64 TRADITIONAL STYLES IN HOUSES OLD HOUSE MUSEUMS The most interesting and vital way to study traditional styles, both period and cottage types, is to visit original old houses that have been preserved as museums. Massachusetts has about one hundred such houses; some states have none. Motorists should inquire about the old house museums located on their routes. These houses are owned by the nation, states, counties, cities, uni- versities, museums, organizations, or private individuals. Among the most famous of our house museums are the homes of George Washington and Franklin D. Roosevelt John D. Rockefeller's restoration of the entire city of Williamsburg, Vir- ginia, converted every building in the town into a house museum of esthetic and historic interest. At Natchez, Mississippi, many beautiful old homes are open to the public. Henry Ford's Edison Institute at Dearborn, Michigan, is pre- serving many buildings that are of great educational value in the study of Americana. The Wayside Inn of Longfellow's poem is one of Henry Ford's preservations in its original location. See page 101. A group of Norwegian pioneer log cabins is now located on the campus of Luther College, at Decorah, Iowa. Old house museums are usually self-supporting through admission fees. Every county in the United States should have as a local museum at least one typical early dwelling in which the original furnish- ings of the locality and other historical material can be preserved* Future Americans can best understand and appreciate the manner of life of their ancestors through the observation of their houses and furnishing. The sacrifices and hardships of the brave pioneers who created the new nation are evident in their homes. This evidence should be preserved, especially that which illustrates the two great American dramas which can never be repeated here, the immigration of European settlers founding a new nation and the westward drive of the pioneers on the frontiers* Those interested in the preservation of old historic or typical houses and their furnishings should study the great outdoor mu- seums, Miahaugen in Norway and Skansen in Sweden. Here even the caretakers are in the garb appropriate to the houses they show* French provincial house museutfcs are among those which are of great benefit and interest to citizens and tourists.