upon the power plant that
would change the world again: the four-cycle compression engine, which
laus
The museum
ran either on gas or gasoline.
early one-cylinder
Otto engines,
all
of
them
development of power. Perhaps the best
is
displays various examples of
of supreme significance in the
an 1877 Otto, water cooled, with
a fifty-three-inch flywheel.
Although Otto's engine was
most provocative thing about
it
first
was
used as a stationary power source, the
its
adaptability to
new forms of transcome most sat-
portation. Replacement of the piston steam engine would
isfactorily
from the steam turbine,
first
built to operating standards by Sir
Charles A. Parsons of England in 1884.
would soon come along
as a factory
into motive power. Rudolf Diesel,
small but significant group of
new
The
heat-ignition Diesel, too,
power plant,
its
German
as well as
inventor,
branching out
was typical of a
engineers, university trained, replacing
105
The wheel
is
twenty-four
engine weighs 80,000 pounds
Above. Scale model of a steeple
compound marine steam
engine, huilt in 1872, demonstrates a then-popular power
plant used in Great Lakes vessels.
full-sized version
impressive
museum's steam enleft marks an 1859
gine collection, the large wheel at the
engine hy George Henry Corliss.
and down blades
their limitations. For one, their boilers blew
Opposiii;.
The museum
also has a
the self-taught tinkerers and natural geniuses
who had
led the
mechanical
parade up to then. Theoretical science merged with mechanics, creating
the technological setting for the twentieth century. Already there was, by
the 1880s and '90s, a different look to the power machinery displayed in the
museum and Greenfield Village. The big twin Diesel of 1898,
built only
one
year after the type's introduction after five years of development, seems
all-
business; as unsentimental as, well, a Diesel.
Increasingly high on the coveted
lizing genie, electricity.
1850s,
of things to master was that tanta-
^^m
arc light in a lighthouse. But the major
^B
for 1867,
when Zenobe
T Gramme
produced the
..J
Ui;jcl,;,'^^^
^i!iQi^
few steam-driven generators appeared in the
and one actually powered an
breakthrough waited
list
IEdIgk
_'
^fe.-;i,/-n;,^
pioneering modern generator, a rotary concoction of ring-wound armature
and
Gramme
field coil.
tory in 1870.
Other
in
and Germany
in
commercial United States use came in 1878 at
Philadelphia, and was directed by C. E Brush, who also
the early 1870s, but the
Wanamaker's
very practically installed arc lights in his Paris fac-
arc installations occurred in France
first
_^^_
installed street arc lights in Cleveland in 1879.
Arc lamps had been dem-
onstrated at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition in 1876. In 1877,
Thomas
more
Edison, aged 30, focused his formidable energies
on developing
satisfactory electric light.
and Port Huron, Michigan, Edison's prospects seemed meager; he was both sickly and mischievous, to the
point of being troublesome beyond the norm. His formal education ended
after a few months when his teacher expelled him as "addled, " and suggested
he be taught farming. His mother, an ex-teacher herself, disagreed, and
taught him at home, encouraging his intense curiosity. At twelve, already
growing deaf, he took his first railroad job, hawking newspapers and snacks
on a passenger train. And at fifteen, he became a telegrapher.
Edison's first job was on the Grand Trunk Railway of Ontario, Canada.
He soon returned to the United States in 1863, and spent the next six years
through the Midwest and Northeast, always in jobs related to that
communications marvel of the age, the telegraph. Landing in Boston at
twenty, he began free-lance tinkering with telegraphic equipment, and in
drifting
1868 received his
first
patent, an electric vote recorder for legislative bodies.
Brashly carrying his invention to a Congressional committee in Washington, he
was crushed
was anathema
to learn that
any thought of speeding up the voting
to the representatives,
who would have been
convenience of vote trading during their customary long
tally
deprived of the
roll call.
Edison
resolved never again to invent anything impractical and for which there was
no commercial potential.
He moved to New York
at
twenty-two and almost immediately struck
gold, improving the crude stock tickers of the day so dramatically that in
new patents. Edison set up
made stock tickers, worked as a
only a year, in 1870, he was paid $40,000 for his
a
new
laboratory in Newark,
New
Jersey,
107
'"
'
opposite. This direct current electric tan was manufactured
by
Thomas A.
Above.
In his childhood back in Milan, Ohio,
Edison, Inc., of West Orange,
The Edison
Illuminating
Company
New Jersey
building in
Greenfield Village reproduced the original 1886 structure
where Henry Ford worked as a young plant engineer. Inside are period boilers, steam engines, and a hisin Detroit,
toric
dynamo named Jumbo
lOK
consultant for the Western Union Company, and saved enough
six years to build a
called
complex of buildings
Menlo
in a rural section of
money
New
11
in
Jersey
At Menlo Park he aimed
something big every
six
tor a
minor invention every ten
months. In ten years he obtained 420 patents
phonograph and
(of his lifetime total of 1,093), including those for the
supreme achievements of the Wizard of Menlo Park. Joseph
Swan of Great Britain actually heat him to the carbon filament bulb by one
year. But Edison's greater achievement was his rapid development of a power
electric light,
distribution system; the supporting network of generators, meters,
wires without which any lightbulb would flicker dimly,
The museum
displays
an odd-looking, homely,
if
at
and
all.
six-foot-tall device sug-
gesting equipment in Dr. Frankenstein's laboratory. But this relic deserves
a place in any
pantheon of electrical
dynamo from
his
first
commercial
system went to sea, for
that sailed from
New
it
its
an original Edison bipolar
is
electrical system, in 1880. Curiously, the
was installed aboard the
all
awkward, stalky
Cape Horn
S. S.
Columbia, a new
.ship
San Francisco with 115
the way. Called "Long-legged Mary Anne"
look, the dynamo would soon recede in the
York around
incandescent lights blazing
because of
rarities.lt
to
design of newer generations of bipolars.
Of equal and perhaps greater significance is the artifact known as Jumbo
Dynamo Number 9, the sole survivor from Edison's Pearl Street Station in
New York City, generally acknowledged as the country's first central electric
Jumbo stands with other early equipment in the Edison IlluminatCompany building in Greenfield Village, an exhibit reproducing a late
nineteenth-century power station. The original began operations September 4, 1882, with Jumbo Number 9 the first generator to be set humming.
station.
ing
Including its Armington and Sims steam engine, the generator weighs
more than 60,000 pounds, and can still produce its original quota of 100
kilowatts.
One good
its
reason
Jumbo remained
working career was
current, of
something
in such
relatively short.
It
immaculate condition
is
that
represented the system ot direct
which Edison was unaccountably fond, and which soon proved
dead end. Direct current was uneconomical for transmission
of a
beyond short range, while alternating current could be sent afar via highvoltage transmission and transformers. George Westinghouse, a great early
rival of
Edison and founder of the Westinghouse
locked up the relevant patents.
mighty new Niagara
When
Company
of Pittsburgh,
electricity started flowing
Falls hydroelectric plant in 1895,
it
it
^ew
"JumKi Dynamo Number 9" was
York City ,n 1882;
from the
served a rapidly
expanding North American power grid irrevocably stamped AC.
Menlo Park itself is, in sum, the weightiest artifact in the Henry Ford
Museum/Greenfield Village complex. A seedbed t)f change that would
affect every American, the Edison buildings are paramount in both tech-
109
in Greenfield
Vdlage
in-
perfect condition to-
stands in the Edison Illuminating
Park, ror the next decade, in the worlds hrst industrial
tical invention.
^""'^'^ '"
day.
research and development laboratory, Edison directed a golden age of prac-
days;
Opposite. Edison's
Company
building
nological
and
social history.
weatherhoarded structure,
The
is
reconstructed 1876 laboratory, a two-story
The
the soul of the complex.
floor
first
com-
P**^^
bines the original machine shop, chemical laboratory, office, and the leg-
endary cubbyhole where Edison cook his catnaps. The rooms and their relics are maintained to suggest the scene ot December 31, 1879, when Edison
here made his
first
room
'"*>
"1^
public demonstration of incandescent light. Upstairs,
where the inventor did most of
long, gas-lit
^^c
its
his work, the era suggested
is
The
earlier.
walls lined with ancient bottles of chemicals
holds the core of Edison's greatest wttrk. Here
is
the vote recorder that
fiz-
and the stock ticker that clicked in 1869. The curious-kioking
pen of 1875 is, once explained, quite clearly the origin of the
zled in 1868,
electric
mimeograph. His massive contributions
to early telephone
technology are
revealed by such inventions as his 1879 "loudspeaking receiver."
Edison's favorite creation was the phonograph, displayed in
production form of 1878.
The
recording medium,
tinfoil,
its
earliest
worked
just the
number of materials since then, from wax to vinyl. Everything
happened to the phonograph since 1877 has been mere embellishment on the primal idea Edison demonstrated that December 4, playing
back his own recitation of Mary Had a Utile Lamb. Meantime, he was proceeding on his work toward artificial light. Something of a latecomer to the
same
as a
that has
tantalizing dream, he felt that others'
heavy, low-resistant filament
the prevailing notion that
he successfully strove
known approach
was the wrong
all lights
on
seeking
a short,
way. Moreover, he rejected
a circuit should
work
at once.
Thus
for a thin, high-resistance filament for bulbs that
could be turned on and off individually. Carbonized cotton sewing thread
was the first successful answer to the filament problem, although the Edison
crew would make a number of materials work. For the great
Year's Eve, 1879, the filament
test
of
New
used was carbonized paper.
By then, Edison's booming research and development operation had
outstripped the original laboratory building.
was crucial
built in 1878,
new
brick
far
machine shop,
development of Edison's lighting plans,
to the
serving as power plant for the
first
centralized system in
which not only the
Menlo Park residences were illuminated. The
machine shop also made the original models tor all the new apparatus: the
dynamos, meters, fuses, and sockets that had never existed before. The
reconstructed building contains, among much original equipment and
laboratory but also three
materials, the very steam boiler that supplied the historic
first
night's power.
opposite. Tlie
fifty
More than
half a dozen
Menlo Park
buildings stand in Greenfield Vil-
lage; most original are the little glass-blowing house, where the first bulbs
were made, and the Sarah Jordan Boarding House. Many of Edison's
twenty-odd machinists, draftsmen, chemists, patternmakers, and others
were young and unmarried, and Mrs. Jordan's was their home.
ing house
wired
is
The
board-
the only completely original building to survive of those
for light,
and stands
today,
first
with replica bulbs and exposed wiring, as
111
New
Menlo Park
laboratory, the "invention tac-
where Thomas Edison conducted his
most significant work, was reconstructed in Greenfield
Village. Edison himself returned here in triumph in 1929,
tory" in
Jersey
years after he
first
successfully demonstrated his incan-
descent lighting system
Model T Ford waits at the Sarah Jordan Boardwhich accommodated a number of Edison's emIt is one of the most
original of all the Menlo Park structures moved to Greenfield Village. In this house, on New Year's Day 1879, EdiTop.
1912
ing House,
ployees
mostly young bachelors.
son demonstrated his new lighting system
Bonom. Architectural
detail,
Sarah Jordan House
it
did in 1879.
An ideal ciimpanidn piece to the shop-and-lahciratory atmos-
phere ot other Menk) buildings, Mrs. Jordan's reveals the
human
or social
and their mid-Victorian era, and in a broader sense
evokes the atmosphere ot a once-essential institutitm that has all but
side of Edison's staff
vanished.
In ten years,
Menlo Park was
New
everything to West Orange,
began moving
obsolete. In 1886 Edison
where he
Jersey,
equipped laboratory on earth, ten times
built the largest, best-
than Menk). Here he devel-
larger
oped his Kinetograph, or motion picture camera, and Kinetoscope, a sort
of peep-show projector. In 1893, he began filming motion pictures in the
first movie studio. Also at West Orange Edison fully devek)ped the phonograph, and sent
is
it
commercial success. The big complex
forth to sensatkmal
represented by the very building where Edison's version of the disc phon-
iigraph was born in 1912. Still another Greenfield Village building from the
inventor's later period
is
the laboratory from his winter headquarters in Fort
Myers, Florida, where Edison worked some kirty years.
The Edison
Illuminating
Company
building (shelter ior }umho)
entirely by chance, a small replica of the Detroit electrical plant
is,
not
where
Henry Ford worked as a young engineer. At a company convention in
met Edison and encouraged him to continue his pioneer
automotive tinkering. They were cut from the same cloth: practical, systematic, goal-oriented, inventive, visk)nary, and doubtless eccentric. Later
generatu)ns would denigrate .some of their methods and viewpoints. It was
Atlantic City, Ford
Edison to cling
clearly a mistake for
tt)
the principle of direct current after
alternating current was demonstrated best, and perhaps he might have
accomplished even nn)re with a greater willingness to substitute abstract
such imperfec-
calculatit)ns for his favored pragmatic experimentation. But
tions were trivial indeed
of
Menlo
Park,
whose
when
lite
set against the
mighty works of the Wizard
changed the world.
y the middle ot the nineteenth century.
New
En-
gland had surpassed Great Britain as the center
machine
\^
ting lathe
as
claw
roi
tools
tool manufacture.
as the
museum's 1855 C.
would .seem almost modern, were
feet.
Only a medium-sized
it
not
tor
lathe of the rime,
t)f
Such Civil War era .shop
Eddy
.screw-cut-
such ornamental touches
ii
nevertheless carried a
forty-one-inch face plate and a five-step cone pulley, rack-and-pinkni traverse,
and two-and-one-half-inch
lead screw.
Low
slung and ma.ssive
feet,
the nine-f(K)t machine has a rhinoceros-like
relic
is
company, the planer
A machine designed
is
an
tor
assurei.1
and
steel
mold blocks
blend of function
wcxKlworking shops
is
ani.1
on
its
animal
Another important
an I860 planer from the Putnam Machine Company
sachusetts. Designed to shape iron
112
.solidity
of FitchJMirg,
Rococo
the niiK--toot
Mas-
manufacturing
kit a
revival styling.
iray
and Wuods
planer of c. 1865, considered a milestone in speed and convenience.
Even the most amateurish home craftsman of today should recognize
jointer, an essen-
(and soon master) the museum's red-painted 1875 Carey
tial
woodworking device whose
graceful design has remained nearly
unchanged for more than a century The museum specimen was probably
used in making wagon bodies. Nearby stands a phalanx of pioneer milling
machines, a family second only to the lathe in machine-shop usefulness. By
machine was
1880, the milling
in the
essentially in
Cincinnati Milling Machine of
a rotating cutter.
1881,
Such machines, perfected
modern form,
its
an
efficient
for the
a future seen
metal remover with
major industrial jobs of
the nineteenth century, merely grew larger and more complex in the
twentieth.
Some
of the best stationary steam engines
were made by
including Edison's
first
Armington and Sims Company. Henry
Ford honored the name by applying it to the fully operational machine shop
and foundry in Greenfield Village, which demonstrates a tum-of-the-century job shop. Such establishments made the machinery used in specialized,
mass production factories, and were essential to industry.
power plants
No
the
better place exists to sense the mysterious beauty of metalworking
than amid these 1890s lathes, boring mills, planers, and slotters in the
Armington and Sims shop. The sounds in the spacious building are partially foreign to the modern ear. From the adjoining power house, a giant
leather belt drives the overhead
power
shafts that
hang from the
ceiling,
up
beside the long roof lantern of windows, going cheepiiy clack, cheepity clack.
Looped and
straight leather belts, for forward
the machines.
iron
and
open
steel
The
mingle with those of foursquare oak
front office. In a
found
its
and
not-unpleasant scents of grease,
thousand such
vocabulary, and
made
reverse, angle
oil,
and
down
to
freshly shaved
office furniture in the
settings, the Industrial Revolution
its rules.
Land-based telegraphy was well established long before the Civil War, but
the exigencies of that conflict honed the skill and speed of engineers and
operators alike.
The museum
displays a definitive collection of early equip-
ment, including beautifully made keys and receivers, and strange-looking
primary
cells that
ing carbon
together in
were the only sources ot power. Such glass
jars,
contain-
and zinc electrodes in electrochemical reaction, were linked
series. The arrangement soon produced its own colloquial term:
the battery.
The
as
telephone, like the telegraph and electric light, might be described
an invention by
committee, each member working independently. The
invention would ultimately be realized by the one whose synthesis of ele-
ments worked
Bell,
best. For the telephone, that
although a
German schoolteacher,
J.
man was Alexander Graham
Phillip Reis, deserves to be
men-
tioned in the same breath for his partially successful "Das Telefon" of 1860.
Bell, in
1875 and '76,
made
rapid progress in his invention while seeking
113
Left
and above. The Armington and Sims Machine Shop,
erected in Greenfield Village in 1928, was based on engine-
and machine-making
factories of the late 1800s,
incorporated features of the original
As
A&S
and
plant in Provi-
is
dence, Rhode
powered hy a nineteenth-century steam engine that drives
Island.
functioning shop today,
it
an overhead shaft and belt system, operating lathes, planers, shapers, drill presses, and other period metalworking
machinery
116
ways to aid the deaf, and a replica of the model that received American
tory's
most valuable patent
is
his-
museum's enormous com-
displayed in the
munications collection. In terms of use, the most significant artifact may
be Bell's 1877 box telephone, the first commercial model ever installed,
linking a Boston banker's
home and
office.
hole in the
wooden box
mouth
served as both transmitter and receiver, requiring quick shifts from
to ear. The device was probably made by Bell's
Thomas Watson. A signaling button on the box
as the
near- legendary assistant,
lives in
telephone history
"Watson thumper.
commercial switchboards were in production, and the
model on which the "plug and jack" system is
already developed. A directory of 1878 adds to the aura of communications
history around the old board. The earliest known dial telephone bestows
immortality on its implausible inventor, a Kansas City funeral director.
Almon B. Strowger's first automatic telephone went into service in LaPorte,
Indiana, in 1892; today the nickel-plated dial and black mouthpiece and
receiver of the museum's example are clear evidence that Mr. Strowger
Soon the
museum
first
displays an 1878
commanded
the telephone of the future.
Invention of the typewriter was even more of a group
to at least 1714 in England, patented in 1829 in
France in 1833. But the
first
effort,
going back
America, and improved
in
commercially successful model was created in
Opposite.
From the dawn
of production typewriters, the
middle 1870s, comes this Remington Model
vented hy Christopher Sholes and associates.
Number
Its
1,
in-
users could
print only capitals
1868 by the team of Christopher L. Sholes, Carlos Glidden, and Samuel
Soule.
They persuaded Philo Remington, the
Ilion,
New
York, arms
tycoon, to add typewriters as another sideline (he was already making sewing machines), and the
first
thousand machines were made in 1874. The
a
"Remington-Sholes.
the typewriter in place, other office equipment could not be far
behind. Edison's "electric pen" heralded the mimeographs of 1888 and
1897.
His phonographs spawned the dictation equipment industry,
traced in the museum's displays.
The
first
all
general-purpose calculator to
achieve commercial success was the 1888 comptometer of Felt and Tarrant,
which could add, subtract, multiply, and divide. The museum's spindly but
still serviceable example dates c. 1896.
For about five decades, photography was in the hands ot professionals and
scientists. An aura of necromancy surrounded the photographer, who from
his wagon-borne portable studio and darkroom fiddled with strange
machines, mixed occult chemicals, disappeared into total darkness, and
emerged with magical results. Then in the late 1870s, young George Eastman experimented successfully with dry-plate processes. Suddenly the need
for instant development was gone, and with it the need for portable
darkrooms.
Eastman was
just starting.
He produced
the
first
practical roll film in
1884 by applying a light-sensitive emulsion to a collodion-coated paper
117
The nineteenth
century's second half brought a
the wet-plate studio camera (example at
left
dates from the
1860s) to George Eastman's Kodak, of which an 1888
model
museum's huge collection of typewriters begins with one of the pioneers,
With
Above.
stunning transition: photography leaped from the age of
with
top table
suitable advertising
rests
on the marble-
118
first,
later
switching to celluloid. In 1888, Eastman introduced the
first
H. Walker. The handKodak, incorporating a roll holder developed by
held, $25 box camera was loaded at the factory for a staggering one hundred
When all
pictures.
to
the
Eastman's factory
roll
was exposed, the customer sent the camera back
and reloading. The cam-
for a $10 processing, printing,
and shutter were preset. "You press the button," said the inventor's
advertising, "we do the rest." Think of it. Almost overnight, the arcane
specialty of photography was released to the multitude. Anyone could make
era's lens
pictures.
New
models came quickly. The
first
pocket Kodak arrived in the 1890s,
as did the first of the still-remembered bellows cameras.
The museum
them in bewildering profusion. Many were presented
George Eastman himself.
plays
Eadweard
tial
Muy bridge,
claim to the
title of
to
dis-
Henry Ford by
a flamboyant early photographer, has at least par-
father of motion pictures. In about 1870, Muybridge
photographed racehorses in motion with a
series of
cameras, then built a
revolving viewer that displayed the photographs as animation. Others
worked on the
idea, too.
Thomas Edison and
his inventive
group produced
the real breakthrough in 1889 with the Kinetograph and Kinetoscope; an
1896 version of the Edison camera
is
displayed.
It
remained only
for twi>
French brothers, Louis and Auguste Lumiere, to patent the cinematograph,
the
first
true
motion picture
projector, in 1895.
Halfway through the nineteenth century, although the reaper was
vir-
Opposite. By about 1880,
machine was
tle Falls,
when
New
New Warrior mowing
Mowing Company of Lit-
this
built by the Warrior
York, technology had already revolutionized
American farming
Above. This 1916 Port Huron tractor once labored in
Greenfield Village maintenance jobs, but was retired in the
early 1950s. Volunteers recently restored
tually standard
formed in
equipment, most of America's grain threshing was
manner
still
per-
that any reincarnated medieval peasant would have
understood perfectly; beating with a hinged
flail
and winnowing from
shallow basket. Threshing had never been a particular problem, for grain,
cut, could be stored and threshed later, when the urgencies of harvest
had passed. The 1780s had seen some experimentation with a boxed-in
winnowing machine called the "Dutch fan," but its use was not widespread.
Rapid developments occurred in the 1840s and '50s, however, and the
once
mechanical thresher-separator became a
efficient as to usher in a new,
reality.
The new machines were
enduring institution
so
the custom thresher-
man, who freed individual farmers from the purchase and care of expensive
equipment. One of the best early units was the Wheeler and Mellick, made
in Albany, New York. Two horses on a treadmill provided power; worked by
four men, Wheeler and Mellicks of the 1860s could thresh a respectable two
hundred bushels of grain daily. The museum's 1866 model seems still able
to
handle
its
quota.
War years added new dynamics of change to the matter of farm
mechanization. Commodity prices soared worldwide, and farm boys by the
millions joined the army, creating both a labor shortage and a vast new market. Inventors and manufacturers released a new generation of more efficient
The
Civil
machines. Starting with the 1860s, the museum's farm
relics
become
dra-
119
ton Si Sims
again
it
Machine Shop, and
it
in the
Arming-
fully operational
chuffs regularly forth at Village special events
120
more complex. Grain drills, sulky plows, and twine hinders sugan increasing specialization. Altogether new was the reaper-hinder of
the 1870s. The museum's example of the complicated machine is hy Walter
matically
gest
Wood
A.
