Henry Ford's "Utopian" Towns | Alberta, Michigan

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 537

  • @DavidBrown-dj7tw
    @DavidBrown-dj7tw Год назад +92

    I am a 76 year old man who has lived in Michigan all of his life. Today, I learned something for the first time. Thankyou for a very informative piece of history.

    • @pmccoy8924
      @pmccoy8924 4 месяца назад

      As a Michigander a side note I also learned was about Fordlandia in Brazil where his rubber was manufactured.

  • @Larixlaricina
    @Larixlaricina Год назад +24

    As a Michigan Tech grad and a some-time Yooper transplant, I love these videos that illuminate the places I know

  • @zachjarrett8730
    @zachjarrett8730 Год назад +56

    Dave is a true Michigan legend and treasure. If you have a chance to go to Alberta, seek him out. He has the life experience of 10 men. A truly lovely man.

    • @joebeutner6538
      @joebeutner6538 Год назад +4

      That he is !! When we logged up on the Pesheekee Grade we would give Dave our
      birdseye culls & longbutts & he would turn them into works of art!
      Joe "Johnson" from Wisconsin....

    • @bookofrevelation4924
      @bookofrevelation4924 9 месяцев назад +1

      Would he have knowledge of other work camps, and perhaps work camps for Keweenaw copper mines in 1920s?

  • @theresemalmberg955
    @theresemalmberg955 Год назад +197

    A little bit of trivia--the highway that runs past Alberta (US 41) also runs through Fort Myers, Florida where Henry Ford and Thomas Edison had estates next to each other. I have often wondered if Ford might have had some influence in the routing of that highway as it does not fit the grid established in 1927 by what was then the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO, now AASHTO). Odd numbered highways were to run north and south with the lowest number (1) on the East Coast and get higher as you got further west. By that logic US 41 should have ended in Mississippi or Louisiana because it is west of US 31 which runs from Michigan to Alabama, but it does not. Instead it makes a long diagonal southeast through Tennessee then down through Georgia before ending in Florida, making it the second longest north-south US highway (1990 miles). Another oddity is that it runs east and west at both ends (Copper Harbor and Miami). Contrary to public belief, the US highway system was not a federally mandated system as is the Interstate System; it came about because transportation officials and others saw a need for a uniformly marked system of highways. It would make sense that influential people like Ford would want to have a say in where these new highways went. A little off-topic but something I thought you might be interested in.

    • @marinamachini
      @marinamachini Год назад +13

      WOW! As a former Fort Myers, FL resident, I knew that I-75 goes to Michigan, but I had no idea that Us41 goes there as well!😀

    • @Hanzyscure
      @Hanzyscure Год назад +15

      The automotive industry had major influences on the routes and designs of interstate highways. For trucks and busses competing with the railroads. The lobbyists from from Ford and other manufacturers had a major influence on highway legislation.

    • @timjohnson8725
      @timjohnson8725 Год назад

      Anyone try ZuPoo yet

    • @bookofrevelation4924
      @bookofrevelation4924 9 месяцев назад +6

      Very interesting, thank you for sharing it.
      For some reason my dad's dad came from Germany fleeing Nazis rising in 1924 at age 24 through Canada by Railway through Sault Ste. Marie to Keweenaw Copper mines for 3 years for Citizenship and move to Detroit to work at Ford. My dad worked for Ford and his oldest brother sold Ford cars locally in Lapeer County Michigan, where I was born in 1963.
      I wonder what role Ford played in my dad's dad becoming an American citizen, and possibly helping prominent German Jews escape by converting to Lutheran anc and working for him or other American Industrialists?

    • @campbellzachc
      @campbellzachc 8 месяцев назад

      @@timjohnson8725shut up Tim

  • @rusticstonetree
    @rusticstonetree 9 месяцев назад +6

    Wonderful historical story told by a very intelligent lady - I graduated from Tech and whenever I pass through Alberta to visit Houghton each year, I appreciate just what when on here and appreciate my time as an engineer with the great Ford Motor Co.

  • @bobrose762
    @bobrose762 Год назад +85

    Awesome show! I received MTU Forestry Technology degree at Alberta. Back then students spent 2 years, full-time at Alberta, including one summer. Thank you and keep up the great work!

  • @markfortin421
    @markfortin421 Год назад +13

    Alexis, you have done a beautiful job of covering Alberta. Your explanations are completely understandable to someone with no knowledge of the subject. As a historian of all things to do with Henry Ford, I find it mind boggling the amount of money he spent to insure that nothing and no one got in the way of his car manufacturing.
    But to say he had the money to do it is a mild understatement!
    My mother was born in Baraga...and being part Chippewa Indian did not help when it came to getting a job, so she moved to Muskegon, and then Detroit (where I am now)
    Thank You for a nice job...keep up the docs, I really enjoy them!
    Mark.

