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Henry Ford: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Henryford.png|thumb|Henry Ford, genius.]]
[[File:Henryford.png|thumb|Henry Ford, genius.]]
'''Henry Ford''' (1863 – 1947), one of the most influential industrialists in history, ushered in the era of mass-production at the turn of the century, making the automobile available to the middle and working classes. In doing so, he shaped the culture of [[America]] forever.
'''Henry Ford''' (1863 – 1947), one of the most influential industrialists in history, ushered in the era of mass-production at the turn of the century, making the automobile available to the middle and working classes. In doing so, he shaped the culture of [[America]] forever.

Revision as of 16:10, 12 June 2022



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Henry Ford, genius.

Henry Ford (1863 – 1947), one of the most influential industrialists in history, ushered in the era of mass-production at the turn of the century, making the automobile available to the middle and working classes. In doing so, he shaped the culture of America forever.

Early life

Ford was born on July 30, 1863, at his family's prosperous farm in Dearborn, MI. During his early years, Ford demonstrated very little interest in farming and preferred instead to tinker with mechanical devices. At age 16, Ford left the farm to work in nearby Detroit as an apprentice machinist, a job he held for three years before returning to Dearborn. He married Clara Bryant in 1888 and supported himself and his wife by running a sawmill. From 1891 to 1899, he worked as a mechanical engineer with the Edison Illuminating Company in Detroit.

Internal combustion

In his free time, Ford began testing experimental gasoline engine designs. By 1893, he had built a small one-cylinder gasoline combustion engine. Three years later he invented the Quadricycle the first "horseless carriage." The Quadricycle had four wire wheels, was steered by a boat-like tiller, and propelled by an ethanol-powered engine with two forward speeds and no reverse. The two-cylinder engine generated 4 hp and a top speed of 20 mph.

Toward the turn of the century, Ford's interest turned to automobiles, and by 1899 he had raised enough money to start his own company, the Detroit Automobile Company. Ford spent $86,000 in seed money, a fortune at the time, and designed his second vehicle in 1900, a delivery wagon. However, his investors saw no profits forthcoming from the company and withdrew. After the collapse of the Detroit Automobile Company, with the help of new backers, Ford formed the Henry Ford Company, but this effort failed as well, amid significant competition by as many as 60 aspiring automakers in the U.S. at the time. His final effort began with the The Ford Motor Company in 1903 and he rolled out his first car, the Model A, in July of that year.

Success

The Ford Motor Company was a success even though just five weeks after incorporation the Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers threatened to put Ford out of business because he was not a licensed manufacturer. The group had acquired the rights to an automobile patent granted to inventor/patent attorney George Baldwin Selden, and was collecting a licensing fee for each vehicle manufactured. Ford fought the claim, and although he lost the initial case in 1909, he won an appeal in 1911 and thus opened the doors for the rapid growth of the automobile industry. The fight and the victory had made Ford a popular hero. Ford dreamed of producing a reasonably priced, reliable automobile accessible to everyone. He once proclaimed, "I will build a motor car for the great multitude." His dream came true when he launched the Model T in October of 1908. In the 19 years of the Model T's existence, he sold more than 15 million vehicles in the U.S., Canada, and Great Britain, a total amounting to half of the automobile output of the world at the time.

Assembly line

Ford's greatest contribution to the automobile industry was the development of the moving assembly line. After much experimentation, Ford implemented the system in 1913 at its new plant in Highland Park, MI. The success of the new manufacturing technique was contingent upon the delivery of parts, subassemblies, and assemblies with precise timing to a constantly moving main assembly line. The new technique allowed individual workers to stay in one place and perform the same task repeatedly on multiple vehicles that passed by them.

The line proved tremendously efficient, helping the company far surpass the production levels of their competitors—and making the vehicles more affordable. Previously, it took 14 hours to assemble a Model T car. The assembly line approach reduced this to 1 hour and 33 minutes. With higher manufacturing efficiency, Ford could lower the cost of each car and reduce the selling price from $1,000 to $360. In 1914, Ford began paying his employees $5 a day, nearly twice as much as the wages offered by other auto manufacturers. He cut the work day down to eight hours, enabling the company to employ three shifts around the clock. Ford's vision of the automobile as the ordinary man's utility rather than the rich man's luxury ushered in the so-called "Motor Age" that changed the economic and social character of the country. The new-found mobility of the masses enabled cities to spread outward and spurred the creation of suburbs and housing developments all connected by a developing highway system.