The
than
ers
New
of
New
York,
York.
design aesthetic was perhaps
manufacturers in other
to
less
important to farm machinery mak-
fields,
yet
Victorians
to the core
makers brightened their products with red paint, and applied gold stripes
and gaudy flourishes of scrollwork. Farm wagons echoed circus wagons.
Some of the ironwork on post-Civil War equipment was magnificent, as
demonstrated by the museum's Eureka mowing machine of 1880. The
nation's commercial artists and lithographers battled it out for their
machinery-making
Taylor
Company
clients
with spectacular trade catalogs. The Aultman
deprived of grain gleanings by superbly efficient threshers.
Company
&
of Mansfield, Ohio, featured a comical starving rooster
The
rival
Rumely
of La Porte, Indiana, countered with sentimental art of happy
children playing beside streams, hay ricks, and threshers.
The museum's
archives bulge with such colorful material.
The
first
farm revolution added the power of horses to machinery, and the
well. Yet from the beginning some visionaries thought
combination worked
steam engines might be preferable
Dixie where steam
mills
and cotton
took
first
its
to horses. Curiously,
gins, as early as the 1820s.
in Greenfield Village.
it
was nonindustrial
stand on the farm, in the big central sugar
The Harahan Sugar
One
such mill
is
reconstructed
Mill was built in Louisiana in
1845, beside the Mississippi River. Like others of the type,
it
employed
steam engine, the same that spun factory wheels in the
not create a small, portable steam engine to turn the working
large, stationary
North.
Why
parts of threshing
The
first
itself,
on wagon wheels, were
this new producer of power could not move
ones, resembling small locomotives
and had
to
justify its
catching on.
be towed around by horses, hardly inspiring the confihigh cost. But after twenty years the farm steamer began
The museum has
a gaggle of stovepipe-black specimens
from
the 1870s; they seem strangely capricious in design, like cartoonists' fancies,
and absurdly tall exhaust stacks, bristling with gauges,
and flywheels. The museum's oldest example is also the
most straightforward in design: a chunky little Owens, Lane & Dyer, built
in 1870 in Hamilton, Ohio.
all
spidery wheels
valves, rods, oilers,
By the 1880s the
ically across
first
self-powered traction engines were chuffing majest-
the grain-farming horizons, towing the ungainly apparatus of
the custom thresherman. The J. 1. Case Company, founded in Racine,
Wisconsin, in 1842, became the giant of the traction engine business. The
museum's 1890 Case, with
gear wheel guard,
action, with
its
its
may not be
graceful stack
and magnificently filagreed
is a joyful machine. In
a thing of beauty, but
piston punching, governor whirling, and stack belching
121
The beauty
of
nineteenth-century machinery
shines in a detail view of a farm steam engine. This portable engine of 1882
was manufactured hy Nichols, Shepard
Michigan
& Company of Battle Creek,
Ahiive.
made
machines?
available by 1850. Paradoxically,
dence to
Opposite.
The
J.I.
Case Company of Racine, Wisconsin,
this resplendent
steam tractor
in 1890
Opposiie.
The
race was already lost to the forces of central
heating, hut makers of parlor stoves
still
had
a few tricks
their sleeves as the nineteenth century closed.
up
One was
this 1898
Art Garland hasehurner hy the Michigan Stove
Company
of Detroit
black coal smoke as
it
drove the shiny leather belt, slung in a long figure
eight to the roaring thresher, the
Case seemed the very soul
erations of farm youth. Sadly, such machines were always
bite.
The
garden
Case's fifteen horsepower
tractors.
And
is
many
surpassed by
while some were used in western
power to genmore bark than
ot
of today's
fields tor
home
actual cul-
and harvest power, their unfavorable horsepower-to-weight ratio
made them inefficient as moving power sources. At times they would pontivation
'
derously dig themselves into holes.
he mechanization ot the American
rapidly after 1850.
/ill
ilies
9^
just before,
accepted their
tui
turers
and especially
first
cook stove when manufac-
were ready with a new generation. Tlie years
just after, the Civil
War were
explosive with the
development of mechanical appliances: apple parers, cherry
grinders,
can openers, and egg
Detached from
home moved
No sooner had American fam-
pitters, coffee
The museum has them by the score.
such artifacts may seem kist and tork)m,
beaters.
their original milieu
but the museum's tour model peritxi kitchen displays are technologically
informative, as well as nostalgically appealing. In the complete kitchen ot
1890, the
theme of change comes through
The major manufacturing
the
Midwest
after 1850,
centers ot America's stove industry
and such
c.
strongest of all.
leaders as the
moved
to
Michigan Stove Company
American parlor stove to a vertex ot efficiency and
Michigan Stove's gigantic "Art Garland" emulates the cimning
tower of Captain Nemo's submarine: nickel-plated castings in swirling
ocean waves embosom a doubiedecker turret of iron grillwork, whose isinglass windows once radiated the cheery orange glow of burning coal. Made
around 1898, the six-toot colossus represents the final flourishing ot treestanding heating stoves as things of pride and gk)ry. Central heating,
pioneered betore the Civil War and common since the 1870s, already had
rendered such stoves obsolescent. Soon they would be passt: embarrassot Detroit brought the
splendor.
ments
to the up-to-date
homeowner.
By the time of the Civil War, sewing machines were becoming common-
home. They assumed a special importance in the Confederacy,
which was lacking in a garment industry and faced the task ot clothing an
army in the field. Sewing machines were moved into the South's churches,
as women set up de /octo factories where "nothing could be heard but the
place in the
click of machines, the tearing of ck)th, the ceaseless
tioning," as one Virginia
murmur of voices
woman remembered. What
formed such service? As embodied
in the
museum's
sort of
ques-
machines per-
collection, they were
sophisticated in engineering and superb in construction quality. Mt)re than
were beautiful in design and ornamentation. Tigether they conone of the museum's otten overlookeil great surprises, these jewelcreations of such forgotten names as Cirover iSi Baker, Ilori'iue, Shaw
that, they
stitute
like
122
wKCigBWff*
'^'^yra t'y
123
124
&. Clark,
tie
and Wheeler
machines all
& Wilson. Clearly,
producing their gleaming
in
lit-
shiny black enamel, gold-leaf scrolls, painted roses,
mother-of-pearl inlay, polished hardwood cases, Rococo iron frames
the
manufacturers aimed straight at the heart of Victorian decorative sensibil-
Why,
ities.
then, do most Singers of the antebellum years appear as mas-
machines? Because that
sively constructed factory
is
what they were.
Isaac
Singer began in 1850 as a maker of industrial machines, although soon his
company joined the competitive home market, developed new marketing
techniques, and grew to dominate the industry.
The nineteenth
century's second halt was a time of complexity in
and children's fashions, often
France. Ready-mades were available
en's
womfrom
in adaptive imitation of styles
American retail stores and tailor
shops long before the Civil War. After 1865, we strove to inflict on ourselves
and our young some of history's most tortured creations, such as the infamous Lord Fauntleroy suit, of which the museum has a pristine example, as
in
well as a similar velvet knickerbocker suit with Zouave jacket.
We can
sigh in pity for the poor ten-year-old forced into such attire,
only
which was
doubtless enhanced by the so-called "American blouse," an orgy of lace,
white cotton, and oversized
collar.
Female fashion of Scarlett O'Hara's time required undergirding by a collapsible crinoline cage, a
cone of some thirty watch-spring
ing concentrically to the
of the
hoop
skirt
was restricted to
a parabola, outlined by
oline cage closely embracing the ankles.
required bustles, of which the
steel rings
grow-
By the 1880s, the exuberant bouncing
floor.
bell
an all-new crin-
Soon the demands of a fuller drape
museum owns
a variety. Designers rushed to
patent these beauty aids, formed ot cotton-covered wire, and resembling
fragments ripped from the viscera of upholstered chairs.
plastic material, celluloid,
masquerading
luUiid
as coral, jet, horn, tortoise shell,
combs and
collars
The
first
synthetic
was mastered by the early 1870s and sent forth
and malachite jewelry. Cel-
were major contributors to dapper grooming
in the
later years of the century.
The need
to clean
up
residential dirt
inventive spirit of the 1850s.
The
first
was a problem made
to order for the
carpet sweeper in America whirred
out of Boston in 1858; a national magazine's enthusiastic product
predicted the end of brooms.
begins with an 1859 Daboll,
The museum's
made
in
test report
collection of such products
Providence,
Rhode
Island. Rolling
on
wheels that spun a revolving brush, the Daboll was reasonably effective.
The
boasting the improvement of an adjustable
museum's 1876 model. The Bissell would dominate the carpet sweeper market for generations.
Bissell arrived in the 1870s,
brush, as displayed in the
The vacuum cleaner began late in the nineteenth century with clumsy,
hand-pumped devices that required two operators. But with the rapid
development of small, high-speed electrical motors, the vacuum sweeper
was an obvious application, and with the advent of the
first
highly success-
125
Opposite. Tins Lord Fauntleroy suit ofc. 1885
American made.
Its
is
pruhahly
pants and jacket arc velveteen; the
126
Hoover of 1908, the age of
ful
modem
housecleaning had truly arrived.
The museum's collection ot household laundry equipment
and homely cavalcade that
Opposite.
traces the long
washday
drudgery. A selection of gadgets sought to improve the ancient washboard
with arms and cranks. Other washers pounded, squished, and sucked. Cradle-shaped rockers like the 1876 Pennsylvanian and the Boss of 1888 made
some insubstantial headway.
Kerosene was important in the home, yet its period ot dominance was
surprisingly short. The kerosene lamp devekiped only from the 1850s, when
it was already plain to many scientists that electric lighting was only a mattried, often unsuccessfully, to ease
ter of time. Gaslight, in use in selected locations since the
beginning of the
century, was a formidable rival to both kerosene and electricity. In 1885, gas
was rejuvenated by the development of the Welsbach mantle, an impregnated gauze device that created a
brilliant, efficient,
and economical
light
that remained popular until 1910.
The museum's
collection of lighting devices, best in the world, includes
North America from the
every type of light used in
earliest settlers'
crude
imports onward, covering such rare offshoots as political parade torches,
and rows of glittering chandeliers, crude wrought-iron grease lamps, stately
Sandwich glass kerosene fixtures, classical Argands. An assembly of
hundreds of lightbulbs traces the progression
In music, the upright piano had
its
of
Edison and his competitors.
origins as far back as the 1820s, but
the popular square held the stage until after the Civil War.
upright age broke with
grand in volume, yet would
The
new
fit
heights of ornamentation.
is
its
The rosewood
lavishly inlaid with
flowers. Inside, the sturdy iron
all
Knabe
is
Then
the
approached the
but the tiniest parlors.
manufacturers from scaling
case of the museum's 1884
maple and mahogany festoons
frame had capacity to spare
ern standard of eighty-eight notes.
rosewood concert grand,
a style that
against the wall of
upright's practicality did not inhibit
Baltimore-made Knabe
and
Here was
full force.
for the
also represented by a
mod-
mighty
1870.
c.
he mastery of new equipment by furniture factories
opened the door
#/StI
structions
9^
like
John Henry Belter
of
Rm,
Rococo
to increasingly intricate
at ever-falling prices.
Such
con-
styles as
revival were dictated by inventive leaders
New York, whose
techniques in laminating and carv-
The Renaissance revival school employed fewer
ponderous dimensions. The museum displays one Renaissance
ing were widely imitated.
curves, but
revival etagere
and
pier table combination, c. 1870, bristling with female
and swags, combining walnut, ebonized
and porcelain. Almost nine feet tall, this prodigy has no practical
heads, scrolls, swans, tassels, plaques,
wood,
gilt,
function other than serving as a mirror and resting place for three pieces of
sculpture. But
it
does do more: such a piece sums up, as no written history
127
Mighty were the works of America's mid-nine-
The grand piano in the
foreground came from the Baltimore shop of WiUiam
teenth-century piano craftsmen.
Knahe
&
Company in about 1870. A decade before, the
Company of Stamford, Connecticut, had
Kroeger Piano
created the harp piano, at rear
could, the tortured complexities of the Gilded Age.
reaction did
pieces,
may have exceeded
lake
come
against such monstrous (although well-made)
and especially against
their imitators,
whose production capacity
their quality standards. English designer Charles East-
was one who sought,
in the 1870s, to curb design excesses, advocating
and con-
plainer rectilinear forms with simple, lightly routed line carving
trasting colors of
and used them
wood. Mass producers immediately seized Eastlake's ideas
to create
more
distortions.'
The museum
displays
an East-
lake-style icebox.
A tar simpler theme was the Mission style of oak furniture arriving in the
1890s.
Its
clean, cagelike simplicity must have struck proper late Victorians
with some surprise. But
did not succeed in holding hack the flood of turn-
it
of-the-century "golden oak" furniture, disparaged in some recent decades
as the nadir of
American
furniture design.
an extra dimension
Historical associations fix
of interest to such
museum
and desk made in 1857 for the U.S. House of
Representatives and designed by Thomas U. Walter. One of the nation's
foremost architects, Walter spanned Greek revival to Romanesque revival
in his long career, and was architect of the U.S. Capitol from 1851 to 1865.
He enlarged the Capitol to essentially its present form, and replaced the
U)wer Bulfinch dome with the one we see today. As part of designing the
new Senate and House wings, he created new furniture as well. The deeply
carved oak chairs, made by the New York firm of Bembe &. Kemmel, were
judged too heavy by the Congressmen, and in only two years were auctioned
off and replaced. An identical chair found its way tt) the Washington photographic studios of Mathew B. Brady and Alexander Gardner, and was
furniture as the massive chair
used to pose such figures as
Abraham
Lincoln.
President Lincoln was sitting in another chair, however, on April
14,
Rococo revival rocking chair in
one of the museum's supreme treasures, albeit
1865, at Ford's Theater. Tciday the walnut,
which he was assassinated
is
melancholy one. The original faded red upholstery is threadbare but
intact. The left runner shows an old break at the rear. As a scar of use it is
especially provocative:
was the wot)d broken
in the Presidential box,
moments
after
in that
mad, trampling scene
Booth triggered
his Deringer.'
Edwin Stanton, the chair was stored for
sixty-five years before returning to its owning family, and thence ci)ming to
the museum. The old rocker is made even more meaningful by two other
original relics displayed across it: the drab, light brown shawl Lincoln was
Impounded by Secretary
using,
and the most
of State
fragile witness to
Persevering against the lingering
murder, his theatrical playbill.
American preference
for foreign
china,
our ceramic manufacturers by mid-century were creating not only tableware
but
al.so
made by
such works of art as the museum's Parian eagle vase
that imitated marble. James (Jarr of the
128
of 1850.
the U.S. Pottery Co. of Bennington, Vermont, using a
New
York
'ity
Pottery
It
was
tec linn.|ue
Co. used the
medium with stunning success in 1876 with his bust of George Washington
in a Roman toga. The work was exhibited at the Philadelphia Centennial,
attracting great attention, just as it remains a popular museum artifact
today. Similarly, a pair of vases by Thomas C. Smith & Son of New York
are veterans of the Centennial.
They
patriotically display selected scenes
and emblems of America around the base.
Such performances at the 1876 exposition helped American ceramicists
become solidly established at last. That significance was lost on Mrs. Ruthfrom
erford B. Hayes, who ordered a new set of Presidential china in 1878
The Hayes china was, at least, decorated by an American with allAmerican scenes. Representative pieces join the museum's many other
France.
examples of Presidential porcelain.
Woodrow Wilson
tion of
that the
(It
would not be
until the administra-
White House received American-made
china, from Lenox, Inc., of Trenton,
New Jersey)
Toward the close of the nineteenth century, a reaction to the uniformity
of mass production inspired a new spirit of individual craftsmanship in
ceramics and
About
glass.
1886, the
Greenwood
Pottery of Trenton,
New
and covered with
a deep royal blue glaze and assorted gilded decorations, the ewer has an oriental look that recalls the fresh interest in Eastern design in the 1880s. Simporcelain ewer. Ten inches
Jersey,
produced an
ilarly,
a twenty-six-inch vase
1889
is
elaborately
artistic
made by Joseph
ornamented with aquatic
phin handles. Called the "Barber Vase,"
tall
Lycett of
New
York City in
and bracketed by dolformer owner, it is one of the
flowers,
for a
museum's most important examples of late nineteenth-century ceramics.
more personalized artistry sprang from such female artisans as Kate B.
Sears, whose 1891 Parian porcelain vase displays a frieze of cupids on flying
geese and the forms of stylized leaves.
By 1900, advanced artists had clearly left the old century's forms behind.
The twentieth-century idea arrived on the iridescent glass wings of Louis
Comfort Tiffany, that master's three-handled, blown amber vase with its
irregular veining seems the very essence of Art Nouveau.
Before the Civil War most American toys were imported, but Yankee
ingenuity did produce at least one antebellum breakthrough: the first modstill
ern board game. Brainchild of
Anne
Abbott, the daughter of a
gland clergyman, the game "Mansion of Happiness" carried
its
New
En-
players along
themed journey, through board spaces dictated by the spin of an indicator.
fitted the time's morality. Players landing on Cruelty were sent
back to Justice; a stop on Idleness would lead to Poverty; a Sabbath Breaker
would be jailed and then lose three turns. But advancing to such frames as
Piety, Honesty, Humility, and Industry sent the player farther along the road
to the Mansion of Happiness. It was a good game and intensely popular.
a
The game
W&
S. B. Ives of
the century
it
Salem, Massachusetts, brought
it
out in 1843; later in
was marketed by Parker Brothers.
Other board games followed
swiftly
The
first
big competitor was
an 1844
129
effort
by L.
I.
Cohen
& Co.
of Philadelphia, entitled
"The National
Game
of the Star Spangled Banner or Geographical &. Historical Tourist through
the United States
Game
Tourist."
& Canada,"
known
as the
"National
rare original
games
in
unsurprisingly
The museum has both
its
toy
collection.
By the 1860s, American industry had geared up for an avalanche of iron
and mechanical toys. One of the first known mass-produced wind-up toys
is a ten-inch-long locomotive, made of tin with cast-iron wheels. The
"Union" stenciled on the
brightly painted engine has
praise another odd- looking toy in the
museum,
boiler.
T)y aficionados
a spring-operated, foot-high
walking doll that pushes a cartlike conveyance. In the cart a boy waves an
American
and the whole ensemble
preceded by a dangling brass
bell.
An elaborate wind-up toy of the era is a fifteen-inch-long sidewheeler,
two-
flag,
stacked steamboat. Others
unmechanized
some of
is
the best in design and detail
iron pull toys, like a nineteen-inch steam
fire
are
engine, with
detachable driver holding the reins to a galloping team. Nearby
is
a lion
with a bobbing head, and a Jack-in-the-Box. Such are a few of the faded
toys of the
Gilded Age.
The museum's
In
some
1877.
It
cases
collection of mechanical banks
we can
displays a soldier aiming a mortar,
house or
fort.
The American
aid even
a coin
made
from her beak into the
a chirping
OpposiK
chair
the
F. ri'.er
hdunnng our
history, this
is
which President Abraham Lincoln was sitting at
of his assassination. He was also using the
moment
shawl and theatrical program draped on the chair.
which shoots
sound from
Bank of c.
a coin into a block-
Bank of 1883 features
The mother bends forward,
hanks were made in the form of the
the rocking
displayed with the toys.
Eagle
feeding two babies in their nest.
and drops
is
see why, as with the Artillery Mechanical
mother eagle
flaps
her wings,
nest. Originally, this deluxe savings
a built-in bellows.
real thing. In one, the
1876, a cashier at his post inside the building rotates
Other popular
Magic Bank of
and deposits the tend-
ered coin.
The
stovepipe hat. while of the appropriate period, has no Lin-
coln connection
Above This important earthenware vase was made in 1889
by the Faience Manufacturing Company of Greenpoint,
New York, and decorated by Joseph Lycett. It is sometimes
called the "Barber Vase" after its original owner
n the 1850s
a few daredevils such as John
revived the nation's interest in ballooning.
'electrified
/.board
county
fairs
Wise
Wise
by dropping animals over-
and sometimes leaping out
himself. Wise carried America's first official airmail two years before the Civil
War. His contemporary, Thaddeus Lowe, sent down the first aerial communiin parachutes,
cation (by telegraph) and founded the U.S.
Army
Aeronautics Corps.
Throughout the nineteenth century, dreamers tinkered with flight. England's Sir George Cayley (1773-1857) articulated some surprisingly
advanced aeronautical theories, and built a successful man-carrying glider.
William Henson, another Englishman, patented an aerial "steam carriage"
that incorporated most of the features of an airplane. In 1848, a model of
it
actually flew.
The
first
130
designed,
pk)wed through the
successful dirigible
Frenchman Henri Giffard
built,
and flown by
Paris skies at five miles per
131
132
opposite. America's surging mechanical ingenuity did not
neglect the young fry
Happy the 1870
child was
ceived this spring-driven ensemble, wherein
doll
pushed
a fanciful
and
who
re-
foot-high
patriotic cart
an early example of a perennial favorite; the
wind-up toy locomotive. Such productions were legion in
the latter half of the nineteenth century
Below. Here
133
is
134
hour in 1852. Driven by a
light
miles in a pioneering powered,
man Otto
motor drove an
airship.
built,
era,
glider flights before a
La France, on a
successful flight with a
two-man
officers.
a few such stirring exploits, the century
the ground, with the railroad
burning
covered seventeen
1896. In 1884, a nine-horsepower battery-operated elec-
crew of French army
Apart from
craft
In the next generation, Ger-
made more than two thousand
Lilienthal
final, fatal glide in
tric
steam engine, the
manned flight.
its
chief obsession.
was firmly footed on
The peak
of the
wood-
1855 to 1875, produced the most beautiful locomotives ever
works of industrial sculpture caparisoned with gleaming brass and
brilliant painted flourishes.
One
of the best survivors
is
the museum's 1858
Rogers, representing the 4-4-0 "American" class locomotive that
is
one of
the milestones of mechanical design. Built originally for the Atlantic
name was
&
Henry Ford acquired and
restored the engine in 1924, and renamed it Sam Hill, after an engineer
who worked the Dearborn run on the Michigan Central when Ford was a
boy. In 1929, when President Herbert Hoover attended the Golden Jubilee
of Light that officially dedicated the museum and Greenfield Village, Ford
renamed the locomotive The President. Meanwhile his shops had conGulf Railroad of Georgia,
its
Satilla.
War era, directed by
Thomas Edison himself, who had worked on just such a train.
The museum's railroad section traces the entire progression of motive
power through the 1880s, when the harbingers of a new era of more powstructed three replica coaches suggesting the Civil
erful coal burners arrived.
By the
late 1890s,
America's main-line loco-
motives dwarfed the few remaining "teakettles," as they were scornfully dismissed, of the earlier era. Their increased speed and weight would not have
been sustainable, however, without two basic technological improvements:
the airbrake and the automatic coupler.