  • @brianhall8097
    @brianhall8097 11 месяцев назад +8

    Well thank you Miss in my 57 years living I didn't know this always learning something new I'm going to check out your other videos thank you for the beautiful content

  • @markcain460
    @markcain460 Год назад +6

    Great show educating the world on Michigan's wonderful UP!

  • @andyinannarbor
    @andyinannarbor Год назад +106

    As an MTU grad (1984, Physics) who works at Ford, I really appreciate your video and your straightforward approach to the flaws of Henry. I can think of modern-day analogs . We need to be vigilant in not confusing success with some sort of moral superiority.
    Love your videos and your enthusiasm for learning. The UP is a special place, but as a resident of Ann Arbor living about a mile from the site of one of your recent videos, I can attest to the amazing things you can find in even the “boring” parts of Michigan. Thank

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +10

      Hey, thank you so much! And I hear you. People are complex, and sometimes people who do great things in one area of life aren't kind or positive in others.
      Also, Ann Arbor is a joy! ☺️ It's a whole different world than the UP, but might be my favorite city in the state.

    • @ericscottstevens
      @ericscottstevens Год назад +2

      Ferris grad here, great campus you have at MTU, loved playing on that football field.
      That wind was a howler though.

    • @teachingthecode4651
      @teachingthecode4651 Год назад

      MTU is a really great school. I'd be very happy if my children went there.

    • @MichaelDabish
      @MichaelDabish Год назад +1

      I'm an MTU grad (2020, CNSA) who also works at Ford :)

    • @kayeninetwo3585
      @kayeninetwo3585 Год назад +4

      We also need to be diligent in monitoring our own moral superiority over people of the past, who came from different times and cultures. As the content creator of this channel mentioned, people are complex. For example, the same Henry Ford who was anti-semitic was also the first American industrialist who hired black workers at the same pay rate as white workers and had both groups work along side of each other in his factories. Many, many black southerners moved to the Detroit area as a result, and that legacy is still apparent in the city today.

  • @gregandkyzer2657
    @gregandkyzer2657 Год назад +6

    The Husky Statue at Husky plaza is my favorite dog so beautiful to stare at it early in the morning with snow and those lights surrounding it awesome! If I weren't 62 years old I would attend that university it looks like such a fantastic community of people.Alberta looks like a great place to visit and I will now thanks I didn't know about it.

    • @erbewayne6868
      @erbewayne6868 9 месяцев назад

      Never too late.

    • @jaxspellinar
      @jaxspellinar 5 месяцев назад

      Before the Husky Statue, there was a leaning tree in its place that we literally called 'The tree in front of the EERC' (the abbreviation for the building) after the tree died, they put the statue in.

    • @gregandkyzer2657
      @gregandkyzer2657 5 месяцев назад

      @@jaxspellinar very cool love the history thanks

  • @joeowensby3997
    @joeowensby3997 Год назад +68

    We always hear about Fordlândia or the fleet of ore ships owned by Ford but this is never spoken about.
    Always amazing learning something new.
    Thank you!

  • @bleebleblahble8833
    @bleebleblahble8833 Год назад +21

    Dave did a great job on the tour. Awesome episode.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад

      He really did! He was a joy to work with on this, and I'm grateful for his expertise.

  • @matts9
    @matts9 Год назад +32

    The way you described the homeowner standards of cleanliness and yard keeping is exactly how you have to maintain your property when living in "on-post" housing in the US Army! Love your content!

    • @Nphen
      @Nphen Год назад +3

      A modern version of this is the town of Celebration, owned & run by Disney for Disney World employees in Florida. There are regulations against drugs & alcohol, even swearing.

  • @Doug8D3
    @Doug8D3 Год назад +16

    "Now can I swear?" LOL, love it.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +3

      Dave is a gem!

    • @MrCoconutcat
      @MrCoconutcat 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@AlexisDahlwhy can't you just keep this a cool non biased documentary why do you have to throw in capital letters anti sametic you don't know ford personally I quit watching right away

    • @absolutjackal
      @absolutjackal 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@MrCoconutcatprobably for the best, wouldn’t want facts to get in the way of your being able to whitewash history in your mind. It’s not like Ford’s anti-semitism (the correct spelling btw) was well documented and common knowledge not requiring being his personal friend to know. Oh wait…it was. And relevant when discussing someone’s personal project to build an utopia, that not everyone was welcome.

    • @SisterShirley
      @SisterShirley 5 месяцев назад

      I agree with @coconutcat
      It was not necessary to project her personal opinion. I don't care what some amateur RUclipsr thinks. I watched to refresh my memory.

    • @SisterShirley
      @SisterShirley 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@MrCoconutcat
      I agree. Thank you for commenting that. I'm so tired of people and their canceling comments. I watched this video to refresh my Alberta history.

