Henry Ford: An American Icon

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Ford is a prestigious motor company with a successful production history spanning more than a century and involving several influential automobiles, most notably the iconic Model T. Indeed, the Model T was a supreme mechanical innovation, a remarkable marriage of “technical design and social context” (Boyer & Dubofsky 275). Although simple in design, and relatively inexpensive, the vehicle performed very well against competitors’ models, surviving the primitive roads and almost nonexistent repair facilities thanks to a very robust frame, high wheel clearance and an easy-to-fix motor and suspension (Boyer & Dubofsky 275). The popularity of the vehicle was the impetus for Henry Ford to look at innovative production techniques in order to quench the high demand of the American public. The production breakthroughs initiated by Ford in his assembly plants became known alternatively as the ‘assembly line’ approach, or Fordism (Boyer & Dubofsky 275). Hence, outside of the automobile industry and culture of car aficionados, the Ford motor company has had its greatest influence on the world through its primary innovation – assembly line production.

Like anything else, mass production did not simply originate with Ford’s acumen, though he certainly was an innovator. The 1890 Westinghouse Air Brake Company also used a prototype of assembly line production. William Klann, head of Ford’s engine department, was most responsible for the adoption of the conveying system at Ford (Curcio 204). Klann had toured the Chicago slaughterhouses, including Swift & Company, and was extremely impressed by its system of overhead conveyors and gravity slides (Curcio 205). This system was known rather gruesomely as a ‘disassembly line’ for obvious r...

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...ordism resulted also in higher wages and a reduced workday, leading to the establishment of the middle-class in America. For these reasons, Henry Ford remains an icon to the automobile industry, forever to be cherished for his contributions to business and society as we know it today.

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Curcio, Vincent. Chrysler: The Life and Times of an Automotive Genius.

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Ford Motor Company. "Henry Ford's $5-a-Day Revolution." Corporate.ford.com. Ford, 9

Nov. 2006. Web. 4 Aug. 2013.

Grint, Keith. The Arts of Leadership. Oxford, UK: Oxford UP, 2000. Print.

Landrum, Gene N. Empowerment: the Competitive Edge in Sports, Business & Life.

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