The museum is also launching the Agricultural Innovation and Heritage Archive, reaching out to farmers, ranchers and American agri-business to preserve America’s agricultural heritage and build a collection that reflects modern agricultural practices.

Curators are seeking stories, photographs and ephemera to record and preserve the innovations and experiences of farming and ranching. For details and to participate, the public may visit the heritage archive's web page.

As an example of the agriculture stories the Smithsonian is seeking, the museum will accept a donation of road signs related to no-till production and organic farming from Jim Rapp, a corn and soybean farmer from Princeton, Illinois.

“The story of agriculture is important and complex,” said John Gray, director of the museum. “In Jefferson’s time, 96 percent of Americans were farmers; today, that number is less than 2 percent. Despite this drop, productivity has skyrocketed and agriculture has evolved into a technology-driven profession with the cab of a tractor akin to a traditional CEO’s office.”

This new collection of stories, photos and objects will play a role in the “American Enterprise” exhibition, an 8,000-square-foot multimedia experience that will immerse visitors in the dramatic arc of the nation’s story, focusing on the role of business and innovation in the United States from the mid-1700s to the present.

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The exhibition is scheduled to open in the spring of 2015.

The American Enterprise project budget is $20 million, which includes the exhibition, a virtual exhibition on the Web, a rich array of programs and demonstrations as well as an endowment for a Curator of American Business.

Recent gifts in support of the “American Enterprise” exhibition include a $2 million gift from Monsanto Company and a $1 million gift from the United Soybean Board.

“American agriculture has gone through a tremendous transformation in the past seven decades, becoming a high-tech industry, deeply affecting not just farmers themselves but every American and the American experience in general,” said Peter Liebhold, curator and chairman for the Division of Work and Industry.

The exhibition will tell the story of the nation’s business, centering on themes of opportunity, innovation, competition and common good with examples drawn from five areas: agriculture, consumer finance, information technology/communication, manufacturing and retail/service.

Chronological in organization, “American Enterprise” will use objects, graphics and interactives to examine how the U.S. moved from a small dependent nation to one of the world’s most vibrant and trend-setting economies.

Visitors will explore the development of American agriculture through objects such as Eli Whitney’s cotton gin, a 1920s Fordson tractor and an Agacetus gene gun, which represent machines and innovation that increased productivity and science that gave insight to the genetic structure of plants.

Agriculture has employed science and technology to dramatically increase production and choice while lowering prices, but these changes have also altered the experience of farmers and the public in unexpected ways.

The initial objects donated to the Agricultural Innovation and Heritage Archive project came from Tennessee Farm Bureau member Pat Campbell of Cleburne Jersey Farm, a multigenerational dairy farm founded in the 1870s in Spring Hill, Tennessee.

Campbell donated a selection of photographs, a computer cow tag and reader unit to show the change in dairying from a hand-labor intensive process to a modern computer-run operation, as well as his personal recollections about how changing technology has altered his work life and has led to greater efficiency and safety.

The museum is located at 14th Street and Constitution Avenue N.W., and is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (closed Dec. 25). Admission is free.  FG

From National Museum of American History news release