  • @jameshodgins1937
    @jameshodgins1937 Год назад +12

    As a person who was born and raised in Michigan, I love your videos! Thank you so much.

  • @danlowe8684
    @danlowe8684 Год назад +12

    Alexis, great post!!! This practice was no different than most mining and manufacturing industries of the time - and continues to this day. Whether it was coal, iron ore, copper, steel, timber, gold, silver, lead, etc., in West Virginia, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, California, etc., the Company 'provided' everything. But, they also owned 'everything'. The house you lived in, the stores you purchased from, the police force, the mayor, etc., were owned by your employer. If you, as a worker, died in an accident, your family was evicted from the very rural area home to make room for your replacement.
    Also, the reason for shuttering this plant had nothing to do with Ford's physical condition. It was the discontinuation of the use of wood products in vehicles. Much of the vehicles were fabricated of wood (which was very labor intense) and steel replaced it due to its superior durability, cost, safety and strength. Only laminates were needed.
    I understand that Ford is a legend in Michigan, and that he fed many mouths, but ol' Henry wasn't worried about anything but the bottom line.

  • @stefanzaharuk7701
    @stefanzaharuk7701 Год назад +5

    Grew up spending summers on Drummond Island. I love all your michigan videos, keep up the great content!

  • @PhixitPhil
    @PhixitPhil 7 месяцев назад +7

    That’s my uncle Dave. I grew up visiting there as kid in the summer. Haven’t seen um in a long time now. Awesome show.

  • @givemeabreakdoc
    @givemeabreakdoc Год назад +22

    My grandmother grew up in Old Hickory, Tennessee. It was a DuPont owned and operated town. You lived in DuPont homes, shopped at DuPont owned stores, DuPont owned theater. When the depression hit, they shut down the plant, and let the workers live for free. Didn’t fire anybody. When they opened back up, the workers came back.

  • @marksteverman1622
    @marksteverman1622 Год назад +6

    My buddy at MTU spent a semester in Alberta for his Forestry program

  • @artbelke5270
    @artbelke5270 Год назад +7

    Thank you, I spent my summer of 1974 in Alberta, Lots of great memories. I learned a lot about Forestry and the science behind it. Thanks again.

  • @wmschooley1234
    @wmschooley1234 Год назад +7

    Ms. Dahl: Really enjoyed your recent post on the village of Alberta. While you mentioned E. G. Kingsford, charcoal and Henry Ford, there’s an actual town in the U.P. named Kingsford. Kingsford is where Ford set up a factory to build wooden station wagon bodies and a WWII glider factory that made more than 4,000 wooden frame Waco military gliders; some of which were used during the D-Day invasion of Europe. There’s also an interesting history behind making charcoal and the foundation of the Kingsford Charcoal Company. Perhaps in a future video you can also follow up on some of this interesting U.P. history. Respectfully, W.S.

  • @jasonasselin
    @jasonasselin Год назад +6

    Very informational coverage of this place. I drive by it often in my travels. I'd love to see you do a video on Kingsford itself. Thats where I live.

  • @davidl.turner1005
    @davidl.turner1005 Год назад +11

    Thanks for a very informative vid! Met Dave and his wife last summer. Great conversation. His birdseye furniture is amazing. He also has a great shop for rock hounds there.

  • @waltcs1
    @waltcs1 Год назад +7

    Thanks for this presentation. I’m a lifelong Detroit resident with roots in Houghton County. Traveling back and forth to the U P I passed this place many, many times. It’s very nice to get the back story on Alberta and insight into Ford’s activities in upper Michigan.
    One could spend a lot of time visiting Ford locations all over southeastern Michigan at locations such as Fairlane, The Henry, Ford World Headquarters along with several small towns Ford created for his workers where they made parts for his auto industry. Each location has a unique history and shows the indelible mark he made on Michigan, the USA and the world.
    Thanks again for this presentation.

  • @garrettk6458
    @garrettk6458 Год назад +11

    Awesome video! I'm currently getting a Wildlife Ecology degree at tech, Dave's always a blast to talk to.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +1

      Oh, my gosh, amazing! Also, right? Dave is a joy. I'm grateful we got to meet as part of all this.

  • @jclarkj6
    @jclarkj6 Год назад +4

    Thanks for doing another great video about U.P.
    My brother was a forestry student at Tech and spent time at Alberta.
    I know Dave from when the State regulated the water supply there. Dave’s wood craftsmanship is amazing. Great guy to talk to about the place.

  • @gitrdone3770
    @gitrdone3770 9 месяцев назад +1

    Another super interesting video! As in all of Ford's company towns the rules, as others have stated, were strict. No alcohol, no smoking, no gambling, and everyone must attend church on Sunday. Violation of these rules cost one their jobs.

