The Roaring Twenties Automobile Travel/Creation of US Federal Highways/Route 66 Ford Company Henry Ford Model T Highways Route 66
Ford Motor Company Founded in Highland Park, Michigan June 16, 1903 by Henry Ford Started out by producing the model A by small teams Inventor of the assembly line and Fordism. In the 1920s almost 9 out of 10 cars in the wolrd were Fords. Todays revenue for the Ford Company is Billion Dollars.
Henry Ford 30. Juli 1863 in Wayne County, Michigan, USA; † 7. April 1947 in Dearborn, Michigan an apprentice machinist with James F. Flower & Bros. and later with the Detroit Dry Dock Co marriage to Clara Bryant in 1888 Became an engineer for Edison Illuminating Company and started working with gasoline motors Founded the Detroit Automobile Company but quickly went bancrupt Founded Ford Motor Company and employed workers for $5 a day, wich was almost twice as much as any competitor. Critiziced for Anti semitism in his book „The International Jew“
„I will build a motor cars for the great multitude. It will be so low in priec that no man making a good salary will be unable to own one - and enjoy with his family the blessing of hours of pleasures in God‘s greatest open spaces.“ - Henry Ford
Ford Model T Aka Tin Lizzie and the Flivver Designers: Childe Harold Wills, Joseph A. Galamb and Eugene Farkas Cost: $825 in 1908 to $300 in 1920s Engine: 77 in³4 cylinder motor 20 hp (15 kW) for a top speed of 45 mph Innovations: steering wheel on the left and enclosed engine and gears made very easy to operate Produced: 15 million By 1918, half of all cars in America were Model T's To promote the car, Ford & Guggenheim organized a cross country race, that the Model T easily won. First to Target a females as a potential market
Herny Ford and his car
National Highway System comprises approximately 160,000 miles
U.S. Route 66 The Main Street of America, The Mother Road Planned by Cyrus Avery opened 1926, though signs did not go up until the following year. originally ran from Chicago, Illinois through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California before ending at Los Angeles for a total of 2,448 miles First highway to be completly paved major path of the migrants who went west Decommissioned on June 27, 1985
Sources Wheels for the World, Douglas Brinkley, Penguine Books,