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3 - Model T: Triumph and Fable

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Mira Wilkins
Affiliation:
Florida International University
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Summary

The Ford Motor Company had purchased in April 1907 a 57-acre tract of land in Highland Park, a few miles north of Detroit, for $81,225, to expand the manufacture of its car. The act was revolutionary. Its old plant on Piquette Avenue, Detroit, which it proposed to abandon, occupied 2.65 acres; Henry Ford was probably right when he said later: “It was as good as, perhaps a little better than, any automobile factory in the country.” He recalled that people were asking, “How soon will Ford blow up?”

Ford officials could smile at that query. They had paid their shareholders fabulous sums on the original capitalization of $100,000, and in 1908 would declare $2,500,000 in regular and stock dividends. During that year they would also produce 10,607 cars, which gave them first place among automobile manufacturers in the United States, and in the next year would almost double this sale, repeating the achievement in 1910–1911 with 34,528 vehicles. Moreover, they stood high in an American industry that in 1910 put out 181,000 cars to 64,000 for France, England, and Germany combined—the outstanding automotive countries of Europe.

In September 1908 William C. Durant united the Olds and Buick firms to form the General Motors Company, to which Oakland and Cadillac were added the following year. Ford lost first place as this powerful combination in 1909 made dollar sales thrice those of Ford.

Type
Chapter
Information
American Business Abroad
Ford on Six Continents
, pp. 35 - 59
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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