  • @brianhapeman9262
    @brianhapeman9262 Год назад +8

    I love this type of history! It’s so important to preserve and document it.
    Your genuine enthusiasm and seemingly unquenchable curiosity makes this a fantastic channel!

  • @josherickson9514
    @josherickson9514 3 месяца назад +1

    Love that town, I feel honored restoring the original hardwood flooring in those houses! While doing a repair i noticed that the boards actually say ford motor company on the bottom! Truly unique.

  • @lakemi4665
    @lakemi4665 Год назад +2

    Great video AD, as a generational michigander thank God for Henry & Thomas keep digging there's so much more !!!

  • @sierrafoxtrotgolf3638
    @sierrafoxtrotgolf3638 Год назад +4

    Alexis, You have the outstanding ability to to make anything interesting and fun. Thanks for sharing your gifts with the world! Tony.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +1

      Thanks, Tony! I appreciate that a bunch.

  • @tcdahn7
    @tcdahn7 Год назад +3

    The UP is pretty much Utopia. I moved up here 7 years ago, and I'm not regretting it.

  • @thegeezerette
    @thegeezerette 10 месяцев назад +1

    I live in Kingsford,Michigan . We owned a home in Ford addition and have ridden past Alberta many times . Have known the history of the Kingsford plant and Ford Addition but this is the first I've learned about the similarities of the two cities. Ive read history books with stories how many companies did this and why.

  • @jamesjohn834
    @jamesjohn834 Год назад +25

    Excellent job! I would like to nominate you to be Michagan's official historian. You do a great job.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +6

      You're too kind! Thank you. 🙂

  • @benjaminscribner7737
    @benjaminscribner7737 Год назад +5

    You always manage brighten my day with your videos, and even though I'm not living in Michigan, I enjoy learning about the state. Your attention to details and your perky demeanor really make your videos enjoyable. Keep up the great work.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much! That's really kind of you, and it means a lot to hear you're enjoying the videos from out of state!

  • @evanrandall1675
    @evanrandall1675 Год назад +5

    I went to Henry Ford Academy in Dearborn in the Museum/Greenfield village which was pretty unique. We learned a lot about Fords lesser known projects. Getting a nice new laptop every year was cool, seeing every imax movie first and free was cool. When they first found the Rosa Parks bus they brought the whole school out to let us on and sit in Rosa's actual seat before it was torn out for remodeling. The reason the Ford focus got a nice stereo and every cheap model after that because they brought the prototype to the school to let the students check it out. We filled out forms with recommended changes. The stereo dominated those and so it was upgraded. I walked past the Lincoln chair and Kennedy car every time I used a particular restroom and the significance was never lost on me. All kinds of cool memories there. He contributed hugely to the preservation of history in Michigan. graduated 2006

    • @Miss1Lyss
      @Miss1Lyss 7 месяцев назад +1

      as a kid i was always so jealous of the kids who went to school at the museum!

  • @EdA-qh7qr
    @EdA-qh7qr Год назад +3

    I lived in lanse Michigan for a long time and when I was young I got to talk to people who worked for ford when he had operations in the up thought it was interesting to learn that Ford would not let the people living in Alberta park there cars in the front of the houses he had garages built behind the houses to put their cars in

  • @alexcarter2542
    @alexcarter2542 Год назад +15

    Hey Alexis, I really can't tell you how much I enjoyed this video. Though I was raised in Toledo, Ohio, I come from a Michigan family and Dad grew up right across the state line on a farm in Bedford, MI. My grandfather worked at the Jeep plant in Toledo at Willy's Parkway (not in Michigan, but close enough and so might be a good idea for a video for you to do some day!) Anyway, my grandfather and father were both big fans of Henry Ford and I grew up going to the Ford Museum. I showed my father your video here and he just got the biggest kick out of it. I've been following your channel for a while. Keep up the good work ❤.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +4

      Aw, that's so wonderful! Thanks for such a sweet comment - and for sharing this with your dad! That's too kind. I'm glad you both enjoyed it!

  • @thomasyoder4537
    @thomasyoder4537 Год назад +7

    Some may not agree but Ford was a great man! Was a great friend of my great grandpa.

  • @zachjarrett8730
    @zachjarrett8730 Год назад +1

    I was part of the small group of MCCC members that had the privilege of living here during our service term. What a great area for a 20-something to explore, swim, and hike. Holds a very special place in my life.

  • @radagastwiz
    @radagastwiz Год назад +15

    In case anyone isn't familiar with Fordlândia, there's another case of Henry Ford wanting to single-source one of his components, so he decided to setup a rubber plantation in Brazil. His management approach that Alexis so eloquently broke down was even less popular with the local Brazilians, and on top of that Ford was not very successful at growing rubber trees. There's an excellent podcast from 99% Invisible that breaks it all down.

