Это видео недоступно.
Сожалеем об этом.

ABRAHAM LINCOLN Assassination Chair & the ROSA PARKS Bus!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 авг 2024
  • #803 ABRAHAM LINCOLN's Assassination Chair & the ROSA PARKS Bus! - Daily Travel Vlog (10/18/18)
    CLICK TO SUBSCRIBE: bit.ly/SubDazeWithJordanTheLion
    MERCH: shop.spreadshirt.com/jordanthe...
    DONATE: www.patreon.com/jordanthelion
    PAYPAL DONATIONS: dazewithjordanthelion@gmail.com
    Or
    paypal.me/jordanthelion
    Use my booking.com code to get $25 off booking.com/s/17935c4f
    Use my Airbnb code and get $40 off your first adventure. I get $20! Here’s my invitation link: abnb.me/e/qnGgEfAAoQ
    FB GROUP: Daze with Jordan the Lion(s)
    Amazon list link : www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wi...
    Email: dazewithjordanthelion@gmail.com
    Intro cartoon by: Jeff Block (youtube- Cre80s)
    www.dazewithjordanthelion.com

Комментарии • 552

  • @angelahartley3212
    @angelahartley3212 5 лет назад +136

    They did a mask on Lincoln when he first got un office and when he died and compared the two of them. It truly shows a more weathered face at the end of his life. Loved this!!

    • @usmanshakir1396
      @usmanshakir1396 2 года назад +1

      Oh wow! Did they take pictures? If so do you have a link or something?

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB 2 года назад

      Lies again? Adidas Leader

    • @kylercroci2278
      @kylercroci2278 Год назад

      They are called death masks

  • @jenniferjones3408
    @jenniferjones3408 2 года назад +75

    I have been there dozens of times. Absolutely the best place to go. And the village too.

  • @seandodd6388
    @seandodd6388 2 года назад +334

    God bless president Lincoln for abolishing slavery among his other random contributions to American society as we know it today. Really sad how the true greats tend to meet a truly sorrowful demise more often than not.

    • @DazewithJordantheLion
      @DazewithJordantheLion  2 года назад +31

      I agree... same thing will happen with cancel culture.. they will kill careers for some reason or another, then 20 years later deem the offenders as heroes and trailblazers..

    • @alexm7627
      @alexm7627 2 года назад +12

      @@DazewithJordantheLion interesting take

    • @joshplaystheguitar
      @joshplaystheguitar 2 года назад +2

      @@alexm7627 my thoughts exactly 🤣

    • @keno857
      @keno857 2 года назад +1

      @@DazewithJordantheLion sure

    • @phelanmcdonald1635
      @phelanmcdonald1635 2 года назад +13

      I was a cook at the Fairbanks Princess in Fairbanks Alaska. I was putting out a bowl of fresh fruit for our early morning breakfast buffet. I saw Old Rosa Parks getting her breakfast. I approached her and said, Hello Rosa, welcome to Alaska. Rosa with her wonderful smile replied, Why thank you young man!. The next thing I said was Well, I must get back to the kitchen. Rosa and I were the only one's in the dinning room. I never mentioned this to any of my co workers. I have come face to face with other famous people, but meeting Rosa Parks was a novelty of experience. God rest her soul. She was so brave.

  • @kimm2265
    @kimm2265 2 года назад +165

    An FYI, Rosa Parks was not the first African American to sit in the white section. It was actually a 15 year old girl by the name of Claudette Colvin, who wouldn't give up her seat to a white person.
    I don't know why history doesn't recognize the true facts sometimes.

    • @ninjachicken8773
      @ninjachicken8773 2 года назад +10

      I learned about that in a random passage in a English test. I was surprised that I didn't know about her.

    • @armyxoxo
      @armyxoxo 2 года назад +2

      Youre wrong.

    • @kimm2265
      @kimm2265 2 года назад +7

      @@armyxoxo I'm not wrong. Look it up!

