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7 - Prosperity and Frustration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Mira Wilkins
Affiliation:
Florida International University
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Summary

Edward Grace, manager of the Cork plant, came to Detroit in May 1923 to discuss the situation created by the English tariff on Irish products. As already noted, this had made the manufacture in Cork of car parts for Manchester economically impossible and posed a double dilemma. There would have to be a new future for the Irish plant, and Manchester must get duty free the engines and castings it had been receiving from the factory. The decision was “for the time being motors and axle assemblies will be manufactured at Cork.” But it was understood that “Cork is to stop manufacturing as soon as it is possible to secure a suitable site in England and erect buildings necessary to accommodate our Cork equipment.” Edsel Ford and Sorensen deputized Grace to scour England and find a location for the new manufacturing center.

It will be recalled that Henry Ford owned land at Southampton, but was not inclined to build there. Grace, with C. L. Gould, manager of the English company, now looked for a better site and soon reported that “after having thoroughly investigated England … the most suitable place for the future plant is in the London district—somewhere in the neighborhood of Dagenham.” For the first time, on July 10, 1923, that name was laid before Ford officials in the United States.

Type
Chapter
Information
American Business Abroad
Ford on Six Continents
, pp. 134 - 161
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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