Before George Westinghouse invented and successfully demonstrated the
airbrake in 1868, stopping a train was a crude
and often dangerous process,
down on each
one's
heavy brake wheel, mechanically forcing shoes against wheels with
little
requiring brakemen to leap from car to car, cranking
more sophistication than the system on
New York-bom Civil War veteran and
logical leap in providing, in effect,
pumped by an
accessory on the locomotive, was piped from car to car along
the train, actuating
lever.
be
all
The new system
difficult to stop
About
Concord coach. Westinghouse, a
brilliant engineer, made a technothe first "power brake." Compressed air,
a
brakes simultaneously
when
the engineer pulled one
did not eliminate train wrecks
but
it
was a quantum leap
a train
would always
in train safety.
the time the airbrake was coming into general use, in the early
1880s, E. H. Janney's automatic coupler was introduced to further applause
among
battered trainmen. "Coupling up" had been one of the most dan-
gerous jobs in industry, requiring a
man
to
stand between mating cars to
guide a large link from coupler to coupler, then drop in a securing pin at the
135
Opposite. By the late 1850s,
American locomotives had
reached a high point in industrial design, as demonstrated
hy the museum's 1858 Rogers. This lovely woodburner was
in Paterson, New Jersey, and cost the Atlantic & Gulf
Renamed The President by
Henry Ford, it ceremoniously pulled President Herbert
Hoover and other dignitaries to the 1929 opening of the
Ford Museum and Greenfield Village
made
Railroad $8,200 on delivery.
instant of impact.
the
new
strated
The
process took a heavy
"knuckle"-style coupler was
on
much
toll in fingers
safer.
and hands. But
Both devices are demon-
Baldwin passenger locomotive of the 1890s, an engine exactly
little 1858 woodhurner, although retaining the same
twice the weight of the
4-4-0 wheel configuration. Baldwins were always in the forefront of Amer-
The Philadelphia company was founded by early
and philanthropist Matthias W. Baldwin with the locomotive
ican locomotive design.
industrialist
Old
Ironsides in 1832.
Generations of our ancestors found streetcars indispensable, and Henry
The
Ford gathered up a representative collection for his museum.
eldest
is
which was approaching the end of the animalpower era. The sixteen-passenger vehicle was built by one of the leading
specialists, j. M. Jones &. Co. of West Troy, New York, a firm that sold thousands of horsecars around the world, including a stunning order ot two
a horse-drawn car of 1881,
hundred
at
home
Bombay, India,
for
in shipping
its
in 1870.
The company had
learned early to feel
vehicles across oceans; after starting in 1839 as a
and wagon maker, it shipped thousands of wagons around Cape
San Francisco during the California Gold Rush.
The 1881 car is toylike, topheavy, and probes the upper limits of Gothic
carriage
Horn
to
quaintness.
Once
it
served in Brooklyn,
New York;
lettering
still
proclaims
&
ERIE BASIN. The lettering, paint
GREENPOINT, FERRIES, HUNTERS POINT
trim, ironwork, interior seating, and "Rules for Passengers" sign all combine
in a priceless time capsule of American street transportation more than a
century ago.
When
electrical pioneer
trified street rail
mal-powered cars came
horsecars.
ful)
is
to
an abrupt
That any survived
is
(the
halt.
museum
epitomized by several
from Philadelphia's
The
1890s marked the end ot
has two out of a national hand-
J.
G.
Brill
electrics, the first
mahogany. Later generations of
Brills are
much
m()tt)rman's
controls.
hand pulled away
for
Such
to
doubt the
of the car's trim was
represented by the company's
"Birney" class, built from 1916 into the '20s, and famed for
named "dead man"
an 1892 vehi-
Company. Anyone tempted
Victorians' quality standards should note that
ically
elec-
remarkable.
The replacement
cle
Frank Sprague created America's premier
system for Richmond, Virginia, in 1889, the career of ani-
its
melodramat-
cars stopped automatically
any reason. That comforted the
allowed the trolley companies to introduce one-man
.service,
if
riders
cutting
the
and
down
on overhead and taking some of the pressure off an overtaxed civilian labt)r
pool during World War 1.
Commercial wagons were rarely preserved when their working lives were
done, and the survival of those in the museum's collection opens an elusive
window on vanished routines and technologies. An 1870 butcher's wagon
recalls the time when peri.shable foods were sold daily in the street, or delivered door-to-door. A 1900 beer wagon once delivered kegs to pre-Prohibi-
136
still hears the name of the original
who hauled new shoes from Massachusetts factories.
is the dump wagon of 1900, with its pedal-actuated dumping
One
tion saloons.
1885 freight wagon
owner, E L. Hatch,
Another
rarity
door
dispensing gravel or sand.
for
blazoned "Standard Oil
partments
heavy
rig,
An
and motor oil
whose driver enjoyed the
for gasoline
Standard Oil
Company
tank wagon of 1892,
oil
Company" and
emcom-
still
"Perfection Kerosene," had
as well.
A two-horse
relative
comfort of a buggy top.
team pulled the
The
alone operated more than six thousand wagons at
the turn of the twentieth century.
The
lovely 1797 chariot already discussed
was a product of the bench
may be viewed against the same measurements
of skill and technology that we apply to a bombe Chippendale chest-onchest, a flintlock long rifle, or a hand-hammered silver coffeepot. In the
craftsman's golden age, and
century that followed, technological changes came, though at a rather slow
pace at
came
first,
to the
manufacture of horse-drawn conveyances. The big news
minor milestones as the invention of the elliptical spring early
in the 1800s, and later improvements in hub construction. Gradually, with
improvements in carriage suspension, manufacturers learned to make
lighter vehicles that could stand the shocks of wretched roads.
Our most important vehicle of the century was the buggy. Though established in essential form before the Civil War, it was in Cincinnati in the
1870s that the type was first made with interchangeable parts. From then
until about 1910, the country saw a flood of homely, practical, and unbein such
cheap buggies, averaging $35 but often discounted to $25. One of
wagon manufacture was Flint, Michigan, where
future automobile tycoon William C. Durant got started with the Flint
Road Cart Company. The carriage makers of Flint were not merely the
they were
ancestors of the men who would make Buicks and Chevrolets
lievably
the centers of buggy and
the same men.
who insisted on the
One maker that provided
Buggies were satisfactory, but not for the wealthy,
comfort and elegance of vehicles of grande
luxe.
them was Brewster &. Co. of New York City, which enjoyed an
reputation by the time of the Civil War.
of Brewsters that span
many
years.
certainly the Rolls-Royce of
formal, a Brewster George
cratic
its
An
The museum
1865 closed coach with facing seats,
day, cost
about $1,500. Less stately but
IV phaeton was
mid-Victorian women,
international
displays a selection
who found
its
a popular type
among
k)w profile an admirable show-
case in which to display their costumes on rides through the park.
led quickly to the Victoria,
still
aristo-
The
style
one of the most graceful vehicles ever made. The
museum's example of c. 1875 has swooping leather fenders, ornately tufted
upholstery, and a dark green tonneau, all slung lithesomely within four Cshaped springs. The Victoria's design
top
was
American
so
good
it
was transmitted
a low, rakish profile
with a calash
to at least the early generations of
cars; the Peerless Victoria of 1911
motorized the
profile for
one of
137
&
Company of West Troy, New York, a preemiJ.M. Jones
nent producer of horse-drawn streetcars, made this charming example in 1881.
streets of Brooklyn,
It
served nearly twenty years on the
New
York
opposite. In 1906, nearing the end of the era of horsefire pumps, the Manchester Locomotive
Works of New Hampshire produced this enormous "extra
first size" pumper. Weighing 9,600 pounds, it could hurl
the best-looking cars in this or any other
drawn steam
1,100 gallons of water per
minute
Somehow, the
museum
collection.
excesses of design in furniture, architecture, and dress of
As
the high Victorian era never reached the artifacts of transportation.
guided by unerring gyroscopes of
taste, carriage
with restraint and an increasingly sure sense of
been
a
little
new
demand
for
anything
When
else.
line.
There seems
to
have
the governor of Nevada ordered
carriage in the raucous silver-boom year of 1870, he received a slen-
sedate barouche from the maker, E.
der,
if
makers plied their trade
M.
Miller ot
Qumcy,
Illinois.
But
Mr. Miller did make some concessions at the governor's request: door handles,
other mountings, and harness for a four-horse team were solid
Among
the
silver.
the nicer nineteenth-century forms that vanished utterly with
coming of motorcars was the hansom cab. Designed by an English
architect, the low-slung, two-wheeled, two-passenger, front-opening han-
som was one of the snuggest
resisted
value,
it
its
Kimball
The
until late in the
vehicles ever devised. Curiously,
horse-drawn
era; by the
The museum's
time was almost gone.
& Company of Chicago,
rare
is
its
by C. R
and dates about 1885.
Some
of the finest examples of the
carriage maker's skill date from the late nineteenth
The museum's brougham
and
of 1902, however,
sporting style favored since before the Civil
War
is
early twentieth cen-
of a mainline, non-
by nabobs and cab-owners
alike, a practical, comfortable, low-slung carriage of
The
example
era of horsepowered vehicles drew to a close with a corresponding
surge of popularity in sport coaching.
turies.
Americans
time we recognized
elegance and strength.
body was appropriated by automobile makers for almost all
early coupes; as late as 1923, Ford was still making a Model T with essentially the same passenger compartment. But the most interesting thing
style of its
about this brougham
is its
history.
dent Theodore Roosevelt, used for
It
was the presidential vehicle of
official
Presi-
occasions throughout his admin-
istration, and on many occasions by his successors, even after President
William Howard Taft motorized the White House fleet. The brougham
remained in White House service until 1928.
America's mt)st famous horse-drawn fire steamers came from Manchester, New Hampshire, where in 1859 the Amoskeag Manufacturing Co. built
its first. The firm was acquired in 1877 by the Manchester Locomotive
Works, which continued making horse-drawn Amoskeag steamers until
1908, for a total of 839. The museum's example, serial number 809, came
in 1906, near the era's close, and is a worthy representative of the twilight
years of steamers. Was there ever a creature t)f the American road as for-
midable as this great, smoke-belching machine, storming out of
its fire-
housc behind a three-horse team.' The splendid Amoskeag served in
Detroit's Engine Company Number One, where it was called "Big Mike."
All by itself, the pumper constitutes a textbook in American industrial
design at the turn of the twentieth century.
138
few early Victorian inventors fiddled with systems
to
a^
add power to that humiliated protobicycle, the
A Scot produced a
hobby horse.
in 1839.
New
lever-drive device
A true breakthrough occurred in the
York soon
made them under Lallement 's
TTie museum's beautifully crafted example dates about 1870.
little use;
by 1871,
Strangely, the boneshakers of the 1860s
and iron
tires
have
bizarre creaticms that
1860s,
even with
their
patent.
received very
as public
wood spokes
more modern look about them than the
came next. Back in England, even as the funeral rites
a slightly
of boneshakers progressed, James Starley produced the
"ordinary."
It
many communities had banned boneshakers
nuisances.
The odd-looking highwheeler was based on
principle: the larger the
wheel where power
is
first
highwheeler, or
a useful
mechanical
directly applied by a crank,
the farther and faster the device will go with each foot-powered revolution.
The
practical limit to the principle
manufacturers went to the
ically forth after 1878.
many
similarities to
was the length of the
maximum, wheels
rider's legs.
As
of sixty inches rolled majest-
By the early 1880s, technological progress brought
modern
bicycles: wire spokes, lightweight frames,
pedal construction. Yet the gigantic front wheel, tiny rear wheel, and solid
rubber
tires
were overpowering features.
Of the museum's number of ordinaries, none
1884 Expert Columbia.
Thomas
It
is
is
more
like the vehicle that
significant
than an
dashing adventurer
Stevens pedaled around the world from 1884 through 1887. lb be
for much of the way; by all odds, a heroic,
The manufacturer of Stevens's bike was the formidable
Colonel Albert Pope, who was also a major lobbying force for good roads
and cyclists' rights. Cyclists' rights? Indeed. With the sudden bike boom,
sure,
13,
he also rode and pushed
500-mile odyssey.
some roadside property owners became
affluent, sporting bikers. Teamsters,
toll
gougers, fleecing the generally
claiming the bikes scared their ani-
mals, shoved sticks into the highwheelers' spokes.
League of American Wheelmen and pushed
maps; they sanctioned races and
rallies,
The
bikers organized the
for better roads, signs,
and
dressed in distinctive uniforms,
built motel-like clubhouses. With bikes costing $150 each, it was a
game for well-to-do adventurers. Downhill speeds of 30 m.p.h. were attainable, and outings traditionally covered 100 miles per day, no mean feat on
the available roads. Such riding was dangerous, for the highwheeler had a
depressing tendency to pivot forward on confronting a serious obstruction,
pitching the driver straight over and down on his head. American ingenuity
and
could produce only one major change during the perilous 1880s: switching
the big wheel to the
rear.
Then
The
rakish, low-slung grace of the Victoria per-
fectly suited the style-conscious
Gilded Age. This
when two Frenchmen applied a simple crank with pedals to the front axle. One
of the inventors, Pierre Lallement, moved to Connecticut and built and patented the first American velocipede, or "boneshaker," in 1866. The firm of
Pickering and Davis of
Opposite.
the rider could pitch hacVMarA.
141
Brewster
1875
fine
cynosures of America's
example came from the shop of
York City, sometime around
& Company of New
142
In 1885, the English technical wizard James Starley, inventor of the high-
wheeler, decided
its
He
time had come.
applied a chain and sprocket drive
system on a bicycle of two equal wheels called the Rover, and began popularizing a
new
era of "safeties.
The
"
bikes of today
all
had
their clear begin-
many dashing
wheelmen took reckless pride in their all-male hobby, and resisted the
namby-pamby influence of low-wheeled safeties. Women had begun taking
ning in Starley 's Rover. Yet the
to
shift
was not immediate,
for
English-import tricycles, on which the rider sat between two majestic
rear wheels. In about five years, however, all that
was passe, and both
men
and women turned in droves to the new bikes. When Colonel Pope began
producing the Columbia Veloce safety in 1888, the stage was set for the biking phenomenon of the 1890s. Irish veterinarian John Dunlop provided the
final necessary modernization, the pneumatic tire, in 1888.
Suddenly a new social structure developed around biking. Young women
now possessed a degree of individual freedom of mobility that only the most
dashing horsewomen had known before. Fashion and etiquette arbiters
warned against the dangers of
unchaperoned young people loose on the roads. But most Americans
struggled to cope. Conservative ministers
accepted the bicycling craze of the 1890s as a happy, healthy social phe-
nomenon, while the decade spawned at least 190 popular songs about bicyThe museum's 1889 Columbia is a good example of the machine that
cling.
so heavily influenced those golden years.
The
biking rage and
potential for commercial riches
its
opened the era
of consumer marketing in transportation. Manufacturers cultivated bike
races as sure-fire attention-getters.
Such
star riders as
Waltham Manufacturing Co., maker
is
publicity-conscious
of the popular Orient line, created a
famous ten-man bicycle that was demonstrated
grotesque, old "Oriten"
young Barney Oldfield
The
staged challenge races, paced by four-man teams.
at races.
The
historic,
if
today one of the museum's most popular bicycle
Another is the powder blue 1900 Tribune Blue Streak once owned
and raced by Barney Oldfield. A similar Tribune carried Charles "Mile-aMinute" Murphy on a historic 1899 ride in which he slipstreamed behind a
exhibits.
speeding train to become the
first
human
to pedal a mile in less
than one
minute.
few pioneers
spiritual
descendants of the great
Oliver Evans, the steam originator, or stirred by
the short-lived success of British road steamers
tinkered with steam for highway power in the middle
nineteenth century.
Among
vehicles in the country
bury, Massachusetts.
was bom; his
ten vehicles.
Roper
leisurely
the most successful, early self-propelled motor
was the one
built his
built by Sylvester
first
Hayward Roper of RoxHenry Ford
car in 1863, the year that
and
production schedule extended until 1896
The museum's
totaled
Roper, acquired by Henry Ford personally, dates
143
opposite. This Railway Express freight
worked
in
Ohio and Indiana
until 1928
wagon
of 1902
From 1880 to 1890, America's favorite bicycle
was the Expert Columbia "ordinary." manufactured by CoPope of Boston. In 1884, daring wheelman
Albert
lonel
Thomas Stevens began a successful round-the-world ride
opposite.
on
model
just like this one, also
made
in 1884
Below. Designed by prominent English bicycle innovator
James Starley, this 1885 Rudge rotary tricycle sought
tempt female bikers in the age of high wheelers
145
to
146
Left.
An
early prunidtiunal
dream machine, the ten-man
to the excellent Orient
Oriten of 1896 drew attention
"safety" hikes of
Waltham, Massachusetts
Above. This 1865 Roper steam carriage
vehicle In the
museum's
bury, Massachusetts, built his
in 1895.
The
Ford in 1930
147
is
the oldest motor
collection. Sylvester
first
Roper of Rox-
steamer in 1863; his
last
charcoal-fueled Roper was acquired by Henry
The
first
motiircycle to be sold cotntnercially, the 1894 Hil-
&
WolfmuUer seems rather modern-looking tor its
debrand
date of manufacture. The two-cyclinder, four-stroke engine
was cooled by water carried
in the rear fender
from 1865, and
The Roper
is
is
probably America's oldest original operable motor vehicle.
a clean-lotjlcing car of the buggy style, appearing far
than some famous marques
of later decades.
more
agile
two-cylinder charcoalbumer,
the brakeless Roper was stopped by engaging reverse or by throttling down.
as
more
wonderful curiosity than potentially valuable means of transportation.
The
Alas, the sturdy
little
unit was viewed by both the public and
its
owners
WW
Austin, exhibited the car at
owner of the museum's model,
county fairs in New England and the Midwest, challenging crack trotting
horses to a race. Austin and the Roper usually won. A broadside t)t the time
original
claimed the
common
car,
rosvds."
carrying two people, could be driven 150 miles per day "upon
A charge of twenty-hve cents was imposed to view "the most
wonderful invention of
148
modem
times."
Considering the public's long exposure to the Roper as
challenged the nation's best horseflesh,
of significant impact.
That
was a steamer,
it
time was steam's heyday.
few years
from
the Doble
endured
a boiler of live
into the 1930s. Still, the
steam did produce some squeam-
and they were expensive
ishness. Boilers did explode,
by the
steam cars
in the 1890s, a veritable fleet of
bouncing along on
its
after all, the
The power source was accepted fatalistically
later,
appeared, and one marque
idea of
car's lack
trailing wisps of smoke
underslung exhaust, should not have been a major objection
public.
successfully
it
hard to explain the
it is
and compli-
to build
The power source that would drive the world's automowas announced from Germany in 1876: Nickolaus August Otto's four-
cated to operate.
biles
cycle, internal
more than
combustion engine. Despite
a century. Otto's principle
every four-stroke engine in the world
mechanic
over
who
growing awareness that
ever, that in the
first
off the
mark
in
in
to every
and exhaust.
it is
moot
question. Scant doubt remains,
how-
annals of internal combustion, Germany's Karl Benz was
in 1885
with a workable
Moreover, he was the
car.
first
to
for public sale, building sixty-nine vehicles
between 1885 and 1893. The museum's surpassingly
cipede represents the world's
it,
intact,
invented the automobile has been defused by a
produce a quantity of cars
called
made
unchanged
the improvements
the sequence known
as intake, compression, power,
The argument
all
would remain
first
production
car.
Benz Velo-
rare 1893
The
Velo, as
devotees
its
incorporated some very modem-sounding mechanical systems for
time, including a carburetor, a gearbox, a differential, and water cool-
its
ing.
Apart from those
fully original
features,
it
resembles an ungainly carriage; wonder-
and archaic looking, the Benz seems
ancient tomb, and hears as
much
superficial
Add
to
its
other
firsts
that the
Years later Benz
ler,
and
their
III.
gawky Benz
gripped the international market, exporting two-thirds of
compo-
to the
nents of modern transportation as the funeral boat of Thutmose
Velo was a sensation.
from an
to have sprung
resemblance
its
Yet the
instantly
production.
would link up with fellow-German pioneer Gottlieb Daim-
company
prospers today.
tributions in the earliest years.
An
Many
others
made
eccentric Austrian
a variety of con-
named
Siegfried
Marcus tinkered promisingly, shunted to other projects, and was almost forgotten. American George B. Selden applied for patents on gasoline-powered cars as early as 1877 and, while never marketing a
royalties
from
a variety of
car, profited
under
manufacturers until defeated in court by Henry
Ford.
The
birth of motorcycles was nearly simultaneous with that of cars.
French "boneshaker" manufacturer, Ernest Michaux, clapped
a little
steam
engine to one of his products in 1867 American Sylvester Roper also made
a pufferbelly motorcycle. But steam
two-wheelers, and
when
was simply the wrong power source
for
Gottlieb Daimler successfully applied a gasoline
engine to a bike frame, the die was
cast.
Daimler moved on to automobiles,
149
ISO
leaving
first
it
to a small
group of engineers in Munich to produce the world's
production motorcycle. They began experimenting in 1892, and in
just
two years the new Hildehrand &. WolfmuUer Company was manufacturing
an open-frame two-wheeler of a conformation that hardly seems out of
place today, almost a century later. Studying the museum's H&.W, it seems
remarkable indeed that such a machine was contemporary with the first
modem bicycles,
and half a decade
cylinder, four-stroke engine
after the
heyday of high wheelers.
A two-
with jump-spark ignition drove the cycle
at a
respectable twenty-four miles per hour.
The magic
year for the
American automobile industry was
the Duryea Brothers marketed the
car.
first
Originally from Illinois, Charles and
plant in Springfield, Massachusetts.
in 1893,
and
America's
built another in 1895.
first
1896,
when
production model of an American
J.
Frank Duryea ran a bicycle
They successfully tested
With Frank at the tiller,
automobile race, sponsored by the
their
first
car
won
Chicago Times-Herald. He
that car
traveled the fifty-five-mile affair at an average of seven miles per hour.
Wagon Company, the brothers launched proThe museum's example is the third of
and is apparently the only survivor. The little
Organizing the Duryea Motor
duction of cars to retail for $1,500.
thirteen identical vehicles,
Duryea has an appealing look of clean, jaunty
often distinguishes the buggy-based
American
simplicity, a quality that
cars of the late nineteenth
century.
Other American pioneers are well represented in the museum's vast
A tall, two-seated 1897 Haynes-Apperson recalls
the saga of Elwood R Haynes of Kokomo, Indiana, a metallurgist who in
1894 designed a car, persuaded the Apperson Brothers (Elmer and Edgar)
to build it, drove it successfully, and continued making cars until 1925,
motor vehicle collection.
believing to his grave that he had built America's
went on
to build splendid cars of their
first car.
The Appersons
own, including the famous
Jackrabbit.
By 1898, the year of the Spanish-American War, even a few motorized
The museum's enormous Riker of that year
With an empty weight of 7,550 pounds, the huge
trucks were in regular service.
was
electrically
powered.
maroon truck carried a payload of two tons in its quarter-century of service
Altman Company of New York. Such department stores as Alt-
for the B.
man's were among the
first
commercial establishments
to appreciate the
value of motorized transport, and reliable electrics could be used effectively
for local delivery service despite their short range.
museum's
historic truck,
Andrew
L.
unusual distinction even for his technically
motor vehicles driven by
and
to
electricity
its
all
The
Riker of Brooklyn,
fluid time.
of the three power sources
builder of the
New
York, had an
He manufactured
steam,
gasoline,
that fought for supremacy as the nineteenth century
came
close.