    • @richardhuffman58
      @richardhuffman58 2 года назад +5

      You are absolutely correct! I didn’t know that. Thank you for sharing that information

    • @armyxoxo
      @armyxoxo 2 года назад +1

      @@darcyperkins7041 Its not actually. Were you there that day? LOL

  • @evanrandall1675
    @evanrandall1675 2 года назад +10

    I went to high school inside of the village and Museum. Every time I went to the restroom I walked past the Kennedy car and the Lincoln chair and the significance never was lost on me. It was an outstanding place to go to school. Very College Prep focused program young teachers. Very well funded. I used to take a special walk into the museum to go see the Stradivarius violin almost everyday, in Lovett hall actually. The Village Campus of Henry Ford Academy can be pretty hard to spot it's in the far back corner near the Lagoon with the paddle boat. When the Rosa Parks bus was first brought back to the museum they brought all of us students out to the parking lot to see the actual bus before it was touched or restored or repainted at all. When it was still really the actual bus. People were crying. Also when the Ford Focus was a prototype vehicle it was brought to the school for us students to come out and give our opinions on its design, and particularly the entertainment system. Which is part of the reason why the Ford Focus has an abnormally nice stereo. Your welcome! Haha

  • @DavidBrown-bp4iq
    @DavidBrown-bp4iq 2 года назад +179

    Of course it's Lincoln's blood on the chair. But the man trying to stop Booth was slashed severely and also bled at the scene. BTW, didn't they have guides to answer questions?

    • @brandonwells5236
      @brandonwells5236 2 года назад +14

      I looked it up when I first saw the stains and it says it’s not his blood and it’s not blood at all just oil. I didn’t fully read where the oil came from though.

    • @vadiktuniyants8662
      @vadiktuniyants8662 2 года назад +3

      Prob his hair

    • @radio1342
      @radio1342 2 года назад +11

      @@brandonwells5236 From what I was told it is oil from people sitting in the chair over the years. The used to let people sit in it and that is why the stains are on the "head" part on the chair. I'm sure there is some blood there but the most of it is oil from people sitting in it.

    • @aprilj1838
      @aprilj1838 2 года назад +3

      No guides. The Henry Ford Museum is self-guided… there are little plaques next to exhibits, and you can get “guides” to explain things at Greenfield Village, as they drive you around in Model-t Fords. Absolutely fascinating place to visit in Dearborn, MI. You can spend weeks exploring everything there!

    • @DavidBrown-bp4iq
      @DavidBrown-bp4iq 2 года назад +3

      @@aprilj1838 People who like history are the best people in the world.

  • @marcymoir3389
    @marcymoir3389 2 года назад +8

    Spent half my childhood at GFV….my great grandmothers sideboard is somewhere in the indoor museum…..the outdoor museum was always my favorite….one day was never enough time to see it all…..thanks for this walk down memory lane…..

  • @springtronic.
    @springtronic. 2 года назад +6

    So glad you liked it here! Michigan is a lively place

  • @otismygotis3670
    @otismygotis3670 2 года назад +4

    , as it appears to be. "There's a large black stain at the back of the chair, which everybody assumes is Lincoln's blood - absolutely not the case." Johnson says they've done some analysis on the stain and have discovered it's hair oil. Some of the other stains are water damage.Apr 15, 2015

  • @jasonyoung8584
    @jasonyoung8584 Год назад +1

    I been to that museum, about 6 years ago. On the Rosa Parks bus, we went on the bus and there was tour guide telling us the story of Rosa Parks and how the museum got the bus. The guide told us the bus was auctioned off in the early 70s and a farmer bought it and used it for a tool shed for years. He got offered from other buyers throughout the years he refused the offers wasn't until late 90s the farmer passed away his kids sold it to the museum on eBay for like a 140k for it. Of the course had to do restoration on the bus. It's pretty neat experience to see that peice of history. I was lucky to see all those prices of history. I also liked that huge steam engine local motive from Ohio. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @drcvenice5906
    @drcvenice5906 2 года назад +9

    Booth's body did not burn in the barn. He was shot in the neck and dragged out to the porch of the Garrett (?) farmhouse where he died.

    • @dannyackland3983
      @dannyackland3983 2 года назад

      The original story has never been truly discovered no one truly knows I'm sure the government do have it locked up but I'm telling you now the general public to this day do not know if he escaped or not or got burned or shot or what not

  • @jacquelinenoble6640
    @jacquelinenoble6640 2 года назад +17

    Really really enjoyed this very informative. Respect to Miss Parks.

