Archive for August, 2009

28
Aug
09

Number please

54!  That’s how many telephones are now on exhibit in the Henry Ford Museum.  The exhibit is one of our new “collections platforms,”  a new way to spotlight some of our under-the radar-collections.

The telephones span from one of Thomas Edison’s experimental phones (a “loud-speaking” chalk phone) to a first-generation iPhone, showing the different ways people have communicated by voice in the last hundred years.

Many of our telephones are from the turn of the twentieth century, an exciting time in phone development.  Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated a working telephone in 1876, and a number of key patents and discoveries were in place by 1900, so that the wall phone was a reliable but still rare and fascinating instrument.

Around 1900, the Bell Telephone system and their manufacturing company Western Electric were market leaders, but they served mostly urban areas on the East Coast.  Independent telephone systems sprang up to provide service to rural customers and customers in the Midwest.  C.J. Moore, who I’ve written about elsewhere, was a Michigan entrepreneur who both ran an independent phone company and manufactured his own phones.  Most independent phone service providers used phones from independent telephone manufacturers, like Stromberg-Carlson, a Chicago company whose “farmers’ phone” was the introduction for many rural Americans to the way telephones could shrink long distances.  Other independents used phones imported from Europe, like this Siemens-Halske phone from Germany.

38.239.2

Early phones included a battery, a magneto for signaling (powered by a crank), and a ringer, so though the candlestick desk phones on exhibit might look small, each would have a companion ringer box hanging on the wall, or discreetly tucked under a desk.

We have rotary phones, touch tone phones, pay phones, business phones, car phones and cell phones.  Come by the exhibit, located in the front of the museum between With Liberty and Justice for all and Made in America, and see the diversity of telephone history.

17
Aug
09

19th Century Celebrity Sightings

In 1929, Henry Ford sent a questionnaire across the country to men and women aged 75 years or older that asked about their childhoods in the early 19th century. Over 100 people responded with detailed accounts of their lives and so collectively created a wealth of memories of one of the most transformative periods of American history.

Historical Resources intern Christine Driscoll has written a series of guest posts on the 1929 questionnaire.

In the 19th century celebrity sightings were just as exciting as they are today. So much so that in responses to the questionnaire that asked them to look back on their lives and memories, many men and women told of themselves or their family members meeting a famous person. The list of people ranges from those whose fame lasted into our own century – men like Jesse James and Abraham Lincoln, to more obscure persons like an opera singer named Lillian Nordica.

Who the respondents name-drop is more illuminating about the person writing than it is about the famous person. Although these men and women wrote about their lives, facts about their status were left out of the responses because it was irrelevant to the questions the Henry Ford sent to them. The question “Are, or were, you a famous person?” unfortunately wasn’t included on the questionnaire.

Through reports of celebrity sightings, we can gather an idea of who respondents were and what they valued. Which famous people were worth mentioning in an account of their lives? Regularly, it was famous people who had something to do with the respondents’ careers. Of course, some tailored their response to the audience and so a few men wrote of meeting a young Thomas Edison.

The most illuminating case of connection through a celebrity came from two women from New England.

Continue reading ‘19th Century Celebrity Sightings’

03
Aug
09

What’s new in the Sarah Jordan Boarding House?

What’s new in the Sarah Jordan Boarding House?

Chances are, when you visit the newly reopened Sarah Jordan Boarding House in Greenfield Village, you won’t notice many changes to the circa-1870 duplex since the last time you visited.

The conservation effort has returned the 10 public rooms to much the way they looked before the building was damaged by fire in January.

Continue reading ‘What’s new in the Sarah Jordan Boarding House?’




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