151
Motor Wagon is one of thirteen
making it the first production car
opposite. This 1896 Duryea
identical automobiles,
'^^nitakiMM
^t
f
'M
^^^x9 Sl^^
t*
XT"
*
t^^r
_^V
Trhnnphs
ofRoad
aiidSky
he Messrs. EXiryea, Haynes, Apperson, and Riker
had plenty of company as they jockeyed for positron
A
^
were
noisy,
they ran at
ers
all.
more than
sixty
American manufactur-
were making automobiles. Mostly the vehicles
undependable, and
While some
cars, the
in 1900, for
fragile creations that
twitched feverishly
when
Such unserviceahility was aggravated by the American roadway.
city
and suburban
streets
could adequately accommodate motor-
unspeakably primitive nature of the nation's rural roads seemed an
overwhelming obstacle. However, such conditions offered a built-in marketing
opportunity. Reliability
ging rights of the
first
and speed
in conquering such conditions created brag-
magnitude. From the outset, manufacturers encouraged
the sporting side of motoring as young bloods
bought cars and organized
was getting from Chicago
races,
to
deserting their bicycle clubs
endurance runs, and
Milwaukee
in
one
day.
It
hill
was
long-distance journeys would shower commercial benefits
Alexander Winton of Cleveland was one of
bicycles to
creations,
climbs. Endurance
clear that successful
on any manufacturer.
this breed,
switching from
make his first car in 1897. Two years later, driving one of his own
Winton made a breathtaking run from Cleveland to New York in
forty-seven hours,
and was greeted by cheering throngs as he drove down
new two-seated model he called "a mar-
Broadway. In 1900, he introduced a
vel of simplicity that
gence."
can be understood by any person of average intellirare Wintons, a tiller-steered, four-
The museum owns one of these
153
Opposiie.
The museum has
number
of cars associated
with famous names and newsworthy dramas of the past, but
this
1940 Chrysler parade car
twenty years by
New
and other notables
is
in a class by itself.
Used
for
York City to carry kings, war heroes,
in ticker-tape parades, the
Crown Im-
phaeton here carried General Dwight D. Eisenhower
World War II victory parade. Today it serves as the oflicial car for opening ceremonies at the annual Greenfield
perial
in a
Village
Old Car
Festival
m'%M
^rS,;s<:;i::'-
liif
III
III
>^i^i
:/
-yrTM/
^^--^^
;-<?
W.lham
Ford, a successful Michigan
farmer,
Dearborn Township farmhouse
built thi
in 1860. Henry Ford
wa
born here ,n 1863, and here,
as a boy help.ng on'
rhe farm
he had h s hrst encounters
with machinery. As an
eiderJN
tycoon Henry Ford finally
had the house
held Village in 1944
moved
to
Green
wiccn
156
passenger
number with wire-spoked
wheels.
Winton's glory would soon he diluted. In
1901, driving a brawny, seventy-
horsepower racer against Henry Ford in a two-car event
Winton took an
Ford pulled ahead to win
ing Club,
at the Detroit Driv-
But his engine began smoking and
early lead.
in the car that survives today as
museum's rarest racing machines.
It was a crucial point in the career of young Henry Ford,
his years of incomparable impact
on the automotive
matic as he was. Ford comes at least partially into
against the major events of his
just
one of the
beginning
Complex and enigperspective when seen
age.
life.
Even the time of Henry Ford's birth was significant: July, 1863, the
month of Gettysburg, one of history's great watersheds. While generals
Meade and Lee pondered their next moves. Ford was horn on the family
farm in Dearborn, a
fertile rural
area just west of Detroit.
The proximity
to
such a major, growing city stimulated the production and marketing of such
profitable
commodities
as dairy products
and
hay, helping the Fords to pros-
per from the time young Henry's grandfather emigrated from Ireland in
1847.
By 1863, William Ford, Henry's
around Dearborn, and had
just
father,
owned 237
acres of farmland
completed the two-story frame home typical
of those in the region, plain but not totally graceless. Henry was
bom
in
one of three upstairs bedrooms.
He soon revealed a marked mechanical aptitude, which was encouraged
by his father.
The boy was
fascinated by watches, and soon was repairing
neighbors' timepieces with tools he
lifelong passion for self-reliance.
made
On
himself, a telling forecast of his
the farm, which was technologically
ahead of the average, he helped maintain equipment
for
haying, harvesting
small grains, and dairying.
For six years he attended school, a period starting at age seven that would
constitute his entire formal education. Yet the boy's formative learning was
Motivated strongly by teachers of high
quality, he drank
William Holmes McGuffey's Readers, and was thereby influenced toward an independent, questing life. A
crushing blow came at a vulnerable age, 13, when his mother died of child-
surprisingly rich.
in the practical, positive philosophy of
birth's complications.
years. In 1879,
Henry worked on the farm
full-time for three
more
aged sixteen, he walked into Detroit and found work as an
apprentice machinist, a point from which Ford's
life
stands as a paradigm
Opposite.
Henry Ford himself was at the wheel of the first
Winton in a dramatic con-
Ford racer, defeating Alexander
test at
the Detroit Driving Cluh.
tached, intent Ford
of the stunning rapidity of change in the peak years of America's indus-
the 1901 car
and of the opportunities that could be wrested from that turbulent pageant. He moved quickly between mechanical jobs: building
streetcars, casting iron and brass, working on steam engines. Already
Detroit had become a major manufacturer of many types of machinery. The
first generation of American automobile makers was in basic training.
Top.
trialization,
when he married Clara Jane Bryant of Dearborn
new house on forty acres bestowed by Henry's father,
Ford tried farming again
in 1888.
They
built a
157
is
is
in the
The man
beside the mus-
identified as Oliver Barthel. Tciday,
museum's collection
Working in a small shop at his Detroit home, young
Henry Ford completed this little vehicle in the spring of
1896. He called it his "Quadricycle," and took it for a trial
run on June 4, with a friend bicycling alongside. After
tinkering with it for six months, he sold it for $200; in
1904, he bought it back for $65
Bociom.
two-cylinder, in-line, four-horsepower engine
displacing 59 cubic inches was the power plant for Ford's
Quadricycle
1S
but the call of Detroit's machinery was too strong, and in 1891 they
back to the
ity,
city.
Eager to study the sensational
Ford began working
for the
new
Edison Illuminating Company. Nights he
He and Clara got
experimented at home, building a gasoline engine.
ning
for the first time,
moved
applications of electric-
clamped
to the
it
run-
kitchen sink, on Christmas Eve,
1893.
The next
step was building his
first
car in a small brick dependency
behind their Bagley Avenue home. Ford called
it
the "Quadricycle."
We
detract nothing from that historic proto-Ford by recalling that Benz, Duryea, Riker,
and others were already
in production. For a thirty-three-year-
old self-taught mechanic, building the
simple angle iron for the frame and
of tufted fabric was
little
wood
mounted above the
He used
car was a triumph.
for its
skimpy body.
A buggy seat
two-cylinder, in-line gasoline
engine, and the entire tiller-steered production rolled on bicycle-type
An electric
bell,
tires.
mounted on the leading edge of the dashboard, warned of
the vehicle's approach.
Ford failed to tailor his car to the door of his woodshed-workshop, so
first run he had to rip out the wooden frame and
Then, with a friend riding beside him on a bicycle, Ford
made his first test drive on June 4, 1896. He tinkered with improvements
for the next six months before selling the vehicle for $200.
Three years later Henry Ford resigned from the Edison Company, determined to build automobiles, and was personally encouraged on his course
before the Quadricycle's
several bricks.
by
Thomas Edison
himself. In the protean year of 1899, fresh automobile
companies bloomed and died almost daily
in our industrial cities,
and
Ford's earliest venture perished with the majority. In 1901, he returned with
the two-cylinder racer that defeated Alexander Winton.
Encouraged by the racing
notoriety. Ford next built
New
two ferocious-looking
named them "999"
race cars with huge four-cylinder engines,
(after a crack
York Central locomotive) and "Arrow," and enlisted young bicycle
racer Barney Oldfield as chief pilot. Dramatic photographs of the daredevil
driver,
clutching the two-handed
but
for Oldfield,
Arrow
it
tiller
of 999, created an instant notoriety
was Henry Ford himself who,
in 1904, drove the giant
new world's record for the mile,
American car and driver in the
across the ice of Lake St. Clair to a
91.37 miles per hour, etching the
first
records of auto sport. For serious racing fans, a pilgrimage to 999
stop in the
Ford in 1903 created the company that continues today.
A a jaunty,
The
successful runabout also called the "Fordmobile"
steering wheel instead of a
styles, testing his
produced a
is
the
first
museum.
tiller.
first
Model
sported
Ford quickly offered a variety of sizes and
design and engineering ideas on the market. In 1906, he
large, costly tourer, the
Model K,
his
first
six-cylinder car. All
the early Fords possessed a certain style, an indefinable hint of rakishness
to
adorn their mechanical excellence. Compared with most cars of the
159
Opposite. Bicycle racer Barney Oldfield switched to cars in
the
dawn
of
auto racing, and gained
still
more
notoriety.
Here, in 1902, he grasps the steering tiller of Ford's famed
"999." Ford himself raced in his early cars
Above. In 1903-04, the fledgling Ford Motor
erated on Detroit's
Mack Avenue
Company
op-
in a building represented
hy this one-quarter-scale structure.
The Mack Avenue
op-
eration was an assembly plant, with parts btought in and
assembled
at
work
stations.
The Model T and
acles of assembly line production
Ford's mir-
were years in the future
160
time, Fords
seemed jauntier and somehow more
K was no exception,
yet
even as he made
it
kinetic.
Ford was
The
lavish
Model
dissatisfied, for already
he was planning the work of genius that would put America on
self-pro-
pelled wheels.
y 1903, Alexander
Winton was
ultimate endurance
ready to essay the
trip: coast-Xjo-coa^t.
hig-
bodied, two-cylinder model, equipped with one of
the
new
steering wheels and driven hy H. Nelson
Jackson, churned across the continent in a race finished in sixty-three days.
Winton's satisfaction was
Less than a
brief.
month
later,
much
smaller one-
cylinder Packard shaved two days off the Winton's time.
That was
a particularly ironic
blow
to
Opposite, clocku;ise /rom upper
Alexander Winton. The Packard
Ward and William Dowd, were well-off young Ohioans
who had been provoked into building cars after buying a Winton in 1898
brothers, James
and experiencing
their twelve-horsepower,
San Francisco
to
mechanical trouble. In the great race of 1903,
a fiasco of
2,200-pound maroon roadster was driven from
New York by
Packard shop foreman
Tom
Fetch, relieved by
Marius Krarup. They sensibly packed such accessories as logging chain and
make their own road. The
two-month saga of Old Pacific, as the car was named, launched the Packard
Company on its long and distinguished career. Tiday the original Old
Pacific is one of the rarest relics in the museum.
pick and shovel, because in places they had to
America's turn-of-the-century car manufacturers accounted
seven thousand automobiles in 1900, year of the
United States.
Of the
first
for less
than
auto show in the
exhibitors in the great event, held in
New
York's
Madison Square Garden, not one survives as a car maker, although at least
two continue in altered lines. Oldsmobile was around, but didn't make the
show.
Young Ransom
tric cars in
Olds of Lansing, Michigan, had built steam and
E.
the 1890s before producing his
first
gasoline vehicle
wagon on enormous wheels
rather like a child's
in 1897
elec-
shaped
He moved
to
went into production, and soon stalled out with an unpopular,
money-losing first edition. Olds was experimenting with several new
Detroit,
models when a
fire
early in 1901 destroyed his factory,
saved was the prototype of a
curved in a graceful
scroll.
little
The
car was Olds's last hope.
Lansing, he produced 425 units in 1901, and 2,100
created 20,000 curved-dash models while
Oldsmobile was America's
first
ing one-third of the nation's
duction by two years.
The
making
mass-produced
new
little
and the only thing
one-cylinder runabout whose dashboard
Moving back
history as well; the
car.
to
1902. By 1905 he had
Merry
For a time Olds was
sell-
and he beat Henry Ford to mass proOlds became an enduring legend as one of
cars,
those rare cars to be clasped to the public
bosom
in universal affection
161
/e/t.
These are the Henry
Ford Museum's 1903 curved dash Oldsmobile, 1912 Rauch
electric town car, 1901 Columbia
and 1910 Stanley Steamer runabout
and Lang
ria,
M:iove. Stately, quiet,
Electric
and
electric Victo-
tractable was this 1914 Detroit
once owned by Mrs. Henry Ford
162
simple, reliable, well-made, easily controlled (and
some would
say cute)
machine. The museum's example, a 1903 model weighing only eight
hundred pounds,
is
a celebrated representative of America's oldest contin-
uing car maker.
Almost a
third of 1900's
ducing about
fifteen
The
was Columbia, which had emerged from
new models were
hundred
pro-
leader
electrics.
the ample organization of bicycle king Albert A. Pope in 1896. Pope would
go on to make a number of marques,
like
Pope-Tbledo and Pope-Hartford,
but the museum's 1901 Columbia Electric
is
a rare early
Hartford, Connecticut, tycoon's excursion into cars.
gant, having
example of the
also unusually ele-
been designed by an important carriage draftsman of the
William Hooker Atwood,
popular.
It is
The combination
of that classic shape with the clean, silent glide
of electric power created the era's ultimate car for the dignified
timid
day,
to follow the lines of the Victoria carriage then
owner. And women
felt
or
that they needed electrics, for cranking a
turn-of-the-century gasoline automobile required
maximum
and shoulder power.
Even after the advent of self-starters on gasoline
cars,
bicep, wrist,
around 1912,
elec-
known of some 150 companies to
make them was the Anderson Electric Car Company of Detroit, whose
famed "Detroit Electric" was made from 1907 to 1942. The museum owns
trics
enjoyed a share of the market. Best
two Detroits from the heyday of the
stately black 1914
electric car, 1912 to 1920.
One
is
the
opera coupe that was once the personal car of Mrs. Henry
Ford. Another popular electric is the museum's 1912 Rauch and Lang, a
company demonstrating the continuity that sometimes occurred in the car
business. The company had made fine horse-drawn carriages in Cleveland
since 1853, and began making electrics in 1905. The 1912 town car clearly
traces the Rauch and Lang heritage with its interior of pleated plush, an
upholstery theme rooted in the era of luxury carriages. Mechanically superior as well, the Rauch and Lang was pushed along by its forty-one-cell
Exide battery through six forward speeds, three reverse. Mourn as we may
low speed,
proved the
the passing of such majestic machines, their handicaps
trip
span between charges, excessive weight
in
short
end
insuperable.
The experience
trics:
of steam-powered cars roughly paralleled that of the elec-
each type had
Steamers were
fast,
prone to catching
its
advantages and
smooth,
fire,
reliable,
and slow
to
its
devotees, but each
its
fatal flaw.
but a bit complex and expensive,
work up
to operating pressure.
ance, they were more flexible than electrics, but
On bal-
women shied away from the
The manufacturers that made
Maine-bom Stanley brothers, E E.
necessary fiddling with valves and gauges.
steamers popular and practical were the
and E O.
a pair of bearded, derbied, identical twins
from Newton, Mas-
The Stanleys, who had already succeeded in producing X-ray
equipment, home gas generators, photographic dry plates, and violins, pro-
sachusetts.
163
Oppoiiie.
tion
is
One
Old
of the most historic cars in the Ford collec-
Pacific, the
Packard that endured a sensational,
two-month, coast-to-coast dash
in
1903
vided additional proof that clever inventors and tinkers could,
minds
their
to
it
duce a better car.
And the Stanleys made it look deceptively easy.
an immediate
steamer, in 1897, was
cality.
The
if
they set
and applied some hard-headed Yankee business sense, pro-
Stanleys, keen
Their
combining grace and
success,
and decorous, followed the crowd
way: seeking the publicity of successful speed
trials.
The
in only
Ormond
Beach, Florida, at 127.66 m.p.h. in a torpedo-shaped Stanley Rocket,
ting a
new
world's record
win since Henry Ford
To
and becoming the
in 1904.
sure raised to a prepotent 1,300
first
American car and
The next year, with
pounds (compared
was
the racer's steam pres-
seriously injured in the ghastly mess; while
servative Stanleys lost heart for racing.
The
set-
driver
to the Stanley standard
of 600), Marriott reached 197 m.p.h., went airborne,
riott
one
were
results
breathtaking. In 1906, race driver Fred Marriott hurtled diiwn
first
practi-
and crashed. Mar-
he survived, the con-
fact that the boiler did
not
explode was inadvertently a publicity bonus, but the Stanley was always
(Jpp'isite.
cosmetic
The immurtal Model
tacelitts in the
while
it
would undergo
course ot a nineteen-year history,
the original car (exemplified hy this 1909 model) remained
largely
unchanged
GMC
trucks and
Direct ancestor of today's
coaches, the 1906 Rapid was huilt by Detroit's Max
Above
Grabowsky
totally safe
from steam explosions; the brothers wrapped so much piano wire
around each boiler that bursting was impossible.
The museum shows two
Stanleys of high interest.
1903, eight-horse-
power model demonstrates the new design of 1902 that established the
Stanley's superiority over other steamers.
passenger Model 60 runabout
coffin-shaped
was
The
fast,
1910, ten-horsepower, tour-
the classic steamer of
hood proudly garnished by the
smooth,
their prices
is
American
legend,
brass script, "Stanley."
its
Here
powerful car for the modest figure of $850. Keeping
down was
further proof of the Stanleys' ingenuity, for they had
no truck with cost-cutting mass-production methods. Painstakingly crewhich ended
ating each car by ancient shop methods, their production
in the
ers
middle 1920s
totaled only eighteen thousand. All told, the broth-
were atypical ornaments of the early automobile business, even to the
tragedy that darkened their final years. In 1918, F E. heroically ditched his
steamer to avoid some careless roadblockers, thus becoming the
first
American car maker to die at the wheel of his own product.
Famous as it was, the Stanley did not have everything its own way
impor-
tant
in the
The chief competitor was the White, begun in 1900 by the
long-succe.ssful White Sewing Machine Co. of Cleveland. Early models
showed speed and reliability, and when the museum's 1902 Mt)del A Stanhope was introduced, the company bore down on one technological advantage White had on Stanley: it would get steam up taster. "Gives pressure in
world of steam.
five
minutes," White's ad copy said. By 1907 such Whites as the museum's
G touring car carried a majestic "Pullman" be)dy on
trimmed out "in the most luxurious fashion which
the carriage builder's art can suggest." The high, regal White, made originally for a French customer, was clear proof that in just a decade or so of
manufacture, American cars could compete with European ones in luxury
seven -passenger Model
a 115-inch wheelbase,
and sophistication.
164
'"^''WWP''^*
165
One
most appealing vehicles is also the historic ancestrucks and buses. Max Grabowsky, a talented
ot the collection's
tor of a long line of
Detroiter
cumbed
who had mastered
to the
under his
modem
the trades of machinist and locksmith, suc-
motor vehicle rage in
own name, Grabowsky
1901. After selling a few delivery trucks
switched to the Rapid
started building heavy gasoline-powered trucks as
enter that uncertain
field.
When
passenger vehicle, he called
applied to such machines.
with a cruising speed of
drawn
vehicles,
and was
it
The
title in
1904 and
one of the very
first
to
he created the museum's 1906, twelve-
a "tourist"-; the
fifteen miles per
word "bus" was not
to its name,
Rapid lived up
successful
hour
it
was twice
yet
for
as fast as horse-
a particular favorite for station-to-hotel service
nee Grabowsky was
sightseeing. For such reasons, the
Rapid
candidate for acquisition in 1909
when William C. Durant,
and
a logical
probably the
greatest organizational genius ot the automotive industry, was putting
The Rapid
together the General Motors Corporation.
under GM, and
lives today as a
throve and grew
world leader in trucks and buses. Grabowsky
name is today's GMC Truck &. Coach Division.
The Rapid gleams in pin-striped, showroom-new restored condition, as
do many of the museum's vehicles. Others survive in original condition,
and thus in varying degrees display their honest scars. That may be more
by another
evocative
made
if less
in Battle
beautiful.
One example
is
the rare 1909
American
truck,
Creek, Michigan, one of the few surviving early vehicles
with four-wheel drive. Despite having only two cylinders, the American
could pack a heroic five-ton load in
its
stake body.
Plumbing manufacturer David Dunbar Buick had already earned his way
into the pantheon ot innovation with a process for porcelainizing bathtubs.
Thereafter the challenge of the infant automobile business was too great to
ignore,
and Buick formed
his
company
in 1903. His reasonably priced,
sturdy car was acquired by William C. Durant,
company
to a place in industry sales
who by 1907 had pushed the
to Ford. The 1908 Model
second only
F in the museum collection was a good buy at $1,250; it was a straightforward car, whose side-entrance tonneau held five adults and whose twocylinder opposed engine generated a respectable twenty-two horsepower.
But the most significant thing about the museum's oldest Buick
is its
date,
1908, the year that Durant organized General Motors.
ntil
Ur
the Mtxlel
T Ford burst on the .scene in Octo-
ber 1908, cars were
still
toys for the well-to-do.
But the new. car was Instantly recognized as the
ong-awaited auto
for
the multitudes, and
ous usefulness shone through at the unveiling.
If
today
it
high off the ground, remember that the Ford was designed to
quagmires and clear the high-mounded centers
its
marvel-
appears comically
chum
of dirt roads. Pivoting
through
on
inge-
nious front nidius rods, cushioned on indestructible transverse leaf springs, and
166
rolling
trails
on chrome-vanadium
and
Advanced
steel axles,
the "T" was huilt to grapple with rocky
bumps.
cruel
for its time, the
engine was cast en bloc with four big cylinders
and, wonder of wonders, a detachable head. While
power may seem small,
engines. Nothing
it
on the
its
twenty-two horse-
was impressively greater than most steam traction
car,
with the possible exception of the planetary
transmission, was too arcane to be grasped and repaired by any reasonably
demand for simplicity meant there was little to
magneto produced the car's electricity. A single pump disengine, transmission, and universal joint. Gravity fuel feed
coordinated amateur. Ford's
go wrong.
pensed
and
oil to
thermosiphon cooling system forestalled troublesome pumps. The car
carried five in reasonable comfort, cruising at forty miles per hour
twenty-three miles per gallon.
The back
seat allowed
milk cans. At a price of $850, the Model
was
room
and
for a farmer's
a premier
mechanical
miracle.
Demand was
so strong that, by 1914, Ford
expanded production system on
a scale
had launched
a radically
unprecedented in manufacturing,
and grafted mass production onto the principle of
moving assembly
line.
Ford said he got the idea from a long-established technology in the mid-
western meat-packing industry, "the overhead trolley that the Chicago
packers use in dressing beef."
The
butchers were taking things apart; Ford
work
Model Ts through the
plant, belt conveyors fed parts to each work station. "Mass production,"
Ford wrote in his usual terse prose, "is the focusing upon a manufacturing
reversed the process and retained the basic principle of bringing the
to the worker.
As
moving assembly
line carried
project of the principles of power, accuracy, economy, system, continuity,
speed and repetition."
The man-hours
required to assemble a car soon dropped to about one-
tenth the former time, enabling Ford to drop prices as well.
