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http://www.moreinterestingfacts.com/michigan-facts |
Henry Ford was born on July 30,
1863, and was the oldest of William and Mary Ford’s six children. 16-year-old
Ford left his hometown of now Dearborn, Michigan, to work in Detroit for 3
years as a machinist’s apprentice. He then returned to Dearborn where he
operated and repaired steam engines until 1891, when Ford became an engineer
with the Edison Illuminating Company. When he was promoted to the position of
Chief Engineer two years later, he had enough personal time to experiment with
his ideas for internal combustion engines. In 1896, Ford created a
self-propelled vehicle that he called the Quadricycle. The Quadricycle had a
gasoline engine, which ultimately set Ford on the path to establishing his own
automobile manufacturing company. The Ford Motor Company was founded in 1903,
which Henry Ford and the chief engineer and vie-president. From there, the
Model T was introduced in 1908, and the company has been a success ever
since.
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Ford and his Quadricycle http://oldcarandtruckpictures.com/ModelTFord/ |
However, beyond Ford’s obvious
achievements, he was involved in other activities as well. Ford built and raced
race cars early on in his career to prove that his engineering designs reliable
vehicles. During the first World War, Ford also financed a pacifist expedition
to Europe. During the second World War, Ford’s manufacturing factories were
mobilized to produce military bombers, Jeeps, and tanks. In 1918, Ford campaigned for the United
States senate and was unsuccessful. Last, several schools were established
under Ford’s influence in various areas of the country, which used traditional
one room school and modern teaching techniques, and “learning through doing.”
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Ford
http://www.hfmgv.org/exhibits/hf/default.asp#childhood
http://www.hfmgv.org/exhibits/hf/facts.asp