    • @WagonPilotAdventures
      @WagonPilotAdventures Год назад +1

      I read a book on Fordlandia a few years back. Crazy of him to think he could just plop a Midwest style town in the middle of the amazon.

    • @gnd111
      @gnd111 Год назад +1

      Info has been out forever and Netflix or Discovery had a show about it

  • @Nikachu0906
    @Nikachu0906 Год назад +24

    I’m surprised The Henry Ford Museum hasn’t wanted to reclaim it and help with the upkeep to make it into a museum. They have gone so far as to break down buildings and bring them to the Greenfield Village. It’s sad to think this huge part of Michigan history could be lost just because Henry’s family didn’t want to carry out his wishes.

    • @megan640
      @megan640 Год назад +2

      That’ll never happen. Michigan Tech owns and maintains it.

    • @gtwfan52
      @gtwfan52 8 месяцев назад +1

      Greenfield Village, the place you are talking about associated with the Henry Ford Museum, was mostly put together by Henry himself. The entire complex in Dearborn is known as the Edison Institute. Henry started Greenfield Village roughly the same time as Alberta was established.

  • @philliphatfield6695
    @philliphatfield6695 Год назад +1

    My wife and I love you're videos. The Alberta video has us wanting to see it.

  • @patkarp1965
    @patkarp1965 Год назад +8

    How interesting. Wife and I just came back form a camping trip in the U.P. Saw this video being available but did not get the chance to watch it yet. Drove by the Ford sign next to the road as we passed through the are. Both my wife and I wondered why it was there. Had I watched this video sooner we might have stopped to see more for ourselves. Regardless at least now we know. Another one of life's mysteries solved. Thanks

  • @GreerSaechao
    @GreerSaechao Год назад +1

    I did fall camp at Alberta from Tech for Forestry :) Awesome place!

  • @daniellima2973
    @daniellima2973 Год назад +3

    There is a town in my home state in Brazil called Fordlandia . Ford bought hundreds thousands of rain forest to grow his own rubber tree plants and tried to establish another utopia in the jungle .

  • @kathyfaulk710
    @kathyfaulk710 Год назад +2

    Your videos are always so enjoyable and informative. I grew up in a Ford home in Dearborn, MI in the shadows of the Ford engineering center. Great to hear about other Ford homes!

  • @mgratk
    @mgratk Год назад +8

    Geez, from HS right through grad school, I worked in a millwork shop. Kinda takes me back. We got rough cut stuff in. He is right that the guy making those decisions on how to cut the boards can make or break the operation. You have to see in the wood all the possible products: all the grades of lumber, all the various common thicknesses, what to cut to absolutely maximize the use of the wood. Seems easy enough maybe, until you try to do it. That is where I learned that intelligence doesn't just equal academics.

  • @michaelhopkins9726
    @michaelhopkins9726 Год назад +1

    Thanks for another great video. As a child I lived on K.I. Sawyer AFB followed by living on CR 557 near Gwinn. Gwinn was the "Model Town" long before Ford created Alberta. Indeed GHS calls itself the "Model Towners."

  • @DavidInWroclaw
    @DavidInWroclaw Год назад +1

    A great video! You should also investigate Pequaming, Michigan. It was also established by Ford and is considered a ghost town.

  • @John_from_Brooklyn
    @John_from_Brooklyn Год назад +1

    I lived there for a few months in 1993. Part of MTUs forestry program. Great memories.

  • @JBLewis
    @JBLewis Год назад +1

    I've driven by there dozens of times over the years working LSPR, but never had the time, during the rallies, to stop and take a closer look! Thanks for sharing!

  • @jCr5733
    @jCr5733 8 месяцев назад

    I appreciate your representation of our state in your descriptions, research, narration and passion that shines in your videos. Thank you for the content and the wonderful information you put out in these videos. You are doing us all proud!!!

  • @djseiner
    @djseiner День назад

    Thanks Alexis. Your energy and positivity are truly inspiring! I enjoy your videos. Keep up the great work!

  • @thedreadedgroomer
    @thedreadedgroomer Год назад +2

    Hey girl! Me again with another fun fact.
    Mr. Kingsford, fords cousin in law who you mentioned, started Kingsford charcoal with, you guessed it, lumber from the ford operations. Yes, that Kingsford charcoal eceryone still uses today.
    As always, love your videos!