  • @hkadez5541
    @hkadez5541 2 года назад +3

    Every thing back then still looks better than present day

  • @detroitboy65
    @detroitboy65 5 месяцев назад

    The Dymaxion House is an amalgamation of the only two houses produced, The museum owns all of the parts that survived and combined them into one house, more or less as it was intended to look though it is not supported by the central mast as it has jack stands ringing the entire structure.

  • @margaretdrew2844
    @margaretdrew2844 2 года назад +3

    I am English thank you for taking us to this interesting museum .

  • @billnewton825
    @billnewton825 Год назад

    I lived in Dearborn and for several worked for Ford Motor Company from 1967 to 1980. For about a year I lived across the street from The Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village for a time. The Museum and Village are wonderful places to explore.

  • @AlreadyFree612
    @AlreadyFree612 2 года назад

    What an awesome museum, so much wonderful history! That Airstream was absolutely incredible, I would love to have one of those! Thanks, Jordan! ✌️

  • @suomenpresidentti
    @suomenpresidentti 2 года назад +10

    Great vid.
    Greetings from Finland!
    Never knew those things existed today. The chair and the bus etc...

  • @Linkman247
    @Linkman247 2 года назад +1

    very interesting. The chair, rosa parks bus and exploded model T were very cool. The relics of jim crow, slavery and segregation really put into perspective how far we have come...and yet how far we still have to go. That Dymaxian house looks like something out of Fallout lol.

  • @smokingrammy828
    @smokingrammy828 5 месяцев назад

    I grew up with Gettysburg and Strasburg RR. Went to Baltimore harbor, this was 60s to early 70s.

  • @kathleenloverde1030
    @kathleenloverde1030 2 года назад +10

    Hi I really enjoy your videos. I too am from Ohio. Born in Akron and lived across the blvd from Akron Fulton Airport and went to Thomastown grade school. So much has changed and I'm really burnt that they sold the Gugenheim to a guy that turned into a halloween mess! Thanks for the travels and keep up the good work! :)

    • @JM-zk9ou
      @JM-zk9ou Год назад

      My mom was born and raised in Akron. Still have family there.

  • @josephschuster
    @josephschuster 2 года назад +2

    That's not blood. In the 1970s I was on a tour of the museum and the guide specifically said that those stains were from men's hair pomade from when people were allowed to pay to sit in the chair for photos. They eventually stopped the practice because the greasy stuff had soaked into the satin fabric.

  • @clinthowe7629
    @clinthowe7629 2 года назад +1

    that was cool, i like how they combined the civil rights stuff along with other historical things, it’s not just focused on one subject.

  • @SammySamSams
    @SammySamSams 2 года назад +2

    The fact they made a mask of lincoln out of his actual face is so cool, it would be nice if someone did a 3d scan of it to have a better look at it

  • @Seiferboi
    @Seiferboi Год назад +1

    I wish they'd bring back those kinds of furniture, and not the cheaply made junk we get today! That Air Stream is awesome! BWT, the Dymaxian House was invented by Buckminster Fuller, who's a cousin of mine.

  • @RedForeman
    @RedForeman 2 года назад +2

    A 100,000 reward in that era has to be like 20 million in todays money

  • @geekincognito
    @geekincognito 2 года назад

    Nice!. I oversaw the printing production and installation of all the display and wall graphics for that exhibit.

  • @tkarno4276
    @tkarno4276 2 года назад

    Love your vlogs. They’re very relaxing 😊and so so interesting. And you have a cute puppy too 🐶🐾
    Can’t wait to see another one 😀

  • @gretashafer9075
    @gretashafer9075 2 года назад +1

    If you look closely at Lincoln s chair it looks like an out line of his face from the side view

  • @GucciGambino1967
    @GucciGambino1967 Год назад

    That bus I take it is THE bus Rosa Parks rode...epic feeling!

