THE FORD CAR FACTS
1863 — Birth of Henry Ford
1896 — Runs Quadricycle experimental car on Detroit
streets
1899 — Persuades investors to underwrite Detroit Auto
Co., quits Detroit Edison; venture fails
1901 — Jobless, moves his wife and son back into his
father's home on Grand Boulevard in Detroit; Ford, driving
own car, beats Alexander Winton in automobile race, attracts
investors who form Henry Ford Co.
1902 — Ford withdraws, company becomes Cadillac
1903 — Ford Motor Co. founded by Malcomson group; Model
A produced in rented Mack Ave. plant
1904 — Company builds Piquette Ave. plant at corner
of Beaubien; still standing and being restored; Ford of Canada
chartered in Windsor, Ontario
1906 — Ford overtakes Olds, Buick and Cadillac combined
to become No.1 auto maker in U.S., Henry Ford becomes company
president and majority owner
1908 — Introduction of legendary Ford Model T
1909 — Offer from Billy Durant to buy out Ford and
fold it into nascent General Motors fails when NY bankers
won't provide the cash up front Henry demands
1910 — Highland Park plant opens, assembly of Model
T transferred from Piquette, which closes
1911 — First overseas assembly plant in Manchester,
England; Ford wins Selden patent suit
1913 — Moving assembly line inaugurated at Highland
Park
1914 — Announcement of $5 workday at Ford
1915 — Purchase of land for Rouge plant in Dearborn;
1-millionth Ford built
1918 — Henry Ford loses Senate race as Democrat
1919 — Henry Ford buys out minority stockholders
1921 — 5-millionth Ford built
1922 — Ford Motor Co. acquires Lincoln Motor Co.
1925 — First pickup introduced; Ford of Germany established
1927 — Model T production ends with 15-millionth built;
Model A introduced after 6-month shutdown for retooling
1932 — Introduction of Ford V-8 and English Ford Model
Y
1933 — Ford falls to third place behind GM and Chrysler
1935 — Lincoln-Zephyr introduced, 1st medium-priced
Ford
1937 — 25-Millionth Ford built
1938 — '39 Mercury introduced as 2nd medium-price entry
1939 — Edsel Ford impresses friends with custom-built
Lincoln-Zephyr Continental, production begins
1941 — War production begins with quarter-ton GPs at
Dearborn and B-24 bombers at Willow Run (8,485 are built by
war's end in 1945); First UAW contract signed
1943 — Death of Edsel Ford, Henry Ford elected president,
Henry Ford II released from Navy to help run company
1945 — Civilian production resumes, Henry Ford II elected
president
1946 — Henry Ford II begins restructuring company with
former GM executives under Ernest Breech, “Whiz Kids”
from Army Air Corps and college graduate trainees
1947 — Death of Henry Ford
1948 — Introduction of 1949-models, company's first
all-new post-war cars
1950 — Ford overtakes Chrysler to regain 2nd place
1954 — Introduction of '55 Thunderbird
1955 — Introduction of '56 Continental Mark II
1956 — Sale of Ford Motor Co. common stock begins;
new Central Office Building opened (later World Headquarters
and now Henry Ford II World Center) in Dearborn
1957 — Introduction of '58 Edsel
1958 — Late introduction of 4-seat '58 Thunderbird
1959 — 50-millionth car, a Ford Galaxie; Edsel discontinued
1960 — Introduction of '60 1/2 Mercury Comet “luxury
compact,” '61 Econoline “compact truck”;
Henry Ford II elected chairman of the board, replacing retiring
Breech, Robert McNamara becomes president but resigns to join
Kennedy Administration as Secretary of Defense
1962 — “intermediate” Ford Fairlane and
Mercury Meteor introduced; Ford acquires Philco Corp.
1964 — Introduction of Mustang “pony car”
1965 — Introduction of Ford Transit van in Europe,
first transnational European design; Introduction of '66 Bronco
in U.S., first Ford sport/utility vehicle
1967 — Ford of Europe formed
1968 — Semon Knudsen hired from General Motors as president
1969 — Company reorganized with Henry Ford II as chairman,
Lee Iacocca as president of Ford North America Automotive
Operations
1970 — Formation of Ford Motor Land Development Co.;
Introduction of sub-compact '71 Ford Pinto; Lee Iacocca becomes
president
1972 — Henry Ford II announces plan for Renaissance
Center on Detroit waterfront
1973 — Introduction of “downsized” '74
Mustang II
1976 — Introduction of sub-compact front-wheel-drive
(FWD) Ford Fiesta in Europe
1977 — Introduction of “Fox” chassis compact
cars
1978 — Introduction of “Panther” chassis
large body-on-frame cars, still basis of Ford Crown Victoria,
Mercury Grand Marquis and Lincoln Town Car; Phillip Caldwell
named president, replacing Lee Iacocca, fired by Henry Ford
II; 150-millionth Ford vehicle worldwide is built
1979 — Henry Ford II retires as CEO, succeeded by Phillip
Caldwell; Ford obtains initial 25% interest in Toyo Kogyo
of Japan, later renamed Mazda
1980 — Phillip Caldwell named board chairman and CEO
with Donald Petersen as president and chief operating officer;
Introduction of '81-model Ford Escort “world car”
1982 — Introduction of '83 Ranger compact pickup; Henry
Ford II retires as company officer and employee; Introduction
of first “jelly-bean” styled cars, ‘83 Thunderbird
and Mercury Cougar
1985 — Donald Petersen succeeds Caldwell as chairman
and Harold Poling elected president; Introduction of FWD midsize
'86 Ford Taurus and Mercury Sable
1987 — Death of Henry Ford II; Introduction of '88
Lincoln Continental; Hertz Corp. acquired by Ford and a partnership
1988 — Edsel Ford II and William Clay Ford Jr. join
William Clay Ford as family members on board of directors
1989 — Ford sells Rouge steel, acquires financial service
company The Associates and Jaguar Cars
1990 — Harold Poling succeeds Petersen as chairman
and Philip Benton Jr. elected president; Introduction of '91
Ford Explorer SUV
1992 — Introduction of Mercury Villager minivan, joint
venture with Nissan
1993 — Introduction in Europe of Ford Mondeo “world
car”; Alex Trotman succeeds Poling as chairman and CEO
1994 — Introduction of '94 Ford Windstar minivan
1996 — 250-millionth Ford vehicle built
1997 — Ford sells heavy-truck business to Freightliner;
Introduction of Lincoln Navigator SUV;
1998 — Lincoln-Mercury headquarters moved to Irvine,
CA; Edsel Ford II resigns as president of Ford Credit; Introduction
in Europe of Focus compact car
1999 — Bill Ford Jr. becomes chairman, replacing retiring
Trotman, and Jacques Nasser becomes president and CEO; Acquisition
of Volvo Cars and TH!NK electric car
2000 — Introduction of Lincoln LS and Jaguar S-Type
models; Acquisition of Land Rover from BMW; Visteon Corp.
parts-making organization spun off
2001 — Nasser resigns as president, replaced by Nick
Scheele; Bill Ford Jr. assumes active management role as CEO,
fourth generation of the founding Ford family; Introduction
of retro 2-seat Ford Thunderbird
2002 — New design unveiled for '04 Mustang, the last
surviving “pony car”
2003 — F-150 redesigned; Rouge plant overhaul nears
completion en route to 2004 startup with multi-platform capability
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