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1863-1947 Founder of the Ford Motor Company. An inventor with 161 U.S. Patents. He became one of the richest best-known people in the world.
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Performing the same magnificent feat for Henry Ford as he did for Walt Disney (in The Magic Kingdom),
historian Watts offers a magisterial and balanced biography of one of
America's business legends. As a farm boy in Michigan, Ford (1863-1947)
followed the beat of his own drum, avoiding hard work but watching farm
machinery with fascination. He objected to wasting physical energy when
a machine could accomplish the same task in less time, and spent much
of his leisure taking watches apart and rebuilding them to learn about
their mechanisms. Once he moved to Detroit, Ford worked as an engineer
at the Edison Illuminating Company, where he quickly became famous for
his ability to patch up engines. Then, in 1898, he invented the
prototype of his Model A car, secured investors to set up a business
and established the first unit of what would become the Ford Motor
Company. Watts deftly traces Ford's rise to fame and the innovations,
such as the "five-dollar" workday, which doubled factory workers'
salaries, that he brought to the workplace, while a chapter titled
"Bigot" delineates his notorious anti-Semitism. Watts also brilliantly
reveals the contradictions of Ford's business philosophy and his
personal and work life. While Ford thought of himself as a man of the
people and strove to improve working conditions and wages in his
factory, for example, he opposed unions. As Watts points out, Ford
embodied both the promises and pitfalls of modern American democracy:
"its devotion to opportunity, openness to new ideas, [and] lack of
pretension" as well as its anti-intellectualism and "faith in the
redemptive power of material goods." Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. |
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