The
car that
$850 in 1908 would average from $300 to $600 for most of its
long career. By 1925 a basic roadster without electric starting cost $260, a
fully equipped "Fordor" sedan $660. For a time, more than half America's
new cars were Fords. In the T's glorious eighteen-year history few mechanical changes ever came. Electric lights and optional self-starters were the
main technical refinements. The bright colors of early Fords were abolished
in 1914, and the brass radiator was a war material casualty in 1916.
A degree of cross-pollination marked the early automobile industry and
its motley crew of machinists, engineers, tinkerers, and promotional
geniuses. Henry M. Leland, a distinguished Detroit manufacturer of
machine tools, was first associated with Henry Ford in about 1901. Then
Leland quickly gave birth to the Cadillac, of which the museum's 1903
specimen is a rare survivor of the first production year. In 1912, Henry
Leland's Cadillac sprang two genuine innovations: a standard self-starter
and standard electrical lighting, first in the industry. Cadillac had won the
retailed for
167
On
the line in the Highland Park Ford plant, 1913: drop-
ping an engine into a
new Model
important Sir
Thomas Dewar Trophy
bihty in 1908;
American
starter, a sure sign
duced the nation's
time
when
Still
for its
mastery of parts interchangea-
scored another o( the coveted Enghsh awards for the
it
cars
had come of
Leland intro-
age. In 1915
V-type, water-cooled, eight-cylinder engine at a
first
the industry standard was four cylinders.
not finished, Leland in 1920 created the Lincoln, a massive prestige
car that he proceeded to
unexciting bodies
make by such expensive methods and with such
Henry Ford bought
that the venture was soon in peril.
the company, retained Leland's quality, restyled the bodies, and experi-
enced instant success on unveiling his new prestige
to those early Lincolns, they
car.
In an odd tribute
were soon favored by gangsters and police.
Henry Ford also gave one to his friend Thomas Edison. That car, a green
1923 V-8 of eighty-one horsepower, is displayed in the museum today, with
a photograph of Edison at the wheel.
When William
in 1909,
Durant was
General Motors
fitting together the pieces of
he hired French immigrant Louis Chevrolet to drive on his Buick
racing team. Durant lost control of
would stage
GM
dramatic recapturing years
almost as soon as
later)
began (he
over, began
it
and, starting
name fortuitously
first-year Chevy in 1912 found it
manufacturing a car newly designed by Chevrolet, his
enhanced by fame
a tough performer,
as a racer. Buyers of the
and the car succeeded despite
Some snap was added
a
is
companion touring
to the line in 1914
car,
its
rather
dowdy
profile.
with the Royal Mail Roadster, and
the Baby Grand.
The museum's
1915 Royal Mail
indeed a rakish sport, with an elliptical gas tank of distinctive profile
The Royal Mail was a good value for $750.
Many high-quality cars came and went in the tumultuous early years, but
for many Americans of means the choice was defined by a glib alliteration:
"Packard, Pierce-Arrow, or Peerless. "The Cleveland-based Peerless reigned
from 1901 to 1932, invariably as expensive as it was lovely. The museum's
slung behind the tonneau.
1911 Peerless Victoria closely
resembles the best horse-drawn carriages of
the transition period, and
leather-topped body was applied by Brewster
its
& Company for a total cost of $6,250.
a
Despite
its
vast dignity. Peerless
mechanical innovator, and one of the few makers of limousines
endurance runs, completing a 1,500-mile struggle from
New
was
to enter
York to St.
Louis in 1904-
Good
as
it
was,
somehow
the Peerless never quite lodged
itself in
ican folklore as Pierce-Arrow did. Perhaps that was because
to consistently
ury
advanced engineering, top
Pierce had a gimmick: after 1913,
faired into
its
fenders.
Thus
its
reliability,
a jewel-like
to affixing
1904
P-A
Amer-
in addition
and Olympian
lux-
headlights were ostentatiously
in a time of bewildering automotive variety, the
Pierce was so instantly recognizable that in only
company stoop
its
name
one year (1928) did the
The museum shows
to the radiator shell.
roadster with a fifteen-horsepower, two-cylinder
engine.
169
Opposite, clockwise /rom upper
Henry Ford Museum's
left.
Shown
here are the
Packard
"Twin Six," 1929 Packard speedster, and 1915 Chevrolet
Royal Mail
1911 Peerless Victoria, 1916
Above. Pierce-Arrow produced
its first
car in 1901
seum's 1904 "Great Arrow" looks sleek for
its
time
the
mu-
170
The end
lights
and
of the "brass era" roughly coincided with the advent of electric
starters after 1912,
although some
cars, like Fords,
clung to brass
radiators until World War 1. Most car owners and chauffeurs rejoiced in the
freedom from polishing brass, and enjoyed their reflections in the easy,
durable shine of new nickel-plated fittings. With lights, starters, and styling
came new engineering
progress, a surge forward just before
Packard was a clear polestar among luxury
cars. In 1916,
World War
I.
Packard scored
with the introduction of the twelve-cylinder Twin Six, a V-12 of superb per-
formance and
flexibility,
num
While
pistons.
its
and the
first
American engine to employ alumi3,000 revolutions per
eighty-five horsepower at
minute may seem bland today,
it
was sensational
in 1916.
A racing version,
De Palma to a new land speed
into World War I's famous Liberty
generating 240 horsepower, carried Ralph
record. Soon, the
Twin Six would evolve
aircraft engines, first of a long line of distinguished
the
air.
ing car
The museum's example
on
of the Twin Six
a 125-inch wheelbase.
not diminished
its
The
is
Packard power plants for
a gigantic black 1916 tour-
passage of almost seventy years has
force of character, revealed in a trenchant, almost brutal,
mass of angles, curves, and
rivets
under a vast leather top. "Ask The
crouched behind imperious headlamps
Man Who Owns One," indeed; everyWhen Warren Gamaliel Harding
one already knew he craved a Packard.
became the first president motor-home to his inaugural, he rode in
ard Twin Six.
The firm's red hexagon trademark already was long established by
well as the distinctive radiator shell contour that
a Pack-
1916, as
would evolve into one of
the loveliest in automotive history in Packard's aesthetic heyday, 1928-36.
Such examples as the museum's 1929 tan and black speedster are among the
most pleasing cars ever built, and epitomize the avidly desired "classic era."
But other choices confronted those smitten by the lust for advanced performance. Mercer and Stutz were special favorites of the hugs-on-the-teethand-goggles clique before the term "sports car" was even coined. Mercer, of
Trenton, New Jersey, unleashed its legendary Type 35 raceabout in 1911.
The
Mercer's greatest rival, the Stutz Bearcat,
came from Indianapolis,
War 1, both cars were
Indiana, in 1914. In their best days, just before World
brawny, stark machines that to the dismay of
down and
refined at the
dawn
of the flapper age.
macho purists were toned
The museum's 1923 Bear-
More grand touring machine than true
and black Stutz is still a jaunty, appealing roadster,
ahead of its time in style, and a favorite with museum visitors. Not far away
stands a 1916 Mercer sport touring car that testifies to the marque's reputation among automotive insiders of its time. It was the honeymoon car of
Mr. and Mrs. Edsel Ford.
Another speedster of formidable vigor was the Apperson Jackrabbit, of
which the museum shows a six-cylinder specimen from 1916. In the 1920s
a new performer arrived that would eclipse almost everything on the road.
cat confirms the domestication.
sports car, the yellow
171
Opposite.
Hubcaps from wooden wheels
of the teens
and
twenties recall some once familiar, hut long departed, au-
tomotive names
and August, hegan making distinguished
1, and hy 1920 they scored well on the
sports car market with the racer-based, ninety-horsepower Model A. It car-
The Duesenherg
hrothers, Fred
racing machines before World
War
ried the unusual refinement of four-wheel hydraulic brakes, pioneered by
the Duesenbergs
when most
cars
struggled to stop with rear-only
still
mechanical brakes. In 1926, the Indianapolis marque was obtained by financier E. L. Cord, who was already making popular and sporty Cords and
Auburns
Auburn, Indiana. Cord gave the Duesenbergs carte blanche
in
to
build the biggest, fastest, most altogether noble car in America, and they
responded with the wonderful Model
in 1928.
A "Dusie" could accelerate
Upon
to 100 in seventeen seconds.
from zero
its
monstrous, 153-inch-
wheelbase chassis, America's finest custom coachhuilders
kins,
opposite.
The
1931
Duesenherg
is
one of today's ultimate
collector cars
Above.
The
Duesenherg managed
its
he-man days
before World
War
draped
their best
bling the $8,500 cost of a chassis alone.
Stutz Bearcat of 1923 showed considerable re-
tinements from
Le Baron, Murphy
ever,
Derham,
Jud-
coachwork, more than dou-
Though
a car for millionaires, the
to survive the Depression to
1937
Its last
years,
how-
were without the uncompromising leadership of Fred Duesenherg,
who
in 1932 joined
driving their
Model
E. Stanley in that select fraternity of car
product.
The museum's
makers killed
majestic, two-and-one-half-ton
convertible Victoria dates from 1931.
Owning
When
own
the factory led automotive pioneers to some irresistible caprices.
Walter R Chrysler planned a new Imperial landau
tor his personal
use in 1932, he began by decreeing an all-aluminum body tor the big 146-
inch wheelbase chassis, powered by a high-compression straight eight ot
125 horsepower.
He ordered such deluxe
interior features as a bar, desk, van-
When
he received
ity cases,
and, naturally, a rear speedometer and ck)ck.
the car
was blue, but Mr. Chrysler changed his mind about the
owned
it
Ming
vase hearing a subtle,
the factory, and repaint.
like
The
result
smoky shade
was a
lovely,
ot red;
match
color.
thcU,
He
he told
low-slung creation glowing
cinnamon-hued marzipan, today one of the museum's most
artistically
satisfying cars.
Chrysler was entitled to enjoy the
fruits
of his success.
veteran of the
Buick and Willys organizations, he took over the Maxwell-Chalmers firm
in
1923 and soon replaced those names with his own, adding a luxury line
Dodge Company, launched the new
marques Plymouth and De Soto, and the modern Chrysler Cttrporation was
on its way. The Dodge had been a reliable it somewhat stodgy workhorse for
of Imperials. In 1928 he acquired the
years, favored for desert expk)ring
and army
use,
and by prosperous tarmers.
Dodge touring car, uninspiring as it may seem, repreits fenders broad and stout enough to lug bags
sents the sort of yeoman car
that endeared itselt to Americans more concerned with pracof fertilizer
The museum's
1918
ticality
than aesthetics.
enormous consternation among his dealers by
months to retool. Ford sent forth the Model
A. The industry's greatest sequel was a bit overdue, as time had caught up
several years before.
the immortal Model T
with the wonderful Flivver
In 1927, having caused
shutting
down
his plants for six
172
173
174
The
nation sang a popular
and the Model
new
song, "Henry's
Made
T was an overnight anachronism.
Lady Out of Lizzie,"
But
was the quiet
it
ence of Edsel Ford, more than Henry, that gave the Model
of design, resembling a baby Lincoln.
The "A" was one
its
influ-
excellence
of the very few basic
cars available in such snappy configurations that even the wealthy did not
mind occasionally being seen in one. A good example
sam green 1928 roadster; another the 1930 phaeton.
Ford tried to give the very
Thomas
Edison,
who
first
one
said thanks but
is
the museum's bal-
two-door sedan,
off the line, a
he preferred open
to
Ford remade
cars.
the car as a four-door phaeton, trimmed in leather. Edison accepted the
which in later years was presented by Mrs. Edison to the
museum, where it joins a select gathering of cars of famous personalities.
One is Charles A. Lindbergh's 1928 Franklin sedan. As Lindbergh's "Spirit
revised version,
of St. Louis" was air-cooled, the public relations value to the air-cooled
Franklin was evident, and the firm renamed one series the "Airman."
Morgan's Rolls-Royce
is
body by Brewster graces the 1926
Harvey
J.
another link with names of the past; an American
S. Firestone ordered a massive
1929 Lincoln with convertible
Victoria body by Dietrich, a leader in custom bodywork.
The
Firestone Lin-
coln reveals a Dietrich innovation: a back seat in a two-door convertible.
Among many
Ford family cars
is
Edsel's
chassis.
own Continental,
a design created
)/i/)Nsiif
Walter (.luvslcr's l'M2 ImpcTi.il
iwcs
its
Above. Sequels often disappoint, but not Ford's Model A,
one of the best cars of all time. After almost twenty years
of the Model T, the "A" was perhaps overdue; it lasted only
from 1927 to 1931. But then, as years passed, such models
as this 1928 roadster never really waned in popularity, and
eased gradually into the status of collector's item
under his personal supervision.
The museum's
V- 12 convertible limousine was built tor King George
VI and Queen Elizabeth, touring the U.S. and Canada in 1939. It was
dusted off again for a North American visit by Queen Elizabeth II and
Prince Philip. Another 1939 Lincoln attracts a great deal more attention,
however: the White House "Sunshine Special," an enormous four-door
Lincolns seemed to attract celebrities, or vice versa.
rather British-looking
convertible crafted for President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
with the top down. In 1942, security demanded
plating,
and bullet-proof
glass,
tires,
and
its
who enjoyed
fuel tank.
Bearing
weight uncomplainingly, the huge car rolled through World
eling with
FDR
riding
remodeling with armor
its
War
five-ton
II,
trav-
and Malta. President Truman finally retired the Sunshine Special in 1950, and accepted a new Lincoln, which served even longer. In the Eisenhower administration, the
addition of a new plastic lid over the rear bestowed its enduring nickname,
"Bubbletop."
to Yalta, Casablanca, Teheran,
The
car served as a spare during the administrations of John
F Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and arrived at
in 1967. Still
its
another presidential Lincoln
associations are tragic.
Kennedy
The
is
its final
museum home
here, but unlike the other
two
1961 convertible sedan that carried President
motorcade
in Dallas seems to surprise visitors. "Is that
"Are you sure?" Long, black, and somehow enigmatic, the car underwent major rebuilding and armoring after Dallas, and
finally was retired from White House service in 1977.
t)n his final
really the car?" they ask.
175
color to
Chinese vase from the auto magnate's collection
i^
176
The development
of America's networks of automotive dealerships, a
necessary apparatus, was rooted in the bicycle
boom
of the 1890s. Local
bike dealers were accustomed to franchise arrangements with such
facturers as Pierce Arrow, Pope, Rambler,
When
manu-
Steams, Waverly, and White.
making cars, many bicycle agencies became car
Henry Ford, himself an enthusiastic biker, plucked many
the factories began
dealers overnight.
successful two-wheel dealerships for his fast-growing dealership chain. For
the dealers
it
was a natural progression, and a necessary one; bikes entered
a precipitous decline in popularity as the twentieth century progressed.
The
red-blooded bikers of the 1880s and '90s were the pioneer automobilists of
The
the 1900s.
addition of the coaster brake in 1906 was basically the last
great bicycle invention. By 1910, bicycles were for kids.
Motorcycles were something
Hedstrom, created the
first
else.
Swedish-born toolmaker, Oscar
"Indian" for the Hendee Manufacturing Co. of
Springfield, Massachusetts, after only four
months on the
success in the marketplace, the Indian also proved
first
its
job.
An
instant
mettle in the nation's
motorcycle endurance contest, a Boston-to-New York run in 1902. For
more than
fifty years,
until the line's
lamented passing in 1953, Indians
were a daring, rakish accent on the American road. The
early specimens: a
and gold
ing red
museum shows two
1904 that weighs only ninety-eight pounds, and a dashpounds.
1911 of 140
Harley-Davidson, the
cycle manufacturers,
last
made
model that needed a push
survivor of
its
more than 150 American motor-
debut in 1903 with a one-speed, no-clutch
to start.
Production date of the museum's
first
Harley, a gray and maroon entry with a squarish tank, was 1907. After
World War I, our motorcycles took on essentially the profile that endures
today, and some of the museum's handsomest examples are veterans of the
Charles A. Lindbergh's twin-cylinder Excelsior was delivered to
jazz age.
him new
in 1920, whereafter
he used
pearance, but more powerful with
it
its
for
about
five years.
Similar in ap-
big four-cylinder engine, the
mu-
Opposite. Successor to the "Sunshine Special," this 1950
convertible Lincoln limousine served four United States
presidents, but
is
chiefly
senhower years when
its
remembered from the Dwight
tonneau was
Top.
War
The 1939
II.
Presidential Lincoln,
accompanied
FDR
to
such key settings as Yalta. Casa-
blanca, and Teheran. After the war, until 1950, the car re-
mained
Truman
in
White House
service under President Harry S.
Bottom. Next to serve the
car, this 1961
in the parade in Dallas
1963. Extensively rebuilt thereafter,
motorized
fire
tractors pulling existing
modem
White House
fire
trucks were gasoline-powered front-wheel-drive
steam pumpers. As early as
1910, however, the
truck appeared, drawing both motive power and
pump power
from a single gasoline engine. Perhaps as a bow to the turbulent traditions
new equipment was more ferociously strident than necand would remain so. Fire trucks were so massively engineered that
they never wore out but were phased out as technological refinements oc-
of firefighting, the
essary
Many today are in the hands of private collectors. The museum
shows a handsome 1928 American La France, of Elmira, New York, that
curred.
remained
in the city service at
Wayne, Michigan,
for half a century.
177
as
primary parade
Lincoln Continental was carrying President
John F Kennedy
first
dubbed the "Sunshine
The armor-plated behemoth (9,300 pounds) even
the speed was insufficient to outrace the Great Depression. Cleveland failed
The
Ei-
with a plastic
Special," carried Franklin D. Roosevelt through World
seum's big Cleveland of 1928 could better one hundred miles per hour, but
in 1930.
fitted
"bubble top"
it
on November 22,
was used by four sub-
sequent presidents and retired in 1977
178
he glamour of early 1900s motor vehicles had
counterpoint in the
its
of steam railroading.
virility
By 1902, when the museum's magnificent AlcoSchenectady passenger locomotive was built,
built
Gone were
the clear image of the twentieth century was apparent.
the high,
quaint, Gothic domes, the bulbous exhaust stacks, the overall balance of vertical
and horizontal
Instead, the
lines that
Schenectady
thrusting forward as
if still
is
made
the older engines objects of such charm.
the very image of power, immensely high yet
yearning to speed out on the Detroit-Chicago run
at its enormous, slim-spoked drive wheels and
machined connecting rods; climb into its solid walnut cab and see the
big dials and gauges, and all the nickel-plated trim. Imagine the Schenectady
thundering through the Midwest in the year before the Wright Brothers flew. In
such machines we see the start of the final phase of America's romance with
Look
of the Michigan Central.
crisply
the railroad.
Original coaches appropriate to the time include the private Pullman, or
business car, of a Michigan railroad president.
terior, just as
heavy and
solid as a pre- World
Its
War
massively crafted oak in1
designer could possibly
reminds us that George Pullman himself began his career as a cabinetmaker (although Pullman was long dead before this car was made). Like
make
it,
Cyrus McCormick, but
Pullman moved
for different reasons,
to
Chicago,
would be the hub of future transcontinental train travel over vast distances. He began making sleeping cars in
the 1850s, and during the Civil War created the innovative luxury car with
correctly perceiving that that city
convertible berths that set the pattern for generations of "Pullmans."
1867 on, the Pullman Palace Car
Company
From
seum's early twentieth-century "combination"
local runs,
it
The
hoi polloi trav-
car.
Very useful on small
included a coach, a smoking section, and a baggage
is,
years)
is
in
recent locomotives in the collection are as dissimilar as any
its
way, historic in the extreme.
The
paradoxically the most modern, for
sion into Diesel locomotive power.
Homely
it is
One
same work.
two (by fifteen
for the
older of the
the museum's only excur-
as a rolling construction shack,
the 1926 IngersoU-Rand represents the nation's
comotive.
first
successful Diesel lo-
of a series introduced in 1925, the machine was built in a
cooperative venture among General Electric, the American Locomotive
Company, and Ingersoll-Rand, which manufactured the Diesel engine and
marketed the locomotive. Power from the six-cylinder
oil
burner was con-
verted into electrical energy, used in turn by the locomotive's traction
tors to
produce strong,
mo-
smooth motive power. It was, as engineers
a means of getting the benefits of electrical power
reliable,
of the day saw the matter,
motor scooter was the Autoped of
for its tiny,
if
he man-
Above. Rakish mounts of our lengthening motorized past,
1911
179
still
suggest excitement and speed.
Indian (top) was one of a long, distinguished, and
The
now
extinct line. This one-cylinder model cost $225. Charles
A. Lindbergh bought the two-cylinder Excelsiot (bottom)
new
in 1920,
and drove
sonally presented
two machines could be, granted that each was designed
Each
first
one-cylinder engine: an Autoped driver could,
these early cycles
mu-
compartment.
The most
America's
Pcrtormance was certainly respectable
aged to keep standing, reach 35 m.p.h.
eled in less elegant circumstances, frequently in such coaches as the
and
)/)/>i'Mii-
1915.
controlled the luxury long-
distance trade through the golden years of railroading.
lines
(.
it
it
for
to the
about
museum
five yeats. Later,
he per-
>^
180
without
tricity.
all
the bother of building overhead wires and transmitting elec-
They were
correct in everything.
The IngersoU-Rand
mid' 1920s were so good that they remained in service
seum's example labored at the
New
Ingersoll-Rand, until donated to the
and thus despite
altered,
most
a
one of
Jersey plant of
museum
Diesels of the
The mu-
for decades.
in 1970.
It is
parents,
its
original
and un-
exceptional lack of charm constitutes one of the
its
satisfactory industrial-history artifacts of all time.
Old Number 90
is
genuine pioneer.
The same cannot be said for the most recent locomotive in the museum's
The 1941 Chesapeake & Ohio Allegheny class coal burner is
collection.
one of the
largest, strongest
motive power sources ever
one of the most beautiful. That
it
was one of the
War
more than
II
sixty like
built,
and
in a sense
only adds an ineffable
The Lima Locomotive Works
sense of doomed allure to the giant "Big Al."
built
last
in the 1940s, all destined to haul the
it
coal of labor chieftain John L. Lewis's United
World
Mine Workers. The
Allegheny's 8,000-horsepower boiler was the largest ever built in a steam
locomotive. The great engine steamed through the mountains of Virginia,
West Virginia, and Kentucky with 160 loaded coal hoppers, a burden of almost ten thousand tons, at speeds between thirty and sixty miles per hour.
More than sixteen feet tall and 125 feet long, the locomotive and tender
weighed six hundred tons, and cost $250,000 to produce in 1941. The
tender carried twenty-five tons of fuel and twenty-five thousand gallons of
water. "Big Al" rolled more than four hundred thousand miles before steaming up to the museum's back door on its final run. The door, naturally, was
too small, and
to
its final
some of the wall was dismantled before the locomotive eased
stop.
The orange
legend
"C&.0
for Progress" still
adorns the
black, brutish snout of the greatest steam engine ever to thunder through
the AUeghenies, and quite probably the favorite artifact of the thousands of
daily visitors to
Henry Ford Museum.
Ford loved steam engines and understood them perfectly, yet he sensed
their ultimate shortcomings.
