INSIDE THE HENRY FORD
HENRY FORD MUSEUM OF AMERICAN INNOVATION
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Driven to Win: Racing in America exhibition is a playground for all ages DRIVEN TO WIN: RACING IN AMERICA presented by General Motors is Henry Ford Museum of American Innovationâs premier racing exhibition. It was all set to open last summer. Anticipation was high. Preview parties were planned. The cars on display â from the âOld 16â race car to Jim Clarkâs Lotus-Ford from the 1965 Indy 500 â were ready for installation. Racing simulator games were plugged in, and âa gravity racetrack was constructed, poised to welcome visitors to take a turn on its hills. COVID-19 changed all that, forcing a long pause in the exhibitionâs grand opening plans in 2020. In March 2021, that pause was finally over, with Driven to Win welcoming guests for the first time. Matt Anderson, curator of transportation at The Henry Ford, will tell you that many of the elements within Driven to Win make it a literal playground â for kids as well as grown-ups. There are lots of interactive elements: Thereâs a quarter midget car that kids can sit in, six full-motion racing simulators (additional fee required to experience), a pit crew exercise where you can try your hand at changing a stock carâs tires â real fast, a drag racing Christmas tree light column that tests your reflexes, a race car driver training gymnasium complete with hightech cognitive games and much more.
ONLINE For more information, hours and pricing for Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation, visit thf.org/museumc
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JUNE-DECEMBER 2021
In addition, you can get acquainted with some of the young-at-heart personalities who have and still are burning up the competitive racing scene, like professional rally driver Ken Block. âYou really get a sense of Blockâs showmanship,â said Anderson about watching the video that runs on a continuous loop near Blockâs wild-looking 2012 Ford Fiesta ST HFHV, which is part of the exhibition. Or you can stop and learn about stock car driver Bubba Wallace, the second Black driver to race full-time in NASCARâs toplevel series. A die-cast model of his 2020 Chevrolet Camaro painted with âBlack Lives Matterâ is on display. And donât forget to take a closer look at the 1960 Slingshot Dragster built by teens Sam Buck and Bob Thompson. âThese guys are a case study for râ acing as grown-up play. A couple of young hot-rodders who built a car from a kit, modified the engine with speed shop parts and became drag strip heroes on weekends,â said Anderson. Plus, thereâs an impressive c â ollection of tether cars, a display of Hot Wheels and slot cars, Lego models of F â ord GT racers, and a whole s â election of influential racing video games â from Atariâs Indy 500 (1977) and Pole Position (1983) to M â icrosoftâs Forza Motorsport (2005). â JENNIFER LAFORCE
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The Henry Ford Magazineâs JanuaryMay 2020 issue totally dedicated to racing. It includes a questionand-answer with drifter Vaughn Gittin Jr., spotlights some of racingâs remarkable women and takes you inside one of racingâs top-tier training facilities in Indianapolis issuu.com/thfmagazinec
HOLMAN MOODY-BUILT FORD GALAXIE Driven to Win: Racing in America has a new addition: a Holman Moody-built 1966 Ford Galaxie driven by Wendell Scott. He was the first African American to compete full-time in NASCARâs Cup Series and the first to win a top-level race. The car is on loan to The Henry Ford from Hajek Motorsports through the end of 2021. Breaking barriers, Scott fought limited resources and discrimination throughout his 13-year career in auto racing, even inspiring the 1977 film Greased Lighting. He was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2015. Learn more about the obstacles he faced and overcame on our blog. See the visiting â66 Galaxie in the exhibition, and then go to The Henry Fordâs digital collections and view related photos in the Dave Friedman Collection, where Matt Anderson, curator of transportation, said images were recently found of Scott and the Galaxie in its original Holman Moody paint.