  • @rylandvincent6787
    @rylandvincent6787 7 месяцев назад

    It is such a pleasure having you teach us new things! Thank you, Alexis! Keep it up! ❤

  • @johncashwell1024
    @johncashwell1024 Год назад +3

    I live in the L.P., in Kalamazoo County, and I really appreciate the fantastic videos you make; seriously, thank you! No matter where you are, there is much history all around you. You just have to look for it. One tip that I learned in college that I can offer anyone studying history is that the best way to understand the people of different eras, is to put yourself in their shoes and think about the environmental forces (anything & everything that that they experienced) that shaped them into who they were. I mean everything, too. For example: today we have little to no patience for hate and at first glance it seems things were the exact opposite circa 1932, but were they? Dig deeper, much deeper, and you may be surprised at what you find. Now, I don't know that answer because I have found that, 1932 specifically, the people in one town were very different from the people in the town a few miles up the road. No matter what you find out the people of the past, understanding who they were and why they were who they were helps us to be better friends to neighbors and strangers today. That's what I love most about history; there is just so much you can learn from it that will help you become a better person, if you are willing to actually learn...

  • @genekied
    @genekied Год назад +2

    I 'found' Alberta on one of my visits back home from Montana a few years ago and loved the little lake and trail there. I didn't visit the town but I'm glad for the peaceful place to pull off and walk my dog. I was there again last week and again we stopped and walked around the lake. Love these mixed tree woods. As a note, the picnic table right near the Ford sign is getting dangerously weathered and should not be used, I'm sure someone would like to donate a replacement or NMU could replace it, maybe with one built from some of the mill's product.

  • @dennisreimink5982
    @dennisreimink5982 Год назад +3

    Love your videos! Great presentation and expert editing. Keep up the great work!

  • @Windrider6
    @Windrider6 Год назад +1

    Interesting video, thank you. It drew my attention because of Alberta. I live in the province of Alberta.

  • @mikewysko2268
    @mikewysko2268 8 месяцев назад

    Being an industrial mechanic I find this machinery and production process fascinating. Well done to all involved.

  • @jadeproctor8312
    @jadeproctor8312 7 месяцев назад +14

    YOU CAN TELL HOW MUCH HE CARED ABOUT THE WORK.. I WISH INDUSTRY WAS STILL LIKE THIS.

    • @jadeproctor8312
      @jadeproctor8312 7 месяцев назад

      sorry for the caps

    • @brycmtthw
      @brycmtthw 7 месяцев назад +2

      You mean ran by fascist? Yeah, no. I for one, am extremely *thankful* for _UNIONS_

    • @jadeproctor8312
      @jadeproctor8312 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@brycmtthw I'm talking about the former employee... unions in principal are a great idea for huge companies or certain trades the problem is they also restrict companies autonomy and they can create a real issue for consumers when issues arise.

    • @jadeproctor8312
      @jadeproctor8312 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@brycmtthw really reaching calling titans of business fascists. i suppose you would prefer to live without modern amenities, or perhaps in a socialist utopia. people that look back on history and try to apply modern ideals are wasting time and missing any lessons to be learned from the past. ford actually was a very controversial figure for his personal beliefs but he did things for the american worker that no political figure or business owner did before he increased benefits and pay more than anyone in his time.

    • @James-vn8zb
      @James-vn8zb 7 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@jadeproctor8312 People love to only look for the flaws. Ford established the 40 hour work week, for double the wages of the 80-100 hour work weeks people were working previously.

  • @onyxdragon
    @onyxdragon Год назад +2

    heaps of thanks for posting this. Very informative and great to know about Ford's major influence and investment in the Upper Peninsula.

  • @gunguy702
    @gunguy702 Год назад +3

    Ford also had an interest in Big Bay, MI. There’s a hotel there called the Thunder Bay Inn that Ford would vacation in. His favorite room is kept in that condition and is marked with his namesake on the door. I believe you can rent the room and stay the night, at least a few years ago that was the case.

  • @brianspoelman1650
    @brianspoelman1650 Год назад +1

    Very informative and interesting to learn more about the history of a small town in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan! Thank you for another great video!

  • @jreese8284
    @jreese8284 7 месяцев назад

    You do an excellent job and you are so pleasant to listen to! Thanks for your work.

  • @butcherwoman3753
    @butcherwoman3753 Год назад

    So glad I found your channel today! Thanks for letting me travel along with you. The UP is on my list of places to spend some time exploring and visiting a friend who lives up there now.

  • @throwyourcaresaway3550
    @throwyourcaresaway3550 7 месяцев назад +1

    The gent at the end knew what he was talking about. Y'all couldn't have found a better human to talk about what happened at the mill. What a beaut.

  • @pigstyjumper
    @pigstyjumper Год назад +1

    Hey!!! The barnyard bard broke the Instagram fence and showed up in your RUclips comments! Not to vent, not at saw! Just wanted to give praise! I didn't know the UP had much of fords doings at all. Thanks for the framing! Also, loved the vernal pool video! I always point them out to my kids in the spring. 😊😊

  • @sheilafranklin186
    @sheilafranklin186 Год назад +1

    Absolutely love your videos!! Thank you so much for making and sharing them with us.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад

      Thanks, Sheila! It's a lot of fun, but also a big time investment, so it's so encouraging to hear that folks enjoy them!

