A Crosley Farm-O-Road with some misleading graphics. Crosley engines weren't hemis......were they?
A well-restored stand-or-sit Divco delivery truck. Don't worry, that milk won't go bad. The bottles are filled with tiny Styrofoam pellets.
The room of "crossover", but with more miles of style. This was the front half of a car/camper combo.
Strangely, PETA was not on hand to protest the unethical treatment of Mo's.
Out back, all the comforts of home.
All the supplies, tables, etc., fit into this beautifully-restored teardrop trailer, and the sedan's cavernous trunk.
In the vicinity of the limestone cottage mentioned above, a number of WWII and Korean-war vintage Jeeps were on display, with a wide array of period military kit.
Another example of the vehicle about which Enzo Ferrari opined "The Jeep is the only real American sports car."
In addition to automobiles, the Village features a pair of restored early locomotives that regularly shuttle visitors in a three mile loop around the periphery of the complex. Here we see the Edison, a 4-4-0. The other locomotive that usually sees heavy use at the village, the "Torch Lake" was not in operation the day of our visit.
There she goes, clanging and chuffing to the next stop. Two stops down the line is a recent addition to the Village, a roundhouse that is in daily use restoring and maintaining locomotives and rolling stock.
The reconstructed DT&M Roundhouse is a replica of a 1884 railroad maintenance building built in DT&M Roundhouse Marshall, Michigan, by the Michigan & Ohio Railroad. The original maintenance building serviced locomotives that ran between Allegan and Dundee, Michigan.Though the building changed hands many times and was operated by the Detroit, Toledo & Milwaukee (DT&M) Railroad for just a few years around 1900, the citizens of Marshall Michigan still call it the DT&M Roundhouse. The building remained in operation as a roundhouse until around 1930. In 1992, Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village acquired the few remaining pieces of the original DT&M Roundhouse. Site plans, original photographs, historical research and the acquired pieces were used in 2000 as a guide when reconstructing the 13,500 square foot roundhouse. In this shot, we see the massive drivers of the Michigan Central #254 (Alco 1905) Atlantic (4-4-2), which was purchased by the village back in 1930.
Stout!
...yet elegant.
Beneath the belly of this beast, a look at the well-greased connecting rods.
A look inside the front hatch of the firebox/boiler
The roundhouse is a busy place. An early diesel 'switcher' engine, used at a Naval Ammunition depot to break down and assemble consists of rolling stock, undergoes some minor work, next door to another steam locomotive with a long way to go before it chugs to life again.
As our day comes to an end, we stop and say hello to a purer form of horsepower. The horses here earn their keep, too, pulling wagons of tourists through the village, and also plowing the fields where tobacco, potatoes and other crops are grown. If you ever happen to visit Detroit, the Village, along with the adjacent Henry Ford Museum (chock-full of trains, planes, automobiles and other milestones of the industrial revolution), is a must see for any connoisseur of history and/or machines.