He knew
in particular that the days of
steam
on the farm were numbered. In 1907, he experimented with an early tractor
even before launching the Model T But other manufacturers beat Ford to
the market with efficient, lightweight, gasoline-powered tractors. By 1913,
it was clear the new generation of lightweight power sources would prevail.
After experimenting for a decade. Ford unveiled the Fordson tractor in
Like the Model
designed to make
plummeted
as the
for instance,
it
was inexpensive,
life
reliable,
1917.
and simple, and thoughtfully
better for the masses. America's horse population
Fordson became our most popular farm
75 percent of
all
tractors
was a humble $495.
Ford had presented Fordson Number
tractor. In 1925,
made were Fordsons. By
1928,
its
OpposUe. Purposeful sculpture
price tag
netics,
Luther Burbank. In
Tof)
One
to that genius of vegetable ge-
later years, gathering
seum, the manufacturer asked
up
for the old tractor back,
munew one
artifacts for his
and sent
181
in steel, the nui-.cum
\'''.':
Schenectady locomotive rolled on 79-inch wheels. This
thoroughbred steamer was built for fast passenger service by
the American Locomotive Company
Supteme creation of the coal-burning
age, the
Allegheny class locomotive generates ineffable
Boltom.
The museum's
CSiO's
star quality
pioneering Ingersoll-Rand Diesel of
1926 heralded the future of
rail
power
'
_"
ji-'\.""#^
'^
^^^"c^
^--
^3I^^P^9^^^^^^^HI^E.
''^^Sm^^^*
182
to replace it. Burbank shipped the machine to Dearborn from his home in
balmy Santa Rosa, California. Water-cooled vehicles like the Fordson required no antifreeze in Santa Rosa, but they did in Dearborn, and the unprotected tractor soon froze. Cracked block and all, the homely Fordson
Number One
is
one of the most
historic
farm exhibits in the museum.
The
Experts refer to two major revolutions in American farming.
first
revolution's peak years coincided with the Civil War, brought efficient
mechanization to the farm, and substituted horse power
for
human
power.
which meant that an individual could farm more land,
continued through the introduction of gasoline tractors, and then culminated in 1938 with an odd-looking red and yellow device of supreme importance. The Massey-Harris combine, which pioneered self-propelled
That
revolution,
grain harvesters, eliminated the towing tractor. Highly maneuverable, frugal with fuel and manpower, and more efficient in gathering grain, the
Toronto-made Massey-Harris combine was the final burst of mechanization
of the first agricultural revolution. The second revolution, which is still in
progress
and not within the museum's purview,
is
the age of agricultural sci-
ence, the use of hybrids, pesticides, and herbicides that has so startlingly
specialized interest than such machines as the
museum's
The
machine of
1912, for
example, stood at the heart of Ford's ability to produce the Model
T so suc-
tieth century reach full speed.
cessfully.
The massive
Highland Park plant
Ingersoll milling
device, twenty-one feet long, was used in Ford's
blocks.
required to run the machine. Similarly,
vast
identical small parts.
Such machine
By the 1930s,
motors.
One
of a kind that enabled one unskilled laborer to produce
first
numbers of
a
bottoms and main bearing
Only one semiskilled operator was
an Acme automatic bar machine
to simultaneously mill the
mounts of fifteen Model T engine
represents the
tools
new
were among the
belt-driven factory equipment.
last
generation of tools was powered by individual electric
of the most significant in the museum's collection
is
a 1941
Bridgeport milling machine. In that streamlined apparatus, painted a nowfamiliar institutional gray,
we
see a
industry: a device, mass-produced
in price
and rugged
work of
One
a production line.
The
is
a 1961
artistic standards,
and
Unimate
robot spent
task of unloading fresh castings
toil
landmark of the machine tool
made other machines. Modest
its
machine
but nevertheless was
industrial engineers.
chronological finale tends to
signal exceptions.
would
that
in performance, the Bridgeport turret milling
art in the eyes of machinists
The museum's
cessors
modem
itself,
was no thing of beauty by orthodox
a
1919.
fall
around 1950, with
robot, the
first
a few
ever installed
on
working career in the hot, dangerous
and placing them
in a cooling bath.
Its
suc-
patiently in a myriad of assembly line jobs.
183
The
other
men
are unidentified
Above. This Fordson, production model #1, was presented
Luther Burbank by Henry Ford,
his
Massey-Harris are exemplars of factory equipment that helped the twen-
Henry Ford (center) seemed pleased with the
progress of a Fordson tractor working near Dearborn in
to
increased production per acre.
Of even more
Opposite.
museum
who
later retrieved
it
for
184
erman
physicist Heinrich Hertz discovered elec-
tromagnetic radiation in 1886. Others took his
laboratory experiments into the zone of practicality,
V
Morse code
for
and
J/arw
'
Italian
more than one mile
Guglielmo Marconi actually transmitted
in 1895. Inventing the
first
practical an-
tenna, he patented his invention in England, where he received financial backing
and
started building ship-to-shore wireless systems for
Among
the museum's
receiver
and transmitter of
haps the
first
relics
from the birth of radio are
1901,
Morse transmissions.
replicas of a
and a 1906 American-made
Marconi
wireless set, per-
production-model receiver.
Experiments soon began with the wireless transmission of voice and music.
England's John A. Fleming invented the radio-wave-detecting tube in
and Lee de Forest created the three-element, or audion, tube, which
1904,
amplified the waves as well.
The next
leg
up came
in 1912, with
Edwin H.
Armstrong's contribution of the regenerative receiver, and was followed in
1918 by his invention of the superheterodyne circuit. The right elements
were in place at
and, in 1920, radio station
last
KDKA went on the
air in
Production-model receivers from the years of radio's commercial beginnings are some of the most appealing examples of American industrial de-
The complete development
the 1920s.
jures
of
RCA Radiola models
is
1924 Federal, a bristling concoction of black
something of the
water Kent Model
thrill that
touched
10, affectionately
its first
owner.
traced through
dials, still
con-
The wonderful At-
known as "the breadboard," is displayed
Anyone who thinks
along with several other rare, excellent specimens.
craftsmanship died with the nineteenth century needs only to examine
these exquisitely
made
radios from the late, lamented Philadelphia
manufacturer.
While the battery-powered
headphones, the
first
made tor
embodthe Bums, a
receivers of the early 1920s were
loudspeakers arrived in 1925.
They were
first
phonograph speakers, like
By 1927, such equipment was
obsolete wherever there was electricity: powerful new models like the RCA
Radiola 17 operated directly from AC house current. The age of modern radio had arrived. The authoritative machine or laboratory look of the battery radio gave way, in a mere decade, to the more liquid sculpture of Art
ied as flaring horns in imitation of
1925 model made of
Deco.
The Atwater Kent Model
II
radio receiver of 19
featured high-quality, molded Bakelite components
mounted on a "hreadhoard." This tour-tube, battery-powered set offered one stage of radio frequency amplification
Pittsburgh.
sign.
Opposite.
The museum
artificial tortoise shell.
captures
its
very essence in a 1935, five-tube Sparton
model whose case is glass tinted a rich, smoky blue, a complex of
planes and curves, the motifs of skyscrapers and sets for movie musicals.
The radio has a companion piece: a General Electric clock set in a halfmoon mirror, on chrome feet.
The 1920s and '30s were the age of radio, but the age of television was
having birth pains. The museum has the evidence in one of the strangest,
rarest devices in the communications collection: the Jenkins Optical Scantable
185
and two stages of audio amplification. Displayed with
here
is
an appropriate Burns loudspeaker, with an
tortoise-shell
it
artificial
horn
Above. This 1936 Sparton Model 558 blue glass mirror
radio, the quintessence of Art Deco, is admired for its
"Century of Progress" styling. The five-tube superheterodyne receiver with a short-wave band was made by the
Sparks-Withington Company
ner.
With
tral lens,
four glass rotating prisms or discs geared together around a cen-
the scanner was the actual experimental
Francis Jenkins of Washington, D.C.
tures for the
time.
first
The
TV camera with which
successfully transmitted
moving
hen one technology has been developed
W-
pic-
date was June 13, 1923.
rity,
we
around
usually look
to find
to
matu-
something new
waiting to replace'it. TTius in the nineteenth cen-
tury's last decades,
when coal- and wood-huming
came gas. But right on the
kitchen stoves had been essentially perfected, along
came
heels of gas
electricity,
with pioneering
electrical stoves developing in the
1890s. Stoves fueled by kerosene appeared as well, to the special joy of rural
housewives. Thus, early in the twentieth century, an unprecedented bonanza
of choices was available. After 1915,
when
the application of thermostats ren-
dered both gas and electric stoves miraculously automatic,
it
was clear that
those two fuels would be the major rivals in urban kitchens.
(Jpp.iMtt'
primal
relic
trom the dawn
ot
TV,
this
is
the
prismatic disc optical scanner of Charles Francis Jenkins.
In 192), he used
it
to successfully transmit "radio vision."
Four rotating prisms, geared around a central lens, formed
a mechanical scanning forerunner to today's electronic
scanning system
Ahne. Something of the pride, solidity, and skill ol preWorld War 1 America is suggested hy these two "railroad
grade" Hamilton pocket watches of 1915-16
A remarkable example of early electric stoves is the 1913 Standard, which
manages to seem perilously topheavy and graceful as a lily simultaneously.
In the T)ledo-made Standard we see the basic black iron structure of the
coal- and wood-burning stove, but ridiculously slenderized, as if announcing that massive fireboxes, grates,
and ash dumps were
Perched high above the soaring burner surface
crowave oven of the 1980s. Those attuned
fashion
may
is
to the interdisciplinary links of
see, in this extraordinary range of 1913, the
then in women's clothes:
skirts
pinched
forever eschewed.
the oven, suggesting a mi-
to a
same
narrow hobble
lines favored
at the ankles,
voluptuous curves in the torso, vast towering headgear.
No
such fripperies of design mark the 1923 Westinghouse combination
electric
and coal-burning range. Massively
was unusual,
practical, ready for anything,
it
by 1923 the standard kitchen range was a slender- legged
for
creatitm in pale porcelainized finish, a style applied to both electric and gas.
Often the color scheme was three-tone, with white, pastel gray, and black.
Typical of the era is the Tippan range in the museum's marvelously authentic re-creation of a 1930 kitchen, a .setting that inevitably strikes mid-
dle-aged and elderly Americans with nostalgia. Every artifact in the
is
R)om
on the stove, the porcelain-topped kitchen
slide-out work surface and flour dispenser, the
familiar: the graniteware pots
table, the
cabinet with
its
small electric appliances, the boxes of prepared dt)mestic products with
bels picturing
young housewives with bt)bbed chestnut
the 1930s kitchen, the Ford
Americans over
The
fifty,
fiftyi.sh
when
collective heart of
its
stacked mass of cooling coils, rciniiids
visitors of the relatively brief histt)ry of electric-powered
cooling. Nearly everyone
also recalls
la-
preparing
and found
kitchen's refrigerator, with
the same
186
Museum reached into the
common memories.
hair, in
who can remember
rhe family next door
still
the coil-crowned refrigerator
used an icebox. By then the ice-
187
important transition in washing machines is
c. 1875 hand-powered rocker scrub board,
and the pioneering electrified Thor, made c. 1907 by the
Hurley Manufacturing Company of Chicago
Above.
An
represented by a
Right.
Americans
past age fifty
may
find the
Kitchen of 1930 a hauntingly nostalgic sight
museum's
box had subsided into a blue-collar bluntness from
its grander years, and was
on the back porch.
Electric refrigerators usually remained in the kitchen or pantry Manufacturers made design changes with extraordinary speed in the 1930s, registering a sequence of contemporary styling themes. Consider the 1938
streamlined Norge, crisp and complacent in black-and-white porcelain and
torpedo-shaped hinges, echoing contemporary cars and skyscrapers. The
advertising copywriter's skill had alreadytriumphed over the engineer's
straightforward thesaurus, and such words as "hydrovoir" and "rollator"
burst upon the 1930s housewife who, late in the Great Depression, was
lucky enough to take delivery of such a marvel.
The 1930s kitchen displays common denominators of the time, and
moves us by its familiarity. But as always, the era had its advancing edge of
style and technology, far ahead of the crowd, and some interesting dead
ends as well. Both characteristics spring ebulliently from a 1930 electric
stove in the domestic arts collection. Like some odd but successful grafting
of stove technology and Art Deco styling onto a Duncan Phyfe pedestal table, the Detroit-made Electrochef is graceful, elegant, and lonely among
others of its time. Its space-wasting shape was doomed by the grubby necessity of pots and pans storage. A monument to uncompromising aesthetic
tenacity, the twin-ovened Electrochef is
if the word can be applied to
routinely located
kitchen stoves
a classic.
In the world of washing machines, the early twentieth century delivered
a pair of
welcome
electrically
tainer with an agitator,
and
powered new mechanisms:
a vertical
con-
a horizontal cylinder that revolved. First op-
erated by hand, the washers soon were fitted with electric motors. Roller
wringers,
which had been around since before the Civil War, were bolted
modem washer had arrived. The museum's formidable 1907
on, and the
Thor Number One
is
a true pioneer of the breed.
And Thor
pioneered
again in the early 1930s, electrifying the wringer.
Many
early labor-saving devices, such as the hand-pumped vacuum
demanded almost as much human energy as they saved. One of the
museum's supreme examples is the 1910 Rochester hand-cranked dishwasher, a truculent-looking wooden hopper lined with galvanized steel, its
cleaner,
viscera bristling with coiled wire fingers to clutch the dirty di.shes.
it was to use, the dishwasher was on the right track. Elsemuseum's encyck)pedic dt)mestic collection are entire evolutitmary cycles which, like that of the dinosaur, simply ended when their
time expired. We are amazed to learn how much effort and ingenuity our
ancestors put into keeping their feet warm. A parade of foot-warmers from
Difficult as
where
in the
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
made
life
more bearable
for
such
outings as carriage and sleigh rides, for beds, and for such public gathering
places as church,
which was often unheated.
the early days of automobiles.
A few footwarmers lasted
into
Many
like iron
other domestic
relics are
more
familiar to the
modern
eye.
Some,
bread toasters from the days of hearth cooking, at least have mod-
em counterparts.
So do
flatirons,
and certain mashers and
graters.
A sense
of discovery comes with discerning the gradual change in style that marked
new
how
generations of the same product; noting, for example,
tieth-century
aluminum cookware
imitated the massive castings of
Recently, the
museum added
usual break with
its
new development
early twen-
unnecessarily
iron forebears.
its
a pioneering 1957
microwave oven, an un-
general rule of ending the collections with 1950, and
attesting to the revolutionary importance of
truth, as the artifacts show,
around
most of
for a while. Electric stoves
electric waffle irons since 1918,
microwave cooking. For
today's kitchen appliances have
have served us
and
for
in
been
about eighty years,
toasters since 1909.
Westinghouse
vs?"
in-
troduced an electric frying pan in 1911.
"Bathing did not become commonplace in America until the nineteenth
century," snaps the text from a
caught on then,
ber than toilette.
The
stanchion. Small wonder
it
even
bathtubs hints more of torture cham-
brave bather's
made product combining
tin basin that
museum
for the collection of
first
a horse trough
choice was between a cooper-
and
a coffin,
and
a tottery- looking
emulated an inverted sombrero. Other creative designs
opposite,
top.
fol-
The Standard electric stove, patented m
new slenderization made possible by elim-
1913, reveled in a
lowed; most were merely aids to sponge bathing, not relaxing immersion.
inating the firebox. But
When the full power of Victorian innovation focused on bathtubs,
construction features of
One
the results were unspeakable.
with
its
own
hot water heater.
uncomfortably
however,
of the most popular was a folding tub
Some folding tubs, arrayed for action, looked
The main trouble was that tubs were wait-
general conformation of future bathtubs (and flush
toilets,
perfected in the
1890s) had been clearly determined. The shape of the future shows in the
museum's 1894 copper, wood, and zinc bathtub made by R. M. Wilson of
Rome, New York. Tj harbor such welcome new appliances, space quickly
for a separate
room, the bathroom. By
1910, porcelainized fixtures
were the norm, and the modern bathroom was in place.
As American homes waited
for
Thomas Edison
to invent the
phono-
The music
box, an
graph, they were not bereft of mechanical music players.
ancient device wherein delicate metal fingers are plucked by the turning of
cylinders or discs, produced sounds of
marked beauty and
delicacy.
sortment of automatic pianos provided similar repertoires.
One
An
as-
elaborate
alternative was the Violano Virtuoso, which combined automatic piano
with a violin. Probably the favorite toward the end of the nineteenth century,
could not quite break with the
its
wood- and coal-burning
predecessors
Opposite, boltom.
made
this
Norge
The Borg-Warner Corporation
electric refrigerator in
of Detroit
1938
like guillotines.
ing for the general introduction of indoor plumbing with hot running water.
That occurred around the turn of the twentieth century, by which time the
was made
it
and well into the twentieth, was the Regina, made in Rahway, New
Resembling the china cabinets of its time, the Regina was cased in
Jersey.
Renaissance revival
style, "especially suitable for
and some models played
as
many
use in the dining room,"
as twelve discs automatically
with one
191
Above.
Around
the turn of the century, the folding bathtub
with attached water heater served homes lacking indoor
plumbing. Such devices were being offered as
late as
1920
J92
about
half an hour's worth of music, not had for the turn of the
would he many years before any phonograph could equal it. A
Regina Type 35 in the museum collection dates from c. 1912; the model's
heyday was 1900-1907, though some were made as late as 1920.
winding
century.
It
Opposite.
Modem aviation was born in this shop,
cycles.
They
also designed
dream of Midwestern
ike a
Wright evokes an Ohio nostalgia almost powerful
W
New
yesterdays, the blue-
home of Wilbur and Orville
enough
em
to
mask the house's
historical significance.
when bought by the Wrights' father, it sheltered the famous brothers through much of their lives and, moved to Greenfield Village from Dayton,
remains as it was when modernized by the young Wrights around the turn of
in 1870
the century, the point where
would be forever fixed
it
weatherboarded house retains that precise era when
cessfijlly
experimented with
flight.
probably the most authentic of
the house transcends
its
all
the structure
it is
connection with famous former owners and becomes
society.
itself,
owners suc-
curtains,
Greenfield Village's historic buildings. Yet
and
It is
urban American
instantly,
home life of the 1900-1910 era.
Above all, the Wrights' eight-room house demonstrates
consumer
its
window
Original even to the
a three-dimensional text that explains, vividly
of the
Thus the com-
in time.
fortable,
the final triumph
mass-produced household, beginning with
a "balloon"
frame building made of standardized lum-
and by framing and trim techniques agreed on by carpenters nationwide. All the furnishings, appliances, and housewares inside were factory
ber,
made. Indoor plumbing, a porcelain-lined kitchen sink, aluminum cookware, linoleum on the
floor,
an icebox, and an arsenal of such labor-saving
made life easier for the Wrights and
gadgets as the Bissell carpetsweeper
their housekeeper. Significantly, the
men who
designed one of history's
greatest technological revolutions revealed their strong conservative bent by
deciding against electric light in their 1903 modernization.
comfortable with that old reliable, gas.
They
felt
more
The Welsbach mantles produced
splendid illumination, and gas enabled the Wrights to upgrade their heating
apparatus conveniently and economically.
They designed and
burning fireplace units, surrounding each with
In 1904, the year after their
brought the
at the
first
first flight
stylish tan
at Kitty
running water into their home. The
built gas-
ceramic
tile.
Hawk, the Wrights
pump
they installed
kitchen sink recalls the brothers' modest plunge into indoor plumb-
ing, ultimate
proof of a twentieth-century household.
The Wright Cycle Company
is
now just next door.
and Wilbur seems an unlikely domestic cover
If
the
home
of Orville
for the fathers of flight, their
technological and manufacturing springboard defies understanding. Did the
air age truly
The
begin in this drab, dim shop behind a southern Ohio store?
answer, as
we have
seen,
golfier brothers their due.
is
yes. Give the MontFrenchman Henri Giffard's
complex, but generally
Properly credit fellow
193
and
in
1903
and
Hawk,
built early gliders
planes, including the historic craft that flew at Kitty
North Carolina,
shuttered, pale yellow
originally
Dayton, Ohio. Here, between 1897 and 1907, Orville
and Wilbur Wright manufactured, sold, and repaired biin
194
powered dirigible. Recall Thaddeus Lowe, soaring over the popping muskets
Do not forget Germany's brave Otto Lilienthal,
of Virginia's battlefields.
tally injured in a glider
wreck
in 1896, the
same year that
ley of Washington, D.C. earned little but ridicule for successfully flying
powered models. Yet having made appropriate bows to those and other
,
we must always
oneers,
fa-
Samuel Lang-
Dr.
his
pi-
give the prize to two young, provincial bachelor
brothers from Dayton, the
first
to fly a
manned, powered, heavier-than-air
machine.
Almost alter egos in their interests and abilities, the Wrights mastered
and photography before opening their bicycle business in 1892,
when Wilbur was 25, Orville, 21. They began by retailing and repairing the
printing
bicycles of other manufacturers, but by 1896 they introduced the
their
own
played in the shop today. (The St. Clair displayed on the
is
first
of
An original Wright Van Cleve bike is dis-
models, the Van Cleve.
the only Wright-made St. Clair
known
museum concourse
to exist.
Reading of the experiments of the late glider Lilienthal, the Wrights
dreamed of flying while thriftily attending to business. Their new passion
was tempered by an intensely methodical approach, an innate sense of scientific caution that led them to weigh
and, in general, find wanting
the
day's meager fund of information on flight. In 1900, after experimenting
with kites and small gliders, they began building gliders designed to carry
a pilot aloft, lb study the unknown science of airfoils, they modified one of
their bikes to carry a free-rotating third wheel, mounted horizontally on the
handlebars. On the wheel, in turn, were mounted fragile metal flaps. Pedaling furiously around Dayton, the Wrights gathered their own data on air-
foils
by observing the
of test surfaces.
first wind tunnel, testing nearly
one year making the leap from bike-technology research
the very symbol of aeronautical research laboratories. Meanwhile they
By
late 1901, the brothers
fifty airfoils
to
movement
and
had
built their
in
determined that the broad, oceanfront beaches of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, offered the
optimum
qualities of steady
In 1903, they built their fourth flying
wind and
cylinder engine and two pusher-type propellers.
hindsight,
when
tion.
we can accept
soft, treeless
machine, and equipped
With
as inevitable the events of
all
it
sand.
with a four-
the benefit of
December
17,
1903,
32-year-old Orville Wright clattered aloft in their kitelike contrap-
The
flight
remains etched in drama and surprise nevertheless, a deed
stunning and brave and poignant. In
nology,
is
there a
all
the history of invention and tech-
more imperishable image?
True, the world took
Orville and Wilbur.
little
note at the time, a reaction disappointing to
The Dayton newspaper
ignored their
though the Norfolk, Virginia, press rendered good
if
first flight (al-
inaccurate
cov-
erage). But the Wrights were not of a kidney to be deterred by public
indifference. Rapidly improving their fragile flyers, the brothers were in de-
mand
in
Europe by 1908. French and German companies purchased Wright
195
Opposite. Fdf
mure than
the Wright family
were moved
to
thirty yenrs.
home
house in 1912 of typhoid
in
tiiLs
1^70 house was
Dayton. Wilhur died
fever. In
1938, the
in the
home and shop
Greenfield Villatje under the supervision of
Orville
Above. Orville
(left)
porch of their home
in
and Wilbur Wright, on the
Dayton, around 1910
front
airplanes,
and
Dayton
finally
in the family
typhoid
ratory,
II
fever.
