Henry Ford
Henry Ford (1863 –1947) was a Michigan born American engineer, industrialist, business magnate, and philanthropist.
At first a farmer, an occupation that he detested, the mechanically talented Ford found a job as an engineer with the Edison Illuminating Company of Detroit. His subsequent friendship with Thomas Edison and other Michigan investors led to creation of the Ford Motor Company in 1903, and production of the pathbreaking Model T Ford in 1908. From that beginning Ford became one of the great manufacturing companies of American history.
His introduction of the Model T revolutionized transportation and American industry. As the Ford Motor Company owner, he became one of the richest and best-known people in the world. He is credited with “Fordism”: mass production of inexpensive goods coupled with high wages for workers. Ford had a global vision, with consumerism as the key to peace. His intense commitment to systematically lowering costs resulted in many technical and business innovations, including a franchise system that put dealerships throughout North America and major cities on six continents. Ford left most of his vast wealth to the Ford Foundation and arranged for his family to permanently control it.
Henry Ford believed that centralized industrial development contributed to the creation of increasingly expensive, normless, and unlivable cities where the virtues of nineteenth-century life he had known (that mix of farming, residential, and commercial influences in small-town America) were threatened with extinction. Simultaneously, rural America’s need for farm workers decreased, and some of those remaining on the land became underemployed due to rising mechanical efficiencies in agriculture. In Ford’s mind, the problem was how to get people the money to buy some of the new necessities of life small-scale farming could not provide, without forcing them off the land and into unhealthy cities. His solution involved taking the factory to the country and allowing rural people to continue part-time farming, while earning decent wages in Ford’s 52 decentralized plants.
In his doctoral dissertation (An Elusive Balance: The Small Community in Mass Society 1940-1960, Iowa State U. 1996) Philip Jeffrey Nelson wrote “Ford’s diagnosis of American society bore striking similarities to the perceptions of government reformers like M. L. Wilson and Rexford Tugwell. But Ford’s prescription for its ills diverged from their plans, the main difference involving Ford’s placement of the decentralized factory at the center of his reform scheme. This was the only ‘planning’ necessary, as the community would naturally take its strength from the synthesis of agriculture and industry. Ford proclaimed that ‘With one foot on the land and one foot in industry, America is safe.’ As Ford referred to them, the actual plan of ‘village industries’ began to take shape in 1916 around dispersed, small-scale factories set in small towns and hamlets in the southeastern Michigan countryside. Ford believed that his interest and efforts in decentralization were part of a growing national movement toward the establishment of increasing numbers of small cities, towns, and villages. While not rejecting completely large cities and large factory complexes (his River Rouge plant in Detroit was the largest factory in the world at the time) he reasoned that there need not be two distinct types of life in America, rural and urban-industrial, both of which suffered from a lack of what the other had. Rural areas were still the repositories of America’s virtues and builders of character, while wanting for economic stability and adequate cash incomes. Urban areas seemed to provide the opportunities for abundant jobs and economic growth, but were the scene of social disorder, anomie, and dissolution. His revitalization program spoke to rural areas where he observed that the greatest strides toward modernism could be most easily accomplished. Rural dwellers could have access to the modem conveniences of urban life and leave behind much of the drudgery, cultural isolation, and poverty of farm life.”
Ford was no theorist or scholar of decentralism (or anything else), but came to embrace decentralization as a significant technique in manufacturing. Nelson reports that “the Ford Motor Company even used the slogan “1st to Demonstrate True Decentralization” in their ad copies in large circulation weeklies during the mid-1940. Ford explained his thinking in his book, with Samuel Crowther, Today and Tomorrow (Garden City NY: Doubleday, 1926), from which the following excerpts are taken.