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Dearborn, Michigan. Karl Westerberg and his son Eric punching the time clock at the entrance to the Ford Motor Company where Eric is an expert tool and die maker and his father is foreman of the rough stock division of the Johansson gauge division

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Dearborn, Michigan. Karl Westerberg and his son Eric punching the time clock at the entrance to the Ford Motor Company where Eric is an expert tool and die maker and his father is foreman of the rough stock division of the Johansson gauge division

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Summary

Public domain photograph of industrial architecture, factory building, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

Henry Ford built his first automobile, which he called a quadricycle, at his home in Detroit in 1896. His first company called Detroit Automobile Company, founded in 1899 but failed soon. On June 16, 1903, the Ford Motor Company was incorporated. During its early years, the company produced a range of vehicles designated, chronologically, from the Ford Model A (1903) to the Model K and Model S of 1907. In 1908, Henry Ford introduced the Model T. By 1913, Ford introduced the world's first moving assembly line that year, which reduced chassis assembly time from 12 1⁄2 hours in October to 2 hours 40 minutes (and ultimately 1 hour 33 minutes), and boosted annual output to 202,667 units that year. By 1920, production exceeds one million a year. Turnover of workers was very high. In January 1914, Ford solved the problem by doubling pay to $5 a day, cutting shifts from nine hours to an eight-hour day. It increased sales: a line worker could buy a T with less than four months' pay, and instituting hiring practices that identified the best workers, including disabled people, considered unemployable by other firms. Employee turnover plunged, productivity soared, and with it, the cost per vehicle plummeted. Ford cut prices again and again and invented the system of franchised dealers who were loyal to his brand name. Wall Street had criticized Ford's generous labor practices when he began paying workers enough to buy the products they made.

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Date

01/01/1942
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Contributors

Rothstein, Arthur, 1915-1985, photographer
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Location

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Source

Library of Congress
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Copyright info

No known restrictions. For information, see U.S. Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Black & White Photographs http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/071_fsab.html

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