End of life

Over the years, Ford suffered through problems with employees, government regulations, unions, and competition, mostly attributed to his opinionated, authoritative personality. He was slowed by a stroke in 1938 and died on April 7, 1947 at his home in Dearborn.

The Dearborn Independent

In January 1919, Henry Ford began publication of the Dearborn Independent, a small financially troubled community weekly he had purchased the previous year. He applied his usual genius to save the paper and the jobs of its employees.

Carrying the subtitle, The Chronicler of the Neglected Truth, each issue of the Independent carried “Mr. Ford’s Own Page,” an editorial expressing his opinions.  Ford hired Edwin G. Pipp from the Detroit News to serve as editor. Paperboys went door-to-door selling subscriptions, and Ford Motor Company encouraged car dealers to buy multiple subscriptions and hand out copies to customers.  The newspaper was extremely popular, it went international, and circulation reached over a million copies in 1926.

The Protocols of the Elders of Zion

The idea of acquiring a newspaper first came to Ford during his antiwar crusade, when it became known to him that a hostile press controlled by jews and other powerful financial interests was campaigning against him. The paper would provide Ford a means to express his own views and to counter the attacks that had been launched against him for the five-dollar day, his pacifist activities, and his 1918 run for the U. S. Senate in which it eventually became known that Senator Truman H. Newberry had stolen from him. He had grown weary of jew manipulations.

The Dearborn Independent would, most likely, have remained a sidebar in Ford’s biography were it not for a revealing series that began on May 22, 1920 and lasted for several years.  Appearing on the front page every week, “The International Jew: The World’s Problem” examined various manipulations dealings launched by Jewish groups, often exposing their activities.  The basis for some articles was an ancient and secret text, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, which jewish leaders of course claimed was an anti-semitic hoax, ignoring that its contents have all turned out to be true, and have stood the test of time.  

William Cameron, who became editor of the Independent, was an enthusiastic supporter of publication of the uncomfortable truths.

However, Ford’s own experiences with jews were a major reason for the publication of “The International Jew.”  His knowledge formed along several solid paths of his direct experience, those of others, and logical patterns of evidence.  He was also somewhat influenced by his own populist political sensibilities that advocated a realist view of the greedy financiers, bankers and institutions of the day.  At the time jews controlled the international banking system; that knowledge fed his common-sense conclusions. Ford was a saavy businessman, but also a fascist, and a champion of the common man, and a pacifist. His crusade against World War I convinced him that international jewish bankers were fomenting the war and supported the war for personal gain. 

Lastly, Ford’s growing cultural conservatism, anti-urbanism, and nostalgia for the rural past formed an important third strand.  Ford saw judeo-Marxists present in everything modern and distasteful—contemporary music, movies, theater, new dress styles, and loosening social mores. The term "cultural Marxism" did not yet exist in his time, but that is what he saw.

The publication of “The International Jew” caused an uproar.  In most quarters it 2as well recieved.  The jews of course were appalled by the series, published demands for retractions, forcibly removed the paper from public libraries, and launched a worldwide boycott of Ford automobiles.  Under jewish pressure many Ford dealers were prevented from carrying the paper. Thousands of frivilous lawsuits were filed. Responding to this pressure, Ford halted publication of the documentary series in January 1922, to create a cool-down, only to start it up again less than a year later.  

In April 1924, the Independent initiated a new series expose' on attorney Aaron Sapiro, revealing his exploiting farmers’ cooperatives.  When Ford refused to print a retraction, Sapiro sued him to force th3 series to stop.  The case finally came to trial in March 1927 and quickly turned into a media circus. 

After negotiations with U.S. Representative Nathan D. Perlman, vice president of the American Jewish Congress, and Louis Marshall, president of the American Jewish Committee, Ford agreed to release a formal apology, written by Marshall, make a cash settlement with Sapiro, and order the closing of the Dearborn Independent (it closed at the end of 1927).