Henry Ford
Museum Purchases Rosa Parks Bus for $492,000 at
MastroNet
DEARBORN, MICH. - Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village
confirmed October 26 their purchase of the bus on which Rosa
Parks famously refused to give up her seat more than 45 years
ago, sparking the beginning of the Civil Rights movement.
The 1948 General Motors diesel-fueled bus is "the most important
artifact in the history of the Civil Rights movement" said Steve
Hamp, president of Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village.
"We are looking forward to publicly displaying this monumental
piece of American history."
The bus arrived on the auction block on Thursday, October 25 and
was won by Henry Ford Museum with the high bid of $492,000. The
auction was conducted by MastroNet, an auctioneer house located
in Oak Brook, Ill.
Along with the purchase of the bus, Henry Ford Museum acquired
the recently discovered and only known written documentation of
the bus's identification number, proving its authenticity as the
vehicle that Rosa Parks rode into American history.
"People have searched for written evidence documenting the Rosa
Parks bus for years," said Bill Pretzer, curator, Henry Ford
Museum & Greenfield Village. Evidence on the authenticity of
the bus was culled from a scrapbook and through oral histories.
"The newly discovered scrapbook compiled at the time by the
company manager in which he notes the bus identification number
is the first known identification of a specific bus," remarked
Pretzer. "These new documents, along with the oral histories long
associated with this particular vehicle, convince us that this is
the bus."
The museum had both the bus and the documents examined by experts
who determined they are authentic.
Hamp remarked that the institution will be going to the public
at-large, as well as area corporations to ask for support in
restoring the bus and putting it on display inside Henry Ford
Museum, which coupled with Greenfield Village is the largest
indoor-outdoor museum in the country.
"Henry Ford Museum is dedicated to social innovation. What Ms
Parks set into motion in 1955, is the same spirit we celebrate
everyday. This object is not only important to our collection,
but is important as well to the greater Detroit community," said
Hamp.
At this time the bus is at an undisclosed site in Montgomery,
Ala. The museum plans to extensively restore the vehicle and
ultimately put it on permanent display at a later time.
Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village welcomes more than 1.5
million visitors annually. The museum is at 20900 Oakwood
Boulevard and Village Road.