U.S. Army Signal
own manufacturing company in
so, at last, did the
incorporated their
threw
a gala for
Corps.
famous native sons. In
its
The Wrights
1909, the
1912,
same year
still
living
home, Wilbur died of one of the time's implacable scourges,
Orville persevered, founded the Wright Aeronautical Labo-
and invented the automatic
stabilizers that
dive bombers. In 1937-38, he helped Henry Ft)rd
would guide W)rld War
move
the old
home and
shop to Dearborn.
Like the Wrights' home, the shop seems to capsule the very air of 1903.
In the back of the
reflect the
showroom, the
brothers' office desk, chair,
back rooms, where bicycles and airplanes were made,
the original
ville
1%
and typewriter
foursquare probity that marked their owners. In one of the shop's
wooden wind
tunnel.
The
first
is
a reproduction of
one had been destroyed, but Or-
provided information that aUowed Henry Ford's staff to reproduce
it.
Orville, founding father, elder statesman,
1948, into the age of
airman of the dawn,
lived
on
to
jets.
By 1909, the year of the Wrights' home-town recognition, no heavier-
manned
had yet flown across the English Channel, although
more than 120 years had passed since the first balloonist soared across. The
London Daily Mail decided to incite flyers to a Channel conquest by offering
a $5,000 prize. Among the contestants was Louis Bleriot of France, who
had already prospered as the inventor of an automobile searchlight, and
whose new passion was building airplanes. He had already survived several
crashes, but he gamely took off again in his little monoplane, which bore
an odd resemblance to a dragonfly A mere three hundred feet above the
fog-shrouded waves, without instruments, Bleriot throttled his threecylinder Anzani engine against stiff winds and completed the crossing in
thirty-seven minutes. It was the first international airplane flight.
than-air
craft
197
In 1909, Louis Bleriot was first to fly across the English
Channel, completing the world's first international flight.
The daring Frenchman flew a plane of his own design and
manufacture, and
Bleriot in the
it
was the virtual twin of
museum
this other
1908
w/.
WK
.-
.'viVflrjTTjr,
The
is the museum's oldest airplane is nearly
one that flew the Channel, and was built by Bleriot in the
same year, 1909. Its combination of metal fuselage panels with open wood
framework, and the shape and positioning of its black fabric wings and tail,
fragile little Bleriot that
identical to the
reveal the transition period
from the original Wright
ginnings of more modem-looking aircraft.
the be-
flyer era into
The sequence
continues in the
museum's 1915 Laird biplane used by pioneer woman flyer Katherine Stinson; a 1916 Standard J- 1, forerunner of the World War I "Jenny"; and a 1917
Curtiss "Canuck," a Canadian version of the "Jenny."
survivor of
first
more than
aircraft to
ten thousand of
be controlled by a
stick, the
ular barnstormer, air-mail carrier,
As
the founding impulses of
its
and the
modem
The
Curtiss
model went on
first
plane
to
fitted
1919 Curtiss Flying Boat, or Seagull, was the
maker,
Glenn H.
first
The
a pop-
skis.
The museum's
commercial
flying boat.
Curtiss, was another bicycle manufacturer
a swift transition to aircraft; in 1910,
1.
aviation gathered strength in the
1920s, another generation of legendary planes took charge.
Its
become
with
a rare
is
kind made in World War
he made the
first
who made
landing on water, and
pioneered landings and takeoffs on Navy ships before there were aircraft
carriers. In 1919, Curtiss
that
summer launched
began manufacturing the famous Seagull, which
between San Pedro and Santa
regular flight service
Catalina Island, in California. The museum's example has a
wingspan, and
is
powered by
fifty-foot
Hispano-Suiza V-8 of 150 horsepower.
made the first transatlantic flight, in 1919.
Even more renowned were the trimotors of the 1920s. First came the
1925 craft built in Holland by A. H. G. Fokker, and promptly flown by him
to victory in the first Ford Reliability Tour. Subsequent Fokkers, made in
larger version
199
Opposite. "Flivver" had the potential for success as a light,
simple, inexpensive personal airplane. But the crash of a
similar plane
and the death of
its pilot
so affected
Henry
Ford that he cancelled the project
Above. In this 1925 Fokker, the
Lieutenant
flight
first
Commander Richard
over the North Pole
E.
trimotor ever built,
Byrd made the
first
2(J(J
Holland and New Jersey, completed the first Califomia-to-Hawaii flight, the
maiden international flight of Pan American Airways (Key West to Havana), and Amelia Earhart's transatlantic flight to Ireland. But the original
Fokker Number One, the very craft displayed in the museum, participated
more breathtaking news event of the Roaring Twenties: famed exfirst flight over the North Pole, piloted by Floyd
Bennett, May 9, 1926. Byrd, then a Naval lieutenant commander, named
in a
still
plorer Richard E. Byrd's
the ship "Josephine Ford" after the daughter of Edsel Ford,
nance the
who helped
fi-
flight.
Another
historic trimotor
the museum's 1928 Ford (the "Floyd Ben-
is
nett") that carried Byrd,
now
a rear admiral,
The
craft
was powered by two wing-mounted Wright
South
Pole, in 1929.
Whirlwind engines and
acteristic
on the
cowl-mounted Wright Cyclone. With
corrugated skin and plain-Jane
profile.
beloved, dependable craft around the world for
hundred of them were
that
still
built at
Dwarfed by such
museum and
relatively large planes
is
many
years.
its
Almost two
to 1932 in a building
village.
a little-known Ford airplane of
the 1920s that might have changed aviation history, had
tragedy that nipped
their char-
Ford Trimotors became a
Dearborn from 1925
stands, adjacent to the
over the
first flight
it
not been
development in the bud. True to his colors
as a
1926 to build an experimental, one-seat, low-winged monoplane.
sulting twenty-five-foot-wingspan,
ahead of
its
Harry Brooks. Less than two years
killed.
Henry
Flivver project.
ing as though
The
man-
The
in
re-
"Flivver," looking a bit
time in design, was piloted aloft in Dearborn in July 1926 by
endurance record
was
550-pound
Brooks attempted a new
light
plane
Ford, deeply affected by the loss of his pilot, canceled the
The
it
later,
another Flivver, but crashed in the Gulf of Mexico and
in
only surviving example
could
still
is
the original prototype, look-
buzz eagerly into the sky
year 1927 was a milestone in the history of commercial flight.
commenced
of twenty-four Boeing biplanes
the nation's
scheduled transcontinental passenger and mail service.
It
first
A fleet
regularly
was a stop-and-
go process, as the Boeing 40-B2 had a range of only 350 miles, cruising at
105 miles per hour.
pit
The
pilot sat
exposed to the elements in an open cock-
about midway in the fuselage; two passengers with sufficient courage
could be
crammed
into a cabin
between the
pilot
and the
earsplitting Pratt
& Whitney radial engine. The museum's specimen, proudly original down
to the
"United Air Lines
Coast
Chicago-to-San Francisco
Only one
year
later,
Lockheed. The Vega
to
Coast" on
its
battered flanks, flew the
leg of the historic schedule.
a significantly
quickly
more modern
won acceptance
craft
Above. Designed in 1935, the Douglas
DC-3 became
the
backbone of commercial aviation, and many examples were
flying in the 1980s. This one was built in 1939, and
still
logged almost 85,000 flying hours before finally retiring to
for a
Henry Ford decided
ufacturer of affordable transportation machinery,
The Lockheed Vega was a pace-setting craft, and
was the favorite of record-seeking pilots and explorers.
Moreover, it was one of the first successful commercial
airliners. The museum's example dates from 1929
Opposite.
was introduced by
by such pilots as Wiley Post,
Amelia Earhart, Billy Mitchell, Charles Lindbergh, and Jimmy Doolittle;
in such hands it won more long-distance records, over land and sea, than
any comparable craft. Partial plywood construction cut down on the Vega's
201
the
museum
in
1975
202
modern instrumentation allowed
weight, and surprisingly
a pilot to "fly
J
, ,! ^^Qf (mrr, 1Q7Q. it survived
a
dates from ly/y, it <7i.i-i>ii7<rl o
Ihe museums r\andsome example
long career as an airliner, and was used in Arctic exploration. It is restored
today in the white-and-maroon colors of a forerunner of Continental
J T-i
U.ind.
Airlines.
As an
however, the Vega was soon upstaged by that great work-
airliner,
horse of the
air,
the DC-3. Created by Donald Douglas in 1935,
handedly ushered in the age of modem commercial aviation, and
is
reflected
even in the
jetliners of
special one: built in 1939,
it
today
The museum's
it
single-
its
design
representative
is
logged 84,875 flying hours in a thirty-six-year
career with Eastern Air Lines and
North Central Air Lines,
world record
when it retired. In a flight history equaling twenty-five round trips to the
moon, the airplane consumed 25,000 spark plugs and wore out 136
engines.
The
homeliest aircraft in the collection
also
is
one of the most
signifi-
cant. Resembling a soapbox racer grafted onto a giant electric fan, the original
1939 Vought-Sikorsky helicopter was the
first
The
War
practical "chopper. "
designer was Igor Sikorsky, one of aviation's true originals. In World
he pioneered building big, four-engine aircraft in his native Russia. Migrating to the United States in 1919, he designed and manufactured a fa-
mous
flying boat, the
S-42 China Clipper. Sikorsky had worked on the
later, he triumphed with a fab-
helicopter principle since 1919; twenty years
VS-300. In 1943, Sikorsky took
it to Henry Ford on a bril-
ric-covered, open-cockpit craft called the
this very helicopter to
liant blue
October
Dearborn, and presented
day.
Edsel Ford had died only six
seum and
village.
had named Henry
Young Ford
months
before,
company He had never
presidency of the
and Henry had resumed the
mu-
relinquished the reins of the
But while the old tycoon was there to greet Sikorsky, he
II, his grandson, to make the official acceptance speech.
referred to the obstacles Sikorsky
the helicopter as "the
fires
had encountered developing
that temper men's determination."
He called
the
strange craft "one of the marvels of our time."
Sikorsky's test pilot, C. L. Morris, put the craft through
the crowd as a Ford-built B-24 Liberator
overhead on a
test flight.
ing a handkerchief
finally,
nose, the pilot Morris
iron ring.
stunts for
helicopter descended with one wheel touch-
on the ground, then hovered with
mechanic's hand, and
ter's
The
some
medium bomber rumbled high
a
wheel cupped in a
with a spear that protruded from the helicoplike a jousting
Someone pointed out
knight
impaled
the bicycle basket also
a suspended
mounted on the
and Sikorsky said he used that to carry his lunch.
He'd seen transportation collections all over the world, the inventor said,
but this was the best, and it was a privilege to present "his little machine."
nose,
Then he took
last
it
for a final ride,
and the helicopter
fluttered
down
for the
time on a lawn beside Village Road.
203
Opposue. Last
flight of the hrst
hehcpter:
Igor Siki>rsl<v
prcsented
his historic craft to the Henry' Ford
^
Museum
in
^J-'
'mH gji
\
wk
^ 'Wr
.,^^
and
Credits
he combined Henry Ford
Village
The Edison
favorite spots
on
Museum and Greenfield
Institute
earth. But glad as
one of my
is
The wicker
Opposite.
Packard
is
picnic basket on this 1904
a carryover
Model L
from those used on horse-drawn
coaches in the days of elegant
al fresco
dining
was to begin a
^ new
ne book on the world's greatest indoor-outdoor
museum, the work would never have been completed without the support and
cooperation of the institute's curatorial and administrative
their expert guidance,
would surely have
museum and
of riches the
lost
village fling before
staffs.
Deprived of
my way What an embarrassment
any observer! Building a coherent
narrative order for that vast collection of treasures was a challenging
and some-
times frustrating assignment, demanding the sifting of thousands of artifacts,
the study of complex interpretive programs, and the tracing of The Edison Institute's
own
evolution across the years. Fortunately, as
skilled counsel, as well as friendly
encouragement.
say,
Among
had the benefit of
who
the curators
generously shared their expertise were John Bowditch (power and shop
Donna
machinery).
Cheyne
R. Braden (home
arts),
Nancy Bryk
(textiles),
Robert
(horology), Peter Cousins (agriculture), Robert E. Eliason (music),
Hamp
Steven K.
(archives),
Randy Mason
(transportation),
Matteson (communications), Larry C. McCans (guns,
toys,
Donald
photography),
Simmons II (metals), and
Kenneth M. Wilson (fijmiture). Special thanks go to
Matelic, manager of interpretive training, Ed Merrill, manager of
Christina H. Nelson (ceramics and glass), Walter E.
director of collections
Candace
interpretive programs,
Adams,
and John L. Wright, director of education. G. Donald
and public relations, and Peter Logan, of the
director of marketing
institute's
media
relations department, helped in a
Harold K. Skramstad,
Jr.,
throughout the project. Harold Sack, president of
^rk
Israel
Sack, Inc.
City, obligingly shared his rare personal recollections of
antiques collector.
steadfast ally
At my
from the
publisher's, senior editor
project's beginning,
Sheila Franklin also guided
Finally, for
of all
thousand ways. President
rendered enthusiastic aid and encouragement
me
of
New
Henry Ford
as
Joan Fisher was a skilled and
and helped chart
its
course;
^e
and
through dangerous thickets of gist and syntax.
support both practical and inspiriting,
my journeys: Gwen C. Wamsley, my
my thanks to the companion
wife.
All photographs are by Ted Spiegel except for those on
pages 29, 34, 36, 38, 40, 44, 46-51, 56-58, 60, 64, 70,
72-3, 94,
James
S.
Wamsley
205
101,
108, 116, 124, 130,
132-34,
137,
140,
which are reproduced courtesy the collections of Greenfield Village and Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn,
Michigan
Richmond, Virginia
97,
144-48, 150, 152, 156, 158, 160-62, 164-65, 167-69,
172-79, 181-83, 187, 190 (top), 191, 195-99, 201-2,
Index
A.
]^umhe.-(% in iixAic
Ackley Covered Bridge, J4
Acme automatic bar machine, 183
ivAxcaxe. \]\.us,tmii(m.s
Affleck,
bhott,
Agnew
Anne, 129
Thomas, 42
99
Eagle,
airplane collection, 130, 135,
197-203
Albany cutter,
97, 99, lOJ
Alcobuilt Schenectady passenger
locomotive, 179, 180
Alexander, William, 49
Allen,
Lathrop, 85
J.
85
Amati, Nicolo, 57
Ambler, Enoch, 88
"American blousel' 125
American Diaiaxvxr-j of the English
Language, An, 62, 63
American Eagle Bank, 130
"American flip-flop" hay rake, 48
alto horn,
American La France, 177
American long rifle, 89, 90
American truck, 163
amethyst
flask,
75
Anglo-Irish style cut-glass pitchers,
76, 208
Apperson Jackrabbit,
171
appliances, 122, 125, 186-91
arc lamps, 107
Arkwright, Richard, 35
armchair,
41,
4i
Armington and Sims Machine
Shop, 105, 109, 113, 114-15,
Armstrong, Edwin H., 185
119
Art Deco, 185, 185, 190
"Art Garland" stove, 122, I2i
Artillery Mechanical Bank, 130
Atlantic cable, 95
Atwater Kent Model
receiver, /H4,
10 radio
185
Atwood, William Hooker,
Austin,
W,
163
148
automobile collection, 27 143,
148-51, 152, 153-77
206
147.
automotive dealerships, 177
boring mill, 35
Autoped, 178
bottle collection, 6-7, 51, 75-77,
78-79
Boulton, Matthew, 33
B.
W,
aldwin, Matthias
136
banjo, 84
box stove, freestanding, 67
box telephone, 117
bracket clocks, 55
MathewB.,97, 128
and German silver tuba, 85
Banjo clock, 54
Brady,
banks, 130
brass
"Barber vasel' 129,
BO
brass instruments,
baritone horn, 85
Barlet elbow melodeon, 85
bar machine.
83
"breadboard, thel' 185
Acme
breechloading muskets, 91
automatic, 183
Brewster and Carver chairs, 41
barshare plow, 37
Brewster George IV phaeton, 137
bassoon, 56
Brewsters, 137
bathtubs,
Bridgeport milling machine, 183
191, ]9I
beer wagon, 136-37
Bell,
MO
"britannia" 81
Alexander Graham,
Brooks, Harry, 201
113
Bennett, Floyd, 201
brougham
Bennett Tower, 214
Brush, C.F, 107
carriage, 137
Benz, Karl, 149
Bryant, Clara Jane, 157
Benz Velocipede, 149
buggies, 137
Best Friend, 101
bugle, keyed, 83
Bible,
25
Buick, David Dunbar, 166
bicycles, 99,
J45, 146,
lOl,
MZ
141,
143, 144,
192, J93, 195
177,
Buick Model F 166
Burbank, Luther, 19,
Bums
"Big Mike;' 138
Andrew, 55
dynamo, Edison, 109
Billings,
buses, 166
bipolar
butchers' wagon, 136
Bissell carpet sweeper, 125
181,
183
radio, 185
Byrd, Richard E.
201
blanket chest, 64, 67
Bleriot, Louis, 197, 199
Bleriot
mono-plane, 19697,
197,
C/.i
/ H. Brown
199
& Co.
blockfront desk, 42
Cadillac, 2-i, 167, 169
Blue-backed Speller, 65
calculators, 117
calico cotton, 55, 71
Boeing 40-42, 201
boilers, 32,
camera equipment, 97 117
camera obscura, 97
Campbell, Angelica, 39
33
bones (musical), S4
boneshaker, 141
book and document
27
engine, 105
collection, 25,
119
card table, 42, 65
Carey
jointer, 113
bookcase, 42
carpeting, 73
boots, 73
carpet loom, 73
207
208
caqiet sweepers, 125
clock shop, 23, 26
Carr, James, 128
clothing, 55,
carriages, horse-drawn, 36, 39,
Clymer, George, 95
136-38
57
Top.
Lower left. Covered compute by Gdlinder
"Westward Ho"
Lower
136-38
97
coal-burner locomotives,
Cartwright, Edmund, 35
coal-burning stoves, 186
Carver, George Washington, 20
cobalt slip decoration, 75
Case traction engine, 121-22
coffeepots, silver, 52
Cay ley, George, 130
ceramic heating stove, 45
Cohen, Mrs. D., 20
Cole Brothers engine, 99
ceramics collection, 49, 128-29
Colt, Samuel, 91
chairs, 40, 41,
41,
42, 42
chair table, 40, 41
chariot, horse'drawn, 36, 39
Chesapeake
& Ohio Allegheny
coal burner locomotive (Big Al),
181, J8J
chest(s), 41,
Columbia Electric, 160, 163
Columbian press, 94, 95
column and cornice clock, 86
combines, Massy-Harris, 183
communications
117, 185-86
collection, 113,
comptometer of Felt and
Concord coach, 97
Chevrolet Baby Grand, 169
Chevrolet Royal Mail Roadster,
166, 168, 169
china, 128-29
China
Clipper, 203
Chinese plates, 49
Chinese porcelains, 49, 50, 51
Ching-teh, chen tea service, 49
Chippendale-style chairs, 42, 4i
Corliss engines, 103, 105
cornet, valve, 83
Cotswold Cottage, 45
Chippendale-style furniture, 42-44
cotton, 73
Chippendale-style highboy, 45
cotton calico, 55, 71
Chrysler, Walter F, 172
cotton gin, 55, 61
Chrysler Corporation, 172
coupe, 39
Chrysler Imperial landau, 172, 174
courthouse, 20, 23
Chrysler parade
covered dish,
car, 152
Cincinnati Milling Machine of
creamware
77,
208
pottery, 51
crinoline cage, 125
1881, 113
crock, 75
era bottles, 77
Crolius inkwell, 75
83
cup
Clemens, Samuel, 96
Clinton,
Tarrant, 117
Conestoga wagon, i8, 39, 41
cook stoves, 68, 69-70
cookware, 71
Cooper, James Fenimore, 89
Cord, E.L., 172
Corliss, George Henry, 103
Chippendale-style clock, 55
clarinet, 56,
181, 181
compote, 77
42
Chevrolet, Louis, 169
De Witt,
77, JOO,
101
plate,
righl.
Sons called
Cut-glass pitchers from England
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (right)
cartridges (bullets), 91
War
&
coaches, horse-drawn, 39, 97,
cartes de visile,
Civil
American
Early and middle ninetcenth-cenriiry
pitchers
73, 125
77
Curie, Eve, 19
clock collection, 54, 55, 86, 214
Currier and Ives lithographs, 27
clock movements, 87
Curtiss,
Glenn H., 199
209
(left)
and
210
Oak armchair
Curtiss "Canuck" (airplane), 199
Duesenberg (1931), 173
Top
left.
Curtiss Flying Boat, 199
dump wagon,
137
Top
right.
Duncan Phyfe
Duncan Phyfe
pedestal table, 190
Luuer
left.
piano, 86
Luwer
right.
208
cut-glass pitchers, 76,
Dunlop, John, 143
Durant, William C,
S. Pillsbury Collection,
DahoU carpet
sweeper, 125
M., 96
Daguerreotype, 96, 97, 97
Daguerre, Louis
J.
83
Duryea, Charles,
Duryea,
Duryea
Dutch
137, 166,
169
151
Frank, 151
J.
(car), 150
fan, 119
Daimler, Gottlieb, 149
Danforth, Josiah, 81
Davenport, Thomas, 93
Davy, Humphrey, 93
agle Tavern, 20, 22,
23
decanter, 77
earthenware, lead-glazed, 73, 74
deep-dish, 75
Eastlake, Charles, 128
Deere, John, 86, 88
Eastlake-style icebox, -128
de Forest, Lee, 185
Eastman, George,
delftware, 51
Eby, Jacob, 55
De Palma, Ralph,
desks,
Eddy,
171
G.W.,67
Thomas
Edison,
42
"Detroit Electric T 160, 163
169, 175
Detroit Racing Club, 157
death, 20
117,
Alva,
Diesel, Rudolf, 105, 107
inventions, 111-12
Diesel engines, 105, 107
life of,
107,
119
17,
97,
97
109
Diesel locomotives, 179, 181
Edison bipolar dynamo, 107
dirigibles, 130, 135
Edison electric pen,
117
dishes, 75, 77
Edison Illuminating
Company
building, 107 109, 112
dishwasher, 190
Doble (steam car), 149
Edison Institute, dedication, 19
Dodge touring
Edison Institute buildings, 1723,
car, 172
45,47
doglock, 59
dolls, 130, 131
"elbow melodeon," 85
domesticity, cult, 71
electrical stoves, 186, 190, 190
Douglas, Donald, 203
electric cars, 163
Douglas DC-3,
electric motors,
201,
203
93
Doyen, The, 57
Downes, Ephraim, 214
electric refrigerators, 190, J90
Draise, Karl von, 99
electroplating, 81
Draisine, 99,
Empire Organ Co., 85
lOl
drinking bowl,
silver,
Electrochef stove, 190
52
Encyclopedie (Diderot), 25
drug jar, 51
Duesenberg, Fred, 172
English guitar, 57
Duesenberg Model A, 172
Duesenberg Model J, 172
Eureka mowing machine,
"English square action," 86
121
Evans, Oliver, 96
211
New
from Massachusetts,
England maple armchair,
Queen Anne
1750
chair,
Chippendale
chaii
1755
c.
c.
