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- W4245071453 abstract "HomeRadiologyVol. 25, No. 4 PreviousNext EditorialGreenfield VillagePublished Online:Oct 1 1935https://doi.org/10.1148/25.4.505bMoreSectionsPDF ToolsImage ViewerAdd to favoritesCiteTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked In AbstractHow interesting it would be if we could turn back the pages of time and see how our forefathers lived! Realize the simplicity of their daily life! Note the progress through the years!That, to some extent, can be done in a trip through Henry Ford's Greenfield Village near Detroit. It has become one of the most interesting places to visit on the continent. Many newly-weds now visit Greenfield Village on their honeymoon.Women, especially, like Greenfield Village, for many of the exhibits are centered about the early American home. Most of the conventions now meeting in Detroit include on their entertainment program for the ladies a lunch at Dearborn Inn and a trip through Greenfield Village.Men, too, find the Village interesting, for combined with it is the Edison Institute which graphically illustrates the birth of American inventive genius and the progress of industry.Few realize the magnitude of the task of gathering the parts that together make a typical American village of long ago. There is nothing like it anywhere else in the world. There are early American homes complete with their antique furniture, spinning wheels, looms, quilting frames and all the other appurtenances of home-making back when “man works from sun to sun, but woman's work is never done” was more than a saying.Facing the village green stands Clinton Inn, famous hostelry, built in 1830, and an important stop for stage coaches on the Chicago turnpike. Nearby are the village general store, the barber shop, the village blacksmith's forge, and the old grist mill that stood for more than a century on the banks of Stony Creek at Frenchtown, near Monroe, Michigan.Then there's the wagon works and harness shop, the prim New England church, and the little red school house where Henry Ford, himself, once went to school. Recently, the home of Stephen Collins Foster, author of “Old Black Joe,” “Suawnee River” and many other favorites, was uprooted from the center of noisy Pittsburgh and re-erected in the ever-growing village of American memories. Nearby a restored stern-wheel steamboat gently rises and falls with the current of the River Rouge.So Detroit, the city that put the Nation on wheels and changed the tempo of living, has on its outskirts in Greenfield Village a living page of history, not of battles and conquests, but of the simple lives of our forefathers, their hardships and comforts, their triumphs in art and industry.If you would turn back the pages of history, plan your trip to Detroit to include a visit to Greenfield Village.Article HistoryPublished in print: Oct 1935 FiguresReferencesRelatedDetailsRecommended Articles RSNA Education Exhibits RSNA Case Collection Vol. 25, No. 4 Metrics Altmetric Score PDF download" @default.
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- W4245071453 date "1935-10-01" @default.
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- W4245071453 title "Greenfield Village" @default.
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