  • @lilliearvizu9447
    @lilliearvizu9447 Год назад

    Very interesting! Thank you for sharing! 👍🏻😊

  • @Themagicofvince2023
    @Themagicofvince2023 2 года назад +2

    John Wilkes was not burned to death in the Garrett barn. The barn was set ablaze by the Union cavalrymen and he was shot through the neck by Sgt Corbet. Wilkes died on the porch of the Garrett farmhouse several hours later.

  • @josephfitzhenry245
    @josephfitzhenry245 Год назад

    The brown staining is blood and cerebral spinal fluid: chair back, arm rest, seat. And if I recall, it is silk upholstery, ergo the current damage as it breaks down, more rapidly in the higher wear areas.

  • @regandunn4850
    @regandunn4850 2 года назад

    Always a great video thanks for sharing huge fan from new Zealand

  • @lynnegrindstaff1075
    @lynnegrindstaff1075 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing this! I really enjoyed it.

  • @rhiannonrhiannon6285
    @rhiannonrhiannon6285 Год назад

    Thank you for this amazing video!

  • @PScott-wg7gf
    @PScott-wg7gf Год назад

    Love your videos, who couldn't love that pup.👍

  • @familytreenutshistorygenealogy
    @familytreenutshistorygenealogy 2 года назад

    Crazy stuff. We’ve been trying to tell Lincoln’s story lately.

  • @bkkorner
    @bkkorner 2 года назад

    Very nice video .. very educational... subbed!

  • @docsaaid2939
    @docsaaid2939 2 года назад

    Thank you bro for giving us opportunity for us too see the history. Much love from pakistan

  • @normaclemins4134
    @normaclemins4134 2 года назад

    I really loved this hiztory video

  • @IamRemoWilliams
    @IamRemoWilliams 2 года назад

    Come to Cincinnati to see Spring Grove cemetary..Abe's fav place in cincinnati.many civil war generals and lot of history

  • @jackieelias6971
    @jackieelias6971 Год назад

    Which museum has Lincoln and Rosa park in it? We would love to go see it in person one day, but there are many many museums. We would be coming from out of state, so any help would be greatly appreciated! Thank you for the great video!! It was great!

  • @JeanPierreHintze
    @JeanPierreHintze 2 года назад

    Very interesting - and great Ideas for my next trip to the States. Regards from Germany!

  • @jimmiecox2496
    @jimmiecox2496 2 года назад +12

    I went to this museum at Dearborn, MI. when I was 10 years old. I was convinced that was Lincoln's blood. But the tour guide told me that someone threw water on the chair and that was water stains. I desperately wanted to call her a liar but Grandma was holding my hand and talking to an adult like that especially in front of Grandma would have got me a knuckle sandwich. But Grandma told that woman off for making that story up.

    • @dru254msquare3
      @dru254msquare3 2 года назад +1

      You can tell that's a blood stain.

    • @morrison1405
      @morrison1405 2 года назад

      Yes Jimmie at 10 years old you knew way more than the guide who worked there. 😛

    • @burtmaclinfbi3993
      @burtmaclinfbi3993 Год назад

      @@dru254msquare3 Stains & brains all over that chair.

  • @forkidsbykidsread-aloud3097
    @forkidsbykidsread-aloud3097 2 года назад +7

    Can you tell me the name and location of this museum? I wanna go there sooo bad! I love history and am related to two presidents so i love learning about them.

    • @forkidsbykidsread-aloud3097
      @forkidsbykidsread-aloud3097 2 года назад +1

      Actually i just saw the name so nvm

    • @zarz3049
      @zarz3049 2 года назад +1

      @@forkidsbykidsread-aloud3097 what’s the name of the museum

    • @MR_MRM_
      @MR_MRM_ 2 года назад +1

      @@zarz3049 Henry Ford Museum. Dearborn, Michigan.

  • @BucketsAlIDayy
    @BucketsAlIDayy Год назад

    Best youtuber out here

  • @North49191
    @North49191 2 года назад

    this is a must see museum

  • @kninefly1
    @kninefly1 2 года назад

    Awesome vlog...ty ❤️

  • @Jerry-fn5nx
    @Jerry-fn5nx 2 года назад +1

    I started watching this vid expecting just to see Lincolns chair and Rosa Parks bus, didn't expect to see Washingtons camp gear and bed, the Arnold letter and other interesting stuff. What an amazing musem. Thank you for sharing

  • @mattg5022
    @mattg5022 2 года назад

    always wanted to go to this museum . . . its always been known as superlative. And who knows? Maybe Ford Motor Co will need to go and re-start production on that model T, in light of the global supply issues.