  • @CurtBagne
    @CurtBagne 6 месяцев назад

    Henry did some impressive work. Thanks for sharing

  • @Leel3ones89
    @Leel3ones89 Год назад +1

    My family has a cabin in Big Bay. It's cool to learn how it was founded.

  • @bradgotschall3259
    @bradgotschall3259 6 месяцев назад

    In 2000 my wife, daughter, and I spent 3 weeks roaming the UP. A favorite vacation for certain for history nerds such as myself. On our way to Copper Harbor I spotted the Ford logo from the corner of my eye and knew we needed to add a stop on our return Southbound. The building was still open for public tours then. Impressive little operation. I hope its future as a museum and public site can be achieved.
    Henry Ford is one of my favorite persons for his vision of improving life and preservation of history. To be sure he is a controversial figure but arguably he put wheels under America and caused a paving revolution and mobility revolution still thriving today. I’m sure there were caveats and unpleasantries in working for Ford but those who worked then most likely had a much better life than most.
    A great video!!!! Thanks for sharing 😊

  • @richardmourdock2719
    @richardmourdock2719 8 месяцев назад

    Another jewel by Alexis. As a huge history buff and fan of the UP, this story was not new to me, but her enthusiasm comes through to give accent to the story.

  • @petermacdonald8631
    @petermacdonald8631 Год назад +1

    That was fascinating, thanks so much for all the care and enthusiasm you put into your research!

  • @siTTinLo
    @siTTinLo Год назад +1

    That saw mill is So Cool!!!

  • @rvboondocker2559
    @rvboondocker2559 7 месяцев назад +1

    I love the UP! If you have the chance, go to the Edison-Ford Museum in Fort Meyer’s Florida and you’ll learn a TON more about the relationship between Edison and Ford. Most people do not know about this critical time.

  • @JulianOShea
    @JulianOShea Год назад

    Forest semester sounds fun. Lovely vid.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад

      Thanks, Julian! 🙂 And truly. It sounds like a huge amount of effort, but such a memorable time!

  • @jasonwicks2884
    @jasonwicks2884 Год назад

    Alexis - just wanted to thank you for your informative and interesting video. We watched it several times for research on places we wanted to check out prior to coming to the U.P. for our yearly trip. Never been to Alberta. We stopped in Monday and immediately recognized Dave and met the young lady running the gift shop. Dave was visiting with her. I looked at him and immediately recognized him. Super nice guy. We bought some things from the gift shop and then went to Dave’s wood shop where my wife spent even more money on a new rolling pin. Loved your video on this and Quincy Mine and Cliff Mines and Dredge. We went to all spots while here. Appreciate your attention to detail.

  • @SuperSalmon01
    @SuperSalmon01 Год назад

    As usual Alexis a story well told! Fascinating history, thanks for the info on Ford's Utopian town:)!!

  • @freedomstar3814
    @freedomstar3814 Год назад +1

    A fantastic slice of past history which built America.

  • @mikemakowski6896
    @mikemakowski6896 6 месяцев назад

    so awesome for Mich Tech to support this video! (MTU grad '11)

  • @ethannickerson1901
    @ethannickerson1901 Год назад

    Great video, thank you! The footage of the sawmill in operation was really helpful - I bet that was a cool find. You incorporated it well!

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +1

      Thank you! Shoutout to Dave Stimac for having it on a DVD in his filing cabinet. :)

  • @garthplinko
    @garthplinko Год назад +2

    I was able to go through the mill before it closed. Loved all the old history and feel lucky to have gotten to before they closed. But I'm really glad to see you got to go through w/ someone who actually worked there as they explained the workings machinery better than I understood at the time. Follow up question: do we know what they did w/ the sawdust collection in the warmer months? UP can get quite warm in the summers and I suspect they weren't running the boiler year round, right? Or was that used for electricity generation as well?
    One of the things that stuck with me about the museum info was not only did the workers HAVE a vegetable garden, working in it was also REQUIRED (along w/ the maintenance/upkeep/landscaping mentioned),. Anyone in the UP knows that the soil is thin and rocky in most places so this was a specific area where workers and their families struggled to get food to grow in it. Henry Ford is a historical example of how we as a species have not learned that success in one area...does not necessarily confer genius in others!
    Love your videos, thank you!

  • @T.ring91
    @T.ring91 Год назад

    Gosh i love your enthusiasm and your love for the mitten state. Truly i thinj we have one of the best states in the country. We got a little bit of everything from cities to the woods. We have such beautiful nature and then to top it off with being surrounded by some of the biggest lakes in the world just completely tops it off i absolutlry would love to be able to travle michigan and find all its secret places and make videos covering the amazingness of the great state of Michigan. Keep up the aweaome work Alexis! You could draw a blind man in with the sound of your voice and enthusiam for michigan.

