We struggle for freedom every day of our lives. From our founding fathers to the Civil War through the suffrage movement, the American civil rights movement and today with the Patriot Act. Frankly, it's a story we have to keep telling to each other.

On a normal Saturday in February, we have 400 people. We had 2,000 in six hours the day before Super Bowl. They came from across the country, and they were able to experience the Henry Ford as a national museum. A lot of people didn't know what we had to offer.

Think about it. The winter of Valley Forge. He's not sleeping on the ground. He's not wet. And he's got air above him, so he's not freezing.

This is a part of history most people don't know about. And this is from the recent past. Women were jailed during their march on Washington, D.C., during Woodrow Wilson's [1918 presidential] campaign.

The idea is that the declaration said, 'All Men are Created Equal,' but still, the declaration is not realized. Lincoln was keeping the country whole for the declaration and not letting it die.

Even before the museum opened in 1929, Henry Ford was acquiring artifacts.