  • @sadarkhankhattak3423
    @sadarkhankhattak3423 Год назад

    Linkon was a very greetman really he done more for his nation

  • @Akat1997
    @Akat1997 2 года назад +1

    I wonder if there is paranormal activity in the museum. All the energy from the exhibits, the things each item has been through, that place must be absolutely wired with spiritual energy

  • @lisaheberling5922
    @lisaheberling5922 2 года назад

    Love this video.where are you at? I would love to go there.

  • @levisawyer1203
    @levisawyer1203 Год назад

    Since he made an exact copy of the declaration of independence it would be so much easier to pull a national treasure.

  • @tonisoles6680
    @tonisoles6680 2 года назад +1

    I thought he slumped in his chair when he got shot.😅

  • @BLOXKAFELLARECORDS
    @BLOXKAFELLARECORDS Год назад +1

    History is fun.

  • @melissacarmack-epling6693
    @melissacarmack-epling6693 2 года назад +1

    Luv n light from bloody Harlan Kentucky... 🍷 🍻 💕

  • @SassyHooper
    @SassyHooper 5 лет назад +39

    I'm so thankful for those who are willing to put themselves in danger for progress, knowledge and change!! Bless your heart, Rosa Parks.

  • @darrin990
    @darrin990 5 лет назад +41

    Here is another fun tidbit, just before I was a cop for Detroit I worked a short time at the Riverfront Towers where Rosa Parks and the one time mayor of Detroit lived (Coleman Young) as security and once a week Mrs Parks would give me an apple and I had no idea at the time it was her. I just knew her as Mrs Parks.

    • @shannonwilliams1941
      @shannonwilliams1941 5 лет назад +1

      Darrin Atkinson would she talk to you ever?

    • @ckotcher1
      @ckotcher1 5 лет назад

      Darrin Atkinson that’s really cool 😎

    • @darrin990
      @darrin990 5 лет назад

      @@shannonwilliams1941 i never got to have any sit down conversations, but we would have chit chat about maybe the weather or things around the building.

    • @SurviventheOnslaught
      @SurviventheOnslaught 5 лет назад

      rosa parks would get robbed by the local thugs in her own house, very sad

    • @shannonwilliams1941
      @shannonwilliams1941 5 лет назад

      Wow

  • @TampaJay
    @TampaJay 5 лет назад +17

    This one is packed full of so many awesome things and historry. Nice touch with putting their glasses in the seat. The Rosa Parks Bus, the Lincoln stuff, the Weinerbus, ans That House were my favorite parts. Awesome video man

  • @binky2596
    @binky2596 5 лет назад +28

    Spectacular museum. Covered so much history. You have outdone yourself on this trip. Thank you for sharing. Belinda Davis in NC

  • @ignatiusjk
    @ignatiusjk 5 лет назад +9

    The wood in Licoln's chair looks remarkably well preserved. I can understand the fabric aging but the wood looks almost pristine.

  • @sandranokes7443
    @sandranokes7443 5 лет назад +18

    wow that's an amazing museum. So much and it works on all your emotions. The car Kennedy was killed in. The chair President Lincoln was killed in. Rosa Parks bus. Slave shackles. The first Mustang. Beautiful cars. Such a roller coaster of emotion. I would have never guessed what this place holds. Thank you.

  • @debbieclark7031
    @debbieclark7031 5 лет назад +34

    This museum is incredible. I was amazed and surprised to see Lincoln's chair. It was interesting to see all of the history so wonderfully preserved and displayed so we'll. That house so futuristic I loved it, especially that dresser. Can't wait to see tomorrow's vlog.

    • @reymysterio5606
      @reymysterio5606 2 года назад

      Where is it if you dont mind me asking?

