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The Henry Ford museum

Travis Butler

Well-Known Member
First in a series of many posts on the Henry Ford museum... took more than 400 pics and it's taking a while to sort through them all. (Not to mention several hundred pics at the Kalamazoo Air Zoo, Mackinac Island and the Michigan Flight Museum... was a tiring but very photo-heavy week!)

This is the first set of related pics I finished and pulled together... the Dymaxion House. After World War II, the United States was experiencing a housing crunch. Buckminster Fuller, relatively early in his career, started putting together designs for houses that would be relatively fast to build, designed to work with the environment; these designs came to fruition in the Dymaxion House, an effort to meet the post-war demand. The house would be put together from pre-fabricated aluminum elements that could be built by aircraft companies that were idled by the end of the war, and could be assembled by ten men in a few days. The curved design would be resistant to the high winds and severe weather of the plains states, and utilized convection cooling to reduce energy use.

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20250527-SDIM5999 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
Sigma fp, OM Zuiko 24/2.8

Fuller worked with the Beech Aircraft company in Wichita, making it a semi-local connection for me.

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20250527-SDIM6003 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

Two prototypes were built, and a Wichita local combined them into a house he lived in for 30 years. Unfortunately, things ended there and the house never made it to full production. In 1990, the family donated the house to the Henry Ford museum; the museum refurbished the parts to reproduce the prototype as closely as possible.

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20250527-SDIM6014 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM6019 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
TTArtisan 11/2.8 Fisheye

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20250527-SDIM6024 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM6036 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

The interior reminded me of a mobile home, and not necessarily in a good way. Floors and walls were made of stamped metal, and you could occasionally feel the flex as you walked around. On the flip side, rotating drawer mechanisms like the one at right packed a lot into a small area.

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20250527-SDIM6039 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

Rooms were designed to be space-efficient but often felt cramped.

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20250527-SDIM6041 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

It reminds me a lot of some of Frank Lloyd Wright's houses - a forceful design philosophy with a very definite idea on how space should be used, innovative but not very flexible. If it fit the way you wanted to live, it was great; not so much if it didn't.

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20250527-SDIM6028 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM6045 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

Credit to the museum for its restoration and presentation!

(The museum itself is generally delightful, but there's some weird frisson with Henry Ford the man. Ford undoubtedly revolutionized industry with the assembly line; he revolutionized American transportation with the Model T and the Ford Trimotor. He was also a virulent anti-semite and had regimented plans for how factory workers should live; take a look sometime at his attempt at an industrial colony in Brazil for producing rubber. Yet the museum has a section devoted to the civil rights movement, including the actual bus where Rosa Parks sparked the Montgomery Bus boycott.)
 
I hope while you were in the Motor City you took advantage of the opportunity to sample another Quality Michigan Product: the coney dog, said to have been invented at Lafayette Coney Island at Woodward Ave and (where else?) Lafayette in the heart of Detroit.
 
I hope while you were in the Motor City you took advantage of the opportunity to sample another Quality Michigan Product: the coney dog, said to have been invented at Lafayette Coney Island at Woodward Ave and (where else?) Lafayette in the heart of Detroit.
Nope, that's one I didn't have time for... Teufel Grinsend Schwanz

Honestly, I put my priority on the Jackson Dairy. :) (Technically The Parlour, I know, but my friend introduced it to me as The Jackson Dairy and that's how I've always thought of it.) The new owner is also the owner of a notable coney dog restaurant, but I put my preference in ice cream. (And honestly, I've never been a fan of smothering dogs... the ideal dog for me is grilled, with the skin just going crispy, and a good ketchup with a vinegar tang, in a good sturdy bun - nothing more.)
 
Now for part II, just for @Pete_W... ^_-

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20250527-SDIM6197 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
Sigma fp, Minolta MD 35-70/3.5 Macro

Nice caboose... what is that thing at left?

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20250527-SDIM6200 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
Snowplow!

Perhaps you'd prefer more old-school?

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20250527-SDIM6202 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM6207 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

...no, older school.

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20250527-SDIM6206 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM6219 by Travis Butler, on Flickr (TTArtisan 11mm fisheye)

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20250527-SDIM6240 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
Why, yes, it is Rocket Engineering! :)

Continued next post...
 
I can tell, you want something even bigger.

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20250527-SDIM6214 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
Sigma fp, TTArtisan 11mm fisheye

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20250527-SDIM6213 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
It needs to be Fed.

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20250527-SDIM6221 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
Too big to fit in the frame all at once.

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20250527-SDIM6225 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
Or even all at twice! (Hey, look at all the little people!)

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20250527-SDIM6237 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
It's big. (MD 35-70/3.5)

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20250527-SDIM6242 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
It's not intimidating at all!

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20250527-SDIM6250 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
It's the Allegheny Steam Locomotive! One of the biggest steam locomotives ever built.

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20250527-SDIM6252 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

Though it's willing to share space with the older DeWitt Clinton.

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20250527-SDIM6255 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

It dominates the museum... is what I'd like to say. But while it's big...

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20250527-SDIM6259 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

The museum's bigger.

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20250527-SDIM6262 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

Still much more to see!

(There's a lot more on the Henry Ford's website... I never knew about their Innovation Nation TV show, and here are a couple of episodes with more railroad stuff:)

[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.thehenryford.org/explore/innovation-nation/episodes/s10e236---industrial-locomotives/[/URL]
 
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Thanks so much @Travis Butler !! Awesome photos, and well done capturing all the detail on that large steam locomotive. Exposing for a black loco is tricky.

That looks like a great museum!
 
Part III: Furniture and Design

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20250527-SDIM5968 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

The Eames couple, Ray and Charles, were one of the great design teams of the 20th Century. Industrial design. Architecture. They did the famous Powers of Ten movie:



And of interest to photographers, a video introducing the Polaroid SX-70:



The Henry Ford focused on their contributions to furniture design, including some instantly recognizable models:

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20250527-SDIM5960 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
The Eames Lounge Chair

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20250527-SDIM5975 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
A classic molded fiberglass chair, and its variants...

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20250527-SDIM5973 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM5970 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
...and the mold used to make them.

They also covered other furniture and home design:

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20250527-SDIM5964 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM5984 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM5982 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

...but my favorite is still the Eames work.

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20250527-SDIM5979 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
 
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