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Window Cleaners in Manhattan

Americana

Lee Iacocca at the Inaugural launch introducing the 1964 Mustang Automobile
THE FORD MUSTANG DEBUTS April 13, 1964 The Ford Mustang debuted this week to an enthusiastic response. Priced from $2,400. over 22,000 orders were made in the first day. The Mustang is the idea of the young vice-president at Ford, Lee Iacocca. The Mustang fondly termed the “Pony Car”will compete with Chevrolet’s Corvair Monza. Lee Iacocca at the Inaugural launch of the 1964 Mustang
DOCUMENTARY: History of the Statue of Liberty and how it was built
Mrs. Henry Ford Redecorates winter home in Ft. Myers, Florida
Mrs. Henry Ford Redecorates Home in Ft. Myers, Florida February 28, 1921 Mrs. Henry Ford has summoned the assistance of the staff at Robb & Stucky to redecorate their home in Ft. Myers. Virgil Robb and Harry Stucky, well known in the area for their furniture and buggy emporium were immediately available to fill this order. The Ford’s very close friends of Thomas Edison, originally came to the area as guests in 1915 , and purchased the house next door the following year. Well-known guests, including Harvey Firestone, naturalist John Burroughs, Nobel Laureate Alexis Carrel, Charles Lindbergh are invited winter guests.
Explore America
Royalton, Vermont
Bill Veeck – Baseballs Promotional Maverick
Bill Veeck – Baseballs Maverick As owner of the Indians, Browns and White Sox, Bill Veeck consistently broke attendance records with pennant-winning teams, outrageous door prizes, enthusiastic fan participation and ingenious promotional schemes. He introduced the concept of honoring fans, a midget player (Eddie Gaedel), Bat Day, Fireworks, exploding scoreboards and player names on backs of uniforms. While employed in various capacities by the Chicago Cubs, Bill Veeck Jr. was responsible for the planting of ivy on Wrigley Field's outfield wall in September 1937.
The Best of Yellowstone - America's National Parks
Yellowstone National Park - A vast wilderness of natural beauty On March 1, 1872 President Ulysses Grant signed into existence the world's first national park, Yellowstone National Park. The 2.2 million acres of wilderness was "set apart as a public park or pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people." Yellowstone's name is historically credited to the Native Americans. The name is derived from the Yellowstone River, which has high yellow rock cliffs along its banks. In 1872 the vast wilderness of the west was viewed by most Americans as something to be tamed, to be explored, settled, mined, logged, ranched and farmed. The west was not valued for its wilderness. It is remarkable that during such an age Yellowstone was set aside as the world's first national park, clearly an illustrative indicator of how unique and magnificent Yellowstone was perceived to be, even then. In 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt visited Yellowstone and was awed at the beauty and wildness of the Park. The railroads were catering to Yellowstone tourists, taking visitors by the carloads to the Park. In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed into existence a new government agency, the National Park Service, forever changing the administration of our national parks. In 1917, only two years after the first automobile entered the Park, some 5000 people entered Yellowstone during the summer season.

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Documentary of the Day
David Halberstam's The Fifties | "Selling The American Way"

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