    • @debbieclark7031
      @debbieclark7031 2 года назад

      @@reymysterio5606 the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn Michigan. Isn't it interesting that it's not in the Smithsonian.

    • @suphi5805
      @suphi5805 2 года назад

      Where is this museum i want to visit

    • @debbieclark7031
      @debbieclark7031 2 года назад

      @@suphi5805 Henry Ford Museum Dearborn Michigan

  • @nanettebryant7599
    @nanettebryant7599 5 лет назад +30

    I have been to The Henry Ford Museum many times...never disappoints...rememer seeing the Lincoln chair..great vlog😊

  • @RhettyforHistory
    @RhettyforHistory 5 лет назад +7

    Very moving to see Lincoln's chair like that. I had no idea that existed. I can't believe how much light they have on it. Seems like it would deteriorate it faster.

  • @angelahartley3212
    @angelahartley3212 5 лет назад +55

    Yes...i am 63 and when i used to go with my grandmother downtown and as the bus made its stops the African Americans were never told to go to the back if the bus...they just knew to! As a child i could not understand whty? As an adult i still dont understand why they did what they did! O may be in the minority but we were all made in Gods image...werent we?

    • @JGM1721
      @JGM1721 5 лет назад +2

      Such a horrible time in our history-- now THAT is systematized racism. Tragic.

    • @suejuede525
      @suejuede525 5 лет назад +1

      I don't have a photo posted here, however I am a 70 year old white woman.....I do and always have, admired, "Rosa Parks". I hold her . in high honer with much respect...., I greatly admire her, for being brave enough, for standing up for her rights on that Bus....she "payed her bus fair " therefore she rented that seat for the duration of her ride on that bus.......the uncouth man whom boarded the bus after, "Rosa Parks", was clearly not a gentleman , but a jerk,

    • @suejuede525
      @suejuede525 5 лет назад

      Rose Tandy, I'm so sorry you had to suffer through the ugly issues, resulting from ignorance and prejudice , I know it was not my fault, in your mistreatment, but someone needs to give you an apology... may the Lord bless and keep you.

    • @rhdtv2002
      @rhdtv2002 5 лет назад

      Thanks for telling your story and experience in a time in American History-even if it wasnt a positive story

    • @edwardclark9057
      @edwardclark9057 5 лет назад +2

      I always wondered how one person could think he was better then someone else because of skin colour. Each and everyone of us are important in some way........Peace&Love too all

  • @emilykirchgesler7969
    @emilykirchgesler7969 5 лет назад +1

    I had an opportunity to visit the theatre and see the bed he passed away in across the street from the theatre twice in my life. Profound and amazing experience. Everytime I go to Disneyland I make it a point to see Great moments with Mr. Lincoln. Wonderful president. Thank you for a great vlog!!

  • @ilanarhian
    @ilanarhian 5 лет назад +4

    There’s an old game show called I’ve Got a Secret , there’s an episode of it on RUclips on which a very old man appears and he was a witness of the assassination when he was a little boy.

    • @jomac2046
      @jomac2046 2 года назад

      The episode is on RUclips, His name was Samuel J. Seymour.

  • @herbm8709
    @herbm8709 5 лет назад +10

    You should check out Greenfield Village next time, they have Wright brothers history in there. Another great job Jordan!

  • @angelahartley3212
    @angelahartley3212 5 лет назад +8

    Did you happen to notice George Washingtons fork? It only had two tines on it! So glad we have four now and can really shovel it in! I have so enjoyed this....right down my alley!! Have you ever been to the Winchester House? Its on my bucket list!!

    • @heatherr2665
      @heatherr2665 5 лет назад +2

      Angela Hartley we actually address the two tine fork thing at this museum at Daggett Farm House in Greenfield Village. The home is a living history site. When I worked in that building I had to learn how to eat with colonial utensils. At that time period you never at with the fork. It was a tool to hold the food while you cut into it with the knife. You ate off of the non blade side of the knife.

    • @angelahartley3212
      @angelahartley3212 5 лет назад

      @@heatherr2665 that is so very interesting!!! Would love to hear more!!!!