  • @C.Schmidt
    @C.Schmidt Год назад +5

    Kinda makes me wonder what Alberta and the other NMOs would have been like if Ford had lived longer. Also it reminds me of Walt Disney's plans to build an "Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow." EPCOT's original concept was also more or less abandoned after Disney's death too.
    Interesting topic! Dave Stimac was very entertaining to listen to! And I'm glad Alberta has a second life with Michigan Tech! As always, such a great video!

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +2

      Hey, thanks! 🙂 Also, man, me, too. Or if his relatives had been on board with the idea and kept the facilities operating for longer. Also, I didn't know that about EPCOT! That... sounds like a wild ride.

    • @C.Schmidt
      @C.Schmidt Год назад

      Yeah... it's a shame. But it is a testament to how much of a force of nature Ford could be that he could just decide to make a town where people would live. Money talks I guess.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +1

      Truly. Money talks real loud. 😅

  • @avedeler
    @avedeler Год назад

    This is really cool! Love learning about lesser known Michigan history from your videos!

  • @rridderbusch518
    @rridderbusch518 Год назад +2

    Iron Mountain (an NMO) is where my g-grandfather lived and had his first 2 children. He quit around the time of the mining strike you covered, and bought land in Wisconsin.

  • @vickilindberg6336
    @vickilindberg6336 9 месяцев назад +1

    Ford built an incredibly well planned manufacturing plant on Prime land on the St Paul side of the cliffs above the Mississippi River. It's a Beautiful location, Ford built state of the art manufacturing buildings, had his own railroad, tunneled into the cliffs & created sand mines to manufacture glass for the cars in site. A power plant was already on site. The plants last big out put was F150 pick-ups. It's recently been demolished & the site is being put to the use originally planned by the city - mixed use development with very nice housing.

    • @richardtrudeau7363
      @richardtrudeau7363 5 месяцев назад

      Ford Rang 17:42 ers last product at Twin Cities.

  • @RDLouks
    @RDLouks Год назад +1

    Loved the new video Alexis, we were just talking bout Alberta. We were visiting my Brother who lives in Houghton (retired professor) a few years ago and took a trip to Alberta and took a tour of the sawmill.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад +2

      Thanks, Raymond! What fun timing. Also, I didn't do the drone footage - I had some colleagues help out with that. I'm working on getting certified so I can use my own footage in projects like this! 🙂

  • @Jazz3006
    @Jazz3006 8 месяцев назад

    I passed that sign on the way to school who-knows-how-many times and never knew what it was for... Love the content, as usual!

  • @CarswithNash
    @CarswithNash Год назад +1

    Excellent video!👍

  • @patrickseals5746
    @patrickseals5746 Год назад

    This was a great documentary. I remember reading Henry had a community he controlled strictly. I remember the people did not care for that and it ended as you said. Thanks for sharing the actual place and details.

  • @johncrisman576
    @johncrisman576 Год назад +1

    Alexis, another superb video. I love your style!

  • @wilbard6708
    @wilbard6708 Год назад +1

    Watched this again as we will be up in your neck of the woods next week, well at least we'll be in the UP, camping at McLain State Park in the Keweenaw Peninsula. Was doing some online research of things to do and see and came across a pamphlet about 12 waterfalls to explore and who do I see on the cover? You or at least the girl looks a lot like you if it's not you. Will keep my eyes open for you and your husband on our adventures next week.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад

      Safe travels! And ha ha, that might be me. Last year, the Keweenaw Visitor's Bureau sponsored a couple of projects, and asked if I'd help them out with some photos while I was in the area. Hope you have a great trip!

  • @donjuan8814
    @donjuan8814 3 месяца назад

    Awesome job Alexis...truly AWESOME!!!

  • @garyallen2296
    @garyallen2296 Год назад +1

    Thank you, Alexis! You do good work. I am impressed and I did learn some things. I enjoy your work.

    • @AlexisDahl
      @AlexisDahl  Год назад

      Thanks, Gary! I appreciate you saying that.

    • @garyallen2296
      @garyallen2296 Год назад

      @@AlexisDahl, It is my pleasure. I enjoy complementing people who do good work and make learning fun.

  • @cydrych
    @cydrych Год назад +7

    Ford owned rubber plantations for his tires, copper mines for electrical components, he created his paint in house, any color you want as long as it’s black. That supply chain model was ingenious at the time.

    • @garyszewc3339
      @garyszewc3339 8 месяцев назад

      Paint was one thing he didn't manufacturer for model Ts. He purchased the paint.