From
"Hibernian Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
85 Years Ago:
Ford Makes a Million
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * December 6, 2000
Eighty-five years ago this week, on December 10, 1915, Henry Ford reached
a milestone. Seven years after he’d introduced it as a low-cost,
no-frills car aimed at the huge American middle class, the one millionth
Model T rolled off the assembly line. It was a landmark event in
the history of modern manufacturing and a signal that American society
was on the verge of a new era.
Henry Ford was born in Michigan in 1863. His father, an emigrant
from County Cork during the Famine, scratched out a living as a farmer.
Young Henry never liked farm work and at age sixteen he left home and walked
to Detroit. There he found work as a machinist’s apprentice, eventually
becoming a full-fledged machinist. In 1890 was hired as a mechanical
engineer at the Detroit Edison Company.
For years he worked in his spare time to design and build a workable
automobile. In 1892 he succeeded in building a “gas buggy” that he
drove around the streets of Detroit. Four years later the young inventor
met Thomas Edison himself. “Keep on with your engine,” the famous
inventor told him, “I can see a great future.”
Ford soon decided to give up his high-paying job at Edison to go into
the automobile manufacturing business full-time. After two false
starts, he formed Ford Motor Company in 1903. In 1904, his first
full year of operation, Ford sold 1,745 cars.
By 1908, with annual sales of 9,000 cars and revenue of $6 million,
Ford introduced the Model T. Five years later he made industrial
history by establishing the assembly line to make Model T’s. Before
the assembly line, it took Ford’s workers 12.5 hours to complete a new
car; by 1920 it took just 93 minutes. The speed and efficiency of
the new assembly process turned the automobile from a luxury good enjoyed
only by the super rich into a necessity within the grasp of middle income
Americans. Between 1916 and 1927, despite inflation, the price of
a Model T dropped from $345 to $290.
His success with mass producing the car had an enormous economic impact.
The steel and petroleum industries, for example, saw demand for their products
soar. Ford’s revolution also spawned dozens of entirely new industries,
from filling stations and motels, to auto dealerships and repair shops.
Of course a few industries were all but wiped out, most notably horse and
buggy manufacturers.
More important, however, was the social impact of Ford’s innovation.
The affordable automobile ended the isolation of rural America. It
also triggered suburbanization by allowing people to work in a city but
live on its outskirts. For a while (until the volume of cars reached
a critical point), it even improved the environment in cities by reducing
the number of horses.
As he rose to fame and fortune, Ford occasionally acknowledged his Irish
heritage. For example, he selected the city of Cork – only a few
miles from his father’s birthplace – as the site for his company’s first
overseas manufacturing plant. Ford traveled to Ireland to personally
open the facility and was received as a returning son. When approached
by a local organization working to build a new hospital, he pledged £5,000.
He soon upped the sum to £10,000 on the condition that he be allowed
to choose the inscription to adorn the façade. He selected
a fitting passage from the Bible: “I came among my own – and they took
me in.”
One cannot discuss Henry Ford without mentioning some of his many flaws.
He was staunchly anti-union and in the 1920s published anti-Semitic rants
in his newspaper, the Dearborn Independent. Nonetheless, his creation
of the modern automobile industry makes him one of the most influential
Americans of the 20th century.
HIBERNIAN HISTORY THIS WEEK
Dec 6, 1921: Anglo-Irish treaty signed, ending the War for Independence
and establishing the Irish Free State as a self-governing dominion within
the British Commonwealth.
Dec 6, 1933: A federal judge lifts the ban on James Joyce’s novel, Ulysses.
Published in 1922, it had been banned in the U.S. and Britain as obscene.
Dec 7, 1972: The Dial removes from the Irish Constitution the clause
granting the Catholic Church a “Special Position” within Irish society.
Dec 9, 1941: Two days after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Flyer Colin
Kelly sinks a Japanese destroyer to become first hero of World War II.
Killed in the raid, he is awarded posthumously the Distinguished Service
Cross.
Dec 12, 1917: Father Edward Flanagan establishes Boys Town outside Omaha,
Nebraska.
HIBERNIANS BORN THIS WEEK:
Dec 7, 521: St. Colum Cille, Irish saint, in Gartan, Co. Donegal
Dec 8, 1939: James Galway, flutist, in Belfast
Dec 8, 1966: Sinead O'Connor, singer and activist, in Dublin
Dec 9, 1898: Emmett Kelly, circus clown Weary Willie, in Sedan, Kansas
Dec 9, 1912: Thomas P "Tip" O'Neill, Speaker of the House, in Cambridge,
MA
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2000
|