  • @ckotcher1
    @ckotcher1 5 лет назад +4

    Is this the Henry Food museum at Greenfield Village?! Oh my God!! I haven’t been there since I was a kid! I grew up in Detroit and I remember thinking how lucky I was to have lived so close to all this Historical stuff. Especially the Lincoln chair.

  • @zipshed
    @zipshed 5 лет назад +5

    Great job Jordan! Seeing that chair was amazing, It makes one really think of the whole Lincoln thing in a different reality and really brings me closer of what happened. Thanks man!

  • @missykowalewski
    @missykowalewski 5 лет назад

    Seeing the Lincoln chair really brings emotion and history together. Makes it all so real. Not just words on a page. Thank u for ur part in keeping history alive. Wonderful experience and awesome museum.

  • @beverlyweeden9759
    @beverlyweeden9759 5 лет назад +2

    This is the most epic museum I have ever seen..!!.. thank you Jordan for going there, sharing a part of history..

  • @janadeubner9883
    @janadeubner9883 5 лет назад +5

    Wow there is so much to this museum! What a cool place! Always great to see the 4 legged son Jah! Thank you for sharing Jordan!

  • @Brace67
    @Brace67 5 лет назад +1

    I was born in Detroit and went to the Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village many times as a boy. The Lincoln death rocker was originally displayed in the Logan County Court House in Greenfield Village in a glass case. It has been subsequently moved to the Henry Ford Museum which has been expanded and improved many times since I was there 60 years ago. Anyone visiting the greater Detroit area should definitely make time to visit these wonderful attractions in nearby Dearborn, Michigan.

  • @annesantos5104
    @annesantos5104 5 лет назад

    I think this is my favorite museum; what incredible historical items they have! Worth a second viewing and more. Thanks, Jordan!

  • @Gang155
    @Gang155 5 лет назад +2

    I'm so excited that there is a Part 2! This museum is fantastic!

  • @karengaynon8020
    @karengaynon8020 5 лет назад +4

    That was a very cool vlog. I agree with you. I think that is one of the best museums I've seen. Thanks for taking us there.

  • @feralLove
    @feralLove 5 лет назад +5

    Thank you Rosa Parks for your act of defiance in not giving up your bus seat.
    😊 Jordan, alot of part 2 was unsettling
    😢💔 but what is history if its telling is sanitized? It's an impressive museum and
    am glad to have had an opportunity to visit
    with you and your brother!

  • @Frauditorfinder90
    @Frauditorfinder90 5 лет назад +3

    Love this museum I want to visit it one day who knew a car museum would end up having a lot of history along with it

  • @ne1124
    @ne1124 5 лет назад

    Holy cow that bed! I love your Volgs because I learn about and see so many neat things! So cool to see how the Ford cars were assembled. My grandmother (born in 1911), learned to drive on a Model A. That is a cool Air Stream house! I am so glad you have visited with your family. Always good to see you and little Jah. Have a safe and wonderful visit Jordan. 😇🕊😊

  • @debbiemoeller2169
    @debbiemoeller2169 5 лет назад

    Incredible! !! The chair where Lincoln shot was heartbreaking. Inside the bus where Rosa Parks made history is amazing. To put yourself in the times these things happened is so incredible . Loved this Jordan. I love touring museums. Much love to you and Jah ❤ ❤

  • @marcorubio3496
    @marcorubio3496 5 лет назад +5

    Thanks for uploading your videos they are time well invested.

  • @michellealva8470
    @michellealva8470 5 лет назад +2

    This museum is pretty cool. Another good one! Thanks for sharing!

  • @lauraodle5816
    @lauraodle5816 5 лет назад +1

    Very touching this part of the museum was. Thank you, Jordan! ❤

  • @michelleeaton7955
    @michelleeaton7955 5 лет назад +1

    That museum was amazing. I need to go to that one, I'm a huge history buff, and I would love to see all that in person. The Lincoln chair was eerie, but interesting to see. I'm with you, those stains were more than wear or hair oils. So much history, I just have to see it all. Great vlog

  • @jan6626
    @jan6626 5 лет назад

    Wow, Jordan, this has been a great museum to see....unbelievable. Thanks for the tour, and sharing.