1650-
1700-25
career, 159-61
ewer, porcelain, 129
Expert Columbia,
141,
143, J44
early
157
154,
life,
education, 157
marriage, 157
Ford, Henry,
Khr
ahric collection,
55, 57, 71, 73
Fairhottom Bobs, 32
Ford B-24 Liberator Bomber, 203
farm equipment collection,
118,
37,
86,
119-21, 120, 181-83
farm steam engines, 120,
mahogany
Ford Dearborn Ttiwnship farmhouse, 23, 154-55
Ford Fordor sedan, 167
121
fashions collecticm, 55, 57, 125
Federal
203
Ford "Arrow," 159
Faraday, Michael, 93
88-89,
11,
Ford, William, 157
clock, 55
Ford Franklin sedan, 175
Fordmobile, 159
Federal radios, 185
Ford Model A, 159, 172, 175
Fetch,
Tc')m,
Ford Model K, 159
fiddle,
84
56
firearms collection, 59, 61, 89-93,
91,
X
T
Ford Motor
Company (Mack
15, 165,
bucket, pitch-doubled, 49
fire
engine
fire
fighting equipment, 48, 49,
130
(tt)y),
27 29
Avenue Building), 159
hose, 49
fireplaces, 45,
Ford Quadricycle,
Ford
98, 99, 99, 138, J39, 177
Number One,
tractor, 181, 182, 183, 183
five -pi ate stoves,
pisttil,
fowler, 61
75
Franklin,
69
freight wagons, 38, 39, 41, 137 142
"friendship" quilt, 70, 73
flintlock fowler, 61
furniture collection, 24-25, 40,
Flivver,
198, 201
"Floyd Bennett" (airplane), 201
Fokker,
A.H.G., 199
Fokker
Number One,
Benjamm, 57 45
Franklin fireplace stove, 45, 66, 67
Fleming, John A., 185
29
"Flivver" monoplane,
91
Fort Meyers laboratory, 19, 112
45
56
C,
183
Stephen, 85
flasks, 51,
J.
182,
Forsythe, Alexander, 91
flageolet,
Fletcher,
181,
Tri motors, 201
Forsythe
Firestone Lincoln, 171
159
Fordson
Forster,
67
15, /5Z
racer, 156
Fordson
Ford
47
fireplace stove, Franklin, 66,
199, 201
Fokker trimotor plane, 199, 199
Ford, Clara (wife of Henry), 23
Ford, Edsel, 171-72, 175, 203
Ford, Henry, 20, 23, 24, 33,65,
41-42,43, 44, 45, 65-67
127-28
alvanometer, 95
Gardner, Alexander, 97 128
gas stoves, 186
143, 149, 156, 177, 181, 182, 196,
General Motors,
201
generators, 107
birth. 157
Germanic
212
166-67
touring car,
Ford "999," 158, 159
92
fire
fire
Ford Model
Ford Model
Cyrus, 93, 95
Field,
fife,
161
166, 169
pottery,
75
German
silver baritone
horn, 85
Haynes-Apperson (motor
Giffard, Henri, 130, 193
hay rakes, 88
Gilbert, William, 37
haystack
Gilmore, Patrick, 83
Headman, Andrew, 75
heating stoves, 67 122
glass bottles, 8. 51, 75-77,
78-79
boiler,
32
glazed earthenware, 73
Hedstrom, Oscar, 177
20
Heinz home, 20
Glidden, Carlos,
helicopters,
glass, pillar
glassware,
molding, 77
128-29
gold bugles,
Heinz, H.J.
117
6-7 83
car), 151
202
Henry, Joseph, 93
Henry
grand piano, 126
rifle, 91, 93
Henson, William, 130
Hepplewhite clock, 55
Hepplewhite desk-bookcase, 62, 65
Hepplewhite mahogany piano case,
58, 59
Hepplewhite sideboard, 65
Grasshopper beam engine, 96
Gray and Woods planer, 112-13
highboy, 42,
"golden-oak" furniture, 128
Grabowsky, Max, 175
grain reapers,
88-89
Grammatical
Institute of the
English Language, 63, 65
Gramme, Zename T,
107
35
gristmill, tower,
Guamerius, Joseph, 57
gmtars,
85
57, 59,
guns, 59,
61,
'^4, 45
Highland Park factory generator, 25
highwheeler,
144
141,
Medad, 61
Hitchcock, Thomas, 59
"hobby horse," 99
Hoe, Richard, 95
hog plow, 37
Hills,
89-93, 92
//ad
-adley chest,
Hertz, Heinrich, 185
Hoover, Herbert, 19
41
Hall, David, 82
horns (musical), 83, 85
Hall, John, 91
horology collection, 23, 52, 54,
Hall,
Rhodolph, 82
Hall flmtlock
55, 56, 86, J86
rifle, 91
Hamilton "railroad grade" pocket
i86,
18,
36, 39,
136, 137
Hall muskets, 91
watch,
horse-drawn carriages,
horse-drawn wagons, 38, 39
Howe,
2H
Elias, 71
hand-pumper, 48, 98, 99
hubcaps, 170
hansom cab, 137
Harahan Sugar Mill, 121
Harland, Thomas, 55
Hunneman pumper, 99
Hussey,
H&
Obed, 88
W motor
car, 151
Harley-Davidson Cleveland, 177
Harley-Davidson Excelsior, 177 U9
harmonicon, 85
harpsichord, 59
Harte, Bret, 96
ice skates, 15
Hatch, EL., 137
Indian (motorcycle),
hats, 73
Indian (India) spinning wheel, 25
Haynes, Elwood R,
cebox, Eastlake-style, 128
151
Ingersoll milling
177,
179
machine, 183
213
214
Ingersoll-Rand Diesel locomotives,
Top
Kip, Jesse, 52
c.
Top
combustion engine, 149
Irish-made plate,
51
Isaac Fiske valve bugle, 85
and M. Peckham park)r
67
knee breeches, 73
Lower
125
suit,
161
Lallement, Pierre,
Jacquard, J.M., 71
lamps. See lighting and lamps
Jacquard coverlet, 73
Langen, Eugen, 105
aird biplane, 199
141
Langley, Samuel, 195
61
45
Janney, E.H., 135
jars, 51, 75
Lannuier, Charles Honore, 65
Jarves,
Deming, 77
Jefferson, Thomas, 37, 57 86
laundry equipment, 127 188, J90
Jehl, Francis, 19
Lee, Robert E., 49
Jenkins, Francis, 186
Leland, Henry M., 167 169
Jenkins Optical Scanner, 185-86
Lenoir, Etienne, 105
stoves,
lantern clock, 55
lathes, 34, 35,
112
lead-glazed earthenware, 74
LeSage, George, 93
187
JohnB., 101
jewelry, mourning, 57 57
John F Stratton alto horn, 85
John Mitchell plan of North
America, 27
Jervis,
jointer,
37
lever-action pistol, 91
Lewis,
Leyden
WK.,
jar,
75
37
lightbulbs, 19
lighting
and lamps,
47, 49,
"Josephine Ford" (airplane), 201
Lilienthal, Otto, 135, 195
80
Jumbo dynamo,
Lincoln,
jugs, 75,
108,
77 93,
107 127
Carey, 113
109
Abraham,
20, 23, 89,
128, 131
Lincoln Continental, 169, 175, 176
Lincoln rocking chair,
K.
ay,
Kendall,
131
Lincoln V- 12 convertible
John, 35
Edward (Ned), 83
limousine, 175
Lindbergh, Charles A., 175
Kennedy, John E, 172
Kentucky rifle, 59
Lockheed Vegas
201, 203
kerosene lamps, 127
locomotives, 4-5, 100,
kerosene stoves, 186
Kinetograph, 112
Kinetoscope, 112
left.
Hamilton pocket watches
now
in Greenfield
of 191')-16
Lower right. Pillar and scroll shelf clock, c. 1820, crafted by
Ephraim Downes of Bristol, Connecticut
jamb
dated
Clock tower of the Sir John Bennett Jewellry
Village
126, 127
Jackson, H. Nelson, 161
rifle,
right.
Knabe piano,
Jack'in-the-Box, 130
stove,
Jaeger
is
1860
Store, originally from London, England,
Krarup, Marius,
S.
c.
kitchen (1930), 186, J88-89
knickerbocker
is
Ladies lapel watches manufactured by the Ameri-
1890; tight,
Kirckman, Jacob, 59
inkwell, Crolius, 75
internal
left.
can Watch Co. of Waltham, Massachusetts. Top
Kip Cup, 52
179, 181, 181
(airplane), 200,
101, J34,
135-36, 179-81. See also
railroads
locomotive (toy), 130, 133
215
Logan County Courthouse, 23
102,
109-11,
no
Lumiere, Louis, 119
Mercer sport touring car, 171
Mercer Type 35 raceabout, 171
Mergenthaler, Ottmar, 95
metal-working lathes, i4, 35, 37
Michaux, Ernest, 149
microwave oven, 191
millmery shop, 20, 2\
milling machines, 113, 183
mills, 35
Miner, Uzal, 83
Lycett, Joseph, 129
Mission-style furniture, 128
log cabin, 65
"Long-legged Mary Anne," 109
Loomis, Samuel, 42
looms, 35, 71
Loranger, Gristmill, 105
Lord Fauntleroy
125
suit, 124,
Lowe, Thaddeus, 130, 195
Lownes, Joseph, 52
Lumiere, Auguste, 119
lyre clock,
Moravian
54
pitcher, 75
Morris, C.L., 203
Morse, Samuel EB., 93, 96
M.
Morton, Herbert E, 23
achine
tools, 34, 35,
112-13,
motion pictures,
112, 119
motorcycles, 148, 149,
183
McCord, Susan, 73
McCormick, Cyrus Hall, 88
motor
motor
McGuftey, William Holmes, 20, 65
McGuffey, birthplace,
16,
McGuttey home, 65
McGujfey Readers, 16,
20
177
vehicles, 27, 121-22,
\2\,
143, 147 148-51
mowing machine,
121
Murphy, Charles ("Mile-a17,
25, 65
Mclntyre, Samuel, 65
McNamee, Graham,
137,
151,
scooter, 178
Minute"), 143
musical instruments collection,
57-59, 58, 60, 81-86, 82,
19
Magic bank, 130
Manny's Patent Reaper, 88-89
"Mansion ot Happiness," 129
music box, 191-92
mantel clocks, 86, 87
muskets, 59,
map
Mussechenbroek, Peter van, 37
Muybridge, Eadweard, 119
collection, 27
Marconi, Guglielmo, 185
8i, 126, 127
music collection, 27
61, 91
Marconi radio receiver and
transmitter, 185
Marcus, Siegfried, 149
Marriott, Fred, 172
A.
Martin, C.E, 85
New Bremen
Mason
Fairlie
locomotive,
4-5
T ational
Game
Ttuirist,"
Glass
bt)ttlc, 51
Newcomen, Thomas,
BO
3 3
Massey-Harris combine, 183
Newcomen steam
matchlock, 59
Newsham, Richard, 48, 49
New Warrior mowing machine,
Matthew, David,
101
New
Maudslay, Henry, 35
Maybury stove, 45
Mcnk) Park laboratory,
216
engine, 33
118
York reaper, 89
Niepce, Nicephore, 96
17,
19, 19,
Norge
electric refrigerator, 190, i90
North, Noah,
Noyes, John,
phonographs.
61
117,
Phyfe,
119
Duncan, 65
piano collection, 58, 59,
0,
boe, 83
oil
112, 191, 193
111,
photography equipment, 96-97,
51
81,
85,
85, 86, 126, 127, 191
tank wagon, 137
pianoforte, 81
Oldfield, Barney, 143, 158, 159
pie plate, 75
Old
Pierce-Arrow "Great Arrow," 169
Ironsides locomotive, 136
Old Number 90, 181
Old Pacific (Packard
Olds,
Ransom
Oldsmohile,
omnibus,
E.
161,
160.
Pierce-Arrow roadster, 169
car), 161, 162
163
"pillar molding,"
77
"Pioneer,"
161
77
pint flask, 75
pistols, 89, 91
18
opaque white glass, 75
ophicleide, 83
organ collection, 85
pitchers,
72, 75, 76, 77,
51,
77
81,
208
Pittsburgh decanter, 77
Pittsburgh glass tumbler, 77
punch howl, 77
Oriten, 143, J46
Pittsburgh
Otto, Nickolaus August, 105, 149
planers, 112-13
Otto engines, 105
Owens, Lane
Dyer steam
plates, 49, 51
&
plows, 37, 86, 88
plumbing,
engine, 121
193
191, I9i,
Plymouth House, 45, 47 47
Plympton, Abigail, 45
Plympton, Thomas, 45
ackard, James Ward,
lid
161
pocket watches, 56, 186
Packard, Model L, 204
Pope, Albert A.,
Packard, tan and black speedster,
Pope-Hartford, 163
168,
143, 163
141,
Pope -Toledo, 163
171
Packard Twin Six,
J68,
171
Packard, William
Dowd,
Papin, Denis,
33
31,
161
porcelain(s), 49, 50,
Port
Huron
51, 77, 81,
portrait prints,
97
Parian eagle vase, 128
"possible Delaware" clock, 55
Parian porcelain vase, 129
pottery,
"Patersons," 91
73-75
powder flask, 92
powder horn, 90
power machinery,
pearl ware, 51
President, The, 134,
Pearson house, 4
printing presses,
pedestal table, 190
Pullman, George, 179
parlor stoves, 67, 67, 69, 122, J23
Parsons, Charles A.
105
105, 107
135
95-96
Peerless Victoria, 168, 169
Pullmans, 179
pewter, 81
punch howl, 77
Putnam Machine Company
Philadelphia highboy, 42, 45
Philadelphia Public Ledger, 95
129
tractor, 119
planer, 112
217
fi
Roper
uadricycle, 15, 157, 159
Queen Anne
chair, 42,
148-49
Architectural details in Greenfield Village
Rover, 143
quilt collection, 73
(car), 143, 147,
Ross, William, 39
42
Rudge rotary tricycle, 145
Rumford roasters, 47 49
rum jug, 80
acingcars, 157, 158, 159,
161,
171-72
radio receivers, 185, 185
135-36, 179-81.
railroads, 19, 134,
s.K
Columbia, 109
S.
S-42 China Clipper, 203
See also locomotives
railroad coaches, 179
Sack, Harold (son of Isaac), 24
Railway Express freight wagon, 142
Sack, Isaac, 24
Rapid
Rapid trucks, J60, 166
Salamandar Works, 73
Saltbox house, 46, 47
Rauch and Lang
salt-glazed stoneware, 51,
electric car, 163, 166
electric car, 160,
73-75, 80
163
RCA Radiola,
Sam
17 185
Recamier Grecian
sofa,
Hill (locomotive), 135
"Sandwich" glass, 77
Sarah Jordan Boarding House,
reaper-binder, 121
65
redward, 75
111,
JJJ,
(locomotive), 135
reed organs, 85
Satilla
refrigerators, 186, 190, 190
Savery,
Regina Type 35 music box, 191-92
schoolhouse, 20
Reis,
Schurtz, A., 97
J.
Phillip, 113
Remington, Philo, 117
Reuben Tower tall-case clock, 86
Revere, Paul, 52
Thomas, 33
89
Scott, Grant,
screw-cutting metal lathe,
34, 35, 112
scrub board, hand-powered
Revere coffeepot, 52
Revere teapot, 52
rocker, 188
revolvers. See pistols
Seagull (airplane), 199
riding chairs, 39
Sears, Kate B.
rifles,
59, 61,
89-93
129
Selden, George B.
rifle-shotgun, 92
149
serpent (musical instrument), 81
Riker truck, 151
Seth Thomas clocks, 86
sewing machines, 71, 122, 125
robots, 183
sgraffito
Rochester hand-cranked
sharps carbine, 91
Riker,
Andrew
L.
151
dishwasher, 190
John D.,
rocker lap organ, 85
Rockefeller,
technique, 75
Sheffield plate, 81
Jr.,
19
shoes, 73
Sholes, Christopher L., 117
Rogers, Will, 19
shotguns,
Rogers 303-0 American Class
Sikorsky, Igor,
Hay ward,
61,
92
203
silverware, 51-52, 53, 81, 83
locomotive, 135
Roper, Sylvester
19,
112
143, 149
Singer, Isaac, 71, 125
219
Comte
Sivrac,
99
de,
steeple
Skramstad, Harold K.,
Stevens,
Jr.,
19-20, 23, 24, 25
Slater, Moses, 85
Slater,
Stiegel,
stoneware,
99
stove',
67-71,
Smith, Horace, 91
Smith and Wesson, 91
Smith Creek railroad station,
45, 47, 49, 66,
17,
67. 69,
122, 123, 186,
190, 190
19
snaphance, 59
68
stove, Troy, 67,
streetcars, 136, 137
tall-case clock,
86
Society of the Cincinnati, 49
hone ash porcelain,
soft-paste
Eranklin, 67
stove collection,
decoration, 75
Soap Hollow
73-75, 80
51,
Stoney Creek Sawmill, 105
Slater's Mill, 35, 55
slip
Thomas, 141
Henry W, 51
Stinson, Katherine, 199
Samuel, 35
sleighs, 97,
compound marine steam
engine, 105
skid engines, 105
Almon
Stutz Bearcat,
81
B., 117
171,
summer-winter
172
fabric pattern,
Supreme Court furniture, 42
Swan, Joseph, 109
sott-paste pitcher, 72
Soule, Samuel, 117
Sparton Model 558 blue glass
mirror radio, 185,
Strowger,
switchboards, 117
\9>'i
spinning looms, 35
spinning wheel, 25
square piano,
To
d>5
stage coaches,
>
"stakes," 81
Standard
electric stove, 186, 190
Standard
J-
(airplane), 199
Stanford, Earl
ot,
Stanley,
tankards,
52, 75
51,
Tiws, Charles, 59
EO., 164
M.N., 69
Tayk)r, Zachary,
95
teapots, silver, 52,
Stanley eight-horse power model
53
telegraph, 93, 95, 113
telephone, 113, 117
(1903), 164
Stanley Model 60 runabout, 160,
television,
185-86
49
86
ten-plate stove,
164
Stanley Rocket, 164
Terry, Eli, 55,
Starley, James, 141, 143
textbooks, 65
Starlight stove, 17
textile mills, 33, 35,
steamboat
Thayer, Ephraim, 49
(toy), 130
steam-driven generators, 107
steam engines, 23, 31-33, il, 96,
103-7
m,
105,
steam locomotives,
\\5,
120,
121
181
steam-powered cars (steamers),
163-64
220
piano, 86
128-29
Talbot, William H.E, 96
tall-case clocks, 54, 55, 86
Tippan range, 186
33
Stanley, EE., 163-64, 172
Stanley,
Gilbert &. Co.
tableware, 49-51,
97
55
Thompson, Benjamin, 47
Thor Number One wa.shing
machine,
188,
Tiffany, Louis
190
Comfort, 129
tin-glazed delftwarc,
tinware, 71
51
73
Tom Thumb,
/^d
Eddy screw-cutting
101
Tench Lake (locomotive),
4-5
also trucks
waistcoats, 73
"tourist" vehicle, 175
toys,
10- JJ, 129-30, 132,
tractors, 1J9,
lathe, 112
wagons, commercial, 136-37. See
112-13
tools, 17,34, 35, 37,
121-22,
B5
Walter,
Thomas U.,
181-83
Walker,
WH.,
121,
128
119
Tribune Blue Streak, 143
washing machines, J88, 190
Washington, George, 49, 51, 129
tricycle, 143, J45
Washington, Mary Ball (mother of
Tripp Sawmill, 105
George), 42
Washington camp bed, 25
Washington highboy, 42, 44
Washington press, 95-96
transfer-printed creamware, 51
trousers, 73
Troy stove, 67, 68
trucks, 151, 166
trumpet, 6-7, 82
watches, 52, 56, 86, J86, 214
tuba, 85
watch shop, 23
watercooler, 80
Watson, Thomas,
Watson thumper,
Tucker,
William
chma
Ellis, 81
by, 72, 81
typewriters,
117
116,
117
117
Watt, James, 33, 55
Watt steam engines, 33
Wayside Inn (South Sudbury,
a.
naimate robot, 183
utility jars,
Massachusetts),
17
Webster, Daniel, 99
75
Webster, Noah,
63-65
Webster, Rebecca, 63
Webster home, 20,62, 63, 65
acui
r acuum
cleaners, 125, 127, 190
Vail, Alfred,
93
Van Dom, Jacob, 52
Van Dom, Maria, 52
Van Rensselaer, Stephen, 57
vases, 77,
stove, 186
128-29, 130
West Orange laboratory,
"Westward-Ho," 77
Velo, 149
vests,
73
112
wet-plate camera, 117
whale
Victoria, 137, J40
Violano Virtuoso,
violins, 57, 60,
Welsbach mantle, 127
Wesson, Daniel, 91, 93
Westinghouse, George, 109, 135
Westinghouse electric/coal-hurning
84
Virginia, University of, 65
Virginia Housewife,
or,
Volcanic Repeating
pistol, 91
Arms Co.
91
vote recorder, HI
Vought, Sikorsky 300 helicopter,
202, 203, 203
lamps, 77
119
wheelocks, 59
Methodical
Cook, The, 71
Volcanic lever-action
oil
Wheeler and Mellick thresher,
Wheelock, Mama, 41
191
Whieldon, Thomas, 51
White, Peter, 89
White House china, 129
White House "Sunshine Special,"
175, 176, J77
White House
vehicles, 137 171,
175, 176, 177
221
222
White Model G touring
White pistols, 89
Whitney,
164
car,
^^'="1 ^^'^ s^"^
Eli, 61, 91
Whittier, John Greenleaf, 99
Whitworth, Joseph, 35, 37
Wilkin, Godfrey, 67
Wilkinson, John, 35
Willard, Aaron, 55
Willard, Simon, 55
William and Mary high chest of
drawers, 42,
44
Wilson, James, 67
Wilson bathtub, 191
Winchester rifle, 93
windmill, 30
windowpanes, 77
Wingert rifle-shotgun, 92
Winton, Alexander, 153, 157
159, 161
Wintons (motor
cars), 153, 157
Wise, John, 130
Wizard ofOz (first edition), 25
Wood, Calvin, 20
Wood, Jethro, 86
Wood, Walter A.,
Wood and
121
Caldwell pitcher,
51
woodwinds, 56, 83
woodworking tools, 112-13
Wright, E.G., 83
Wright, Orville,
195-96,
195,
19, 20, 193,
197
Wright, Wilbur, 193, 195-96, J95
Wright Cycle Company, 192
Wright family home, 2-3, 20,
193, 194
Wright
St. Clair (bicycle), 195
Wright Van Cleve (bicycle), 195
Wright wind tunnel, 195, 196
ouave jacket, 125
223