  • @jodihepler6202
    @jodihepler6202 5 лет назад +1

    I love museums and this one is up there near the top. Wish I could visit it one day. Have a great day!

  • @fairieelchlepp9531
    @fairieelchlepp9531 5 лет назад

    The vlog today was wonderful but sad in the way history affected our lives. I was touched by the picture of Rosa Parks being arrested. She remained strong and forever a lady. To see her calmly back on the bus is a true testimony for who she was at that time in America. Enjoy the rest of your trip, Jordan, and thank you for this vlog.

  • @kathleenhorner9296
    @kathleenhorner9296 5 лет назад

    What a fabulous museum! Abraham Lincoln's chair was the highlight. Looking forward to the next vlog..thanks, Jordan. Hugs and kissies to Jah.

  • @chiptapp145
    @chiptapp145 5 лет назад +1

    That air stream house was really awesome. You did an excellent job on your vlogs today and yesterday also.

  • @scotttimmons9832
    @scotttimmons9832 5 лет назад

    Wow!!! So. Much. History!!! Thanks for taking us on this two days journey! I have to come by and check this place out in the future!

  • @heatherr2665
    @heatherr2665 5 лет назад +4

    I'm so bummed I just saw this! I was just at the Village for the Hallowe'en Walk on the 20th. I am a former museum employee. I worked there for almost 10 years. I actually was there the day they found the Rosa Parks bus & towed into the back of the museum for restoration. After they were finished & putting the bus out for exhibition, Rosa Parks was there for the dedication ceremony. She is buried in Detroit at the same cemetery that they just laid Aretha Franklin to rest with her family. There are also a lot of other Motown legends buried there. There is so much to see at the museum! When I worked there, I would use my 15 min morning & 15 min afternoon breaks just to walk around to find all the really cool little unknown items. I'm sad that they archived the letter from Clyde Barrow that he sent to Henry Ford telling him that he only stole Ford V8's 😂

    • @janetcarlson31
      @janetcarlson31 5 лет назад

      Do you happen to know why they did that to his letter?!

    • @heatherr2665
      @heatherr2665 5 лет назад +1

      Janet Carlson as far as I know, they moved it to the archives when they were rearranging the exhibits. The Henry Ford Museum has so many items stored that have never been displayed or had been previously displayed but moved backed to archives. For example, when I started to work there, there had been a whole section of the museum dedicated to old farm equipment. It was usually a ghost town over there. Not a lot of people really wanted to see that stuff. So when they decided to bring a school back to the museum (when Mr. Ford originally built the museum & village it was a public school grades k-12 it operated into the 60's) the farm exhibits were moved to storage. They built classrooms for the grade 9 students in part of that exhibition area. The new school, The Henry Ford Academy, is grades 9-12. Also, when I first started working there the Dymaxion House was in storage except for it's bathroom. They had the bathroom on display. In the late 90's we also had a Motown exhibit that was on loan while the Motown Museum was going through a renovation. I love going to the museum even now that im not an employee because you never have the same experience. There is so much to see. 😊

    • @janetcarlson31
      @janetcarlson31 5 лет назад

      @@heatherr2665 wow, thanks for answering my question!! You have a lot of great knowledge about that place!! I was born in Detroit in 1959. But we moved to FL. in '71, when I was 12. I never made it to the museum!! Too bad too, cause I absolutely love history now!!

  • @JudithElizabeth67
    @JudithElizabeth67 5 лет назад +3

    So captivating from beginning to the end! Thank you! Your Vlogs are my DAILY joy!

  • @mabelrodriguez3080
    @mabelrodriguez3080 5 лет назад

    I was amazed by this tour. So much history. It was a bit melancholy , but at the same time so intriguing!! Thank you Jordan! You sure do know how to pick them !!! 😍

  • @martindriver6026
    @martindriver6026 5 лет назад +2

    Nice. I think this tour of the Henry Ford Museum is my favorite so far. Looking forward for tomorrow's vlog.

  • @lynnepaveling6150
    @lynnepaveling6150 5 лет назад +1

    Wow loved the round Airstream home, that would be interesting to live in. Thoroughly enjoyed the museum, it must be massive to house all those exhibits. Thanks Jordan, for another informative Vlog