Inscription
At this intersection stood the home in which Henry Ford was born on July 30, 1863. The farmhouse was owned by Ford’s parents, William and Mary Ford, and in 1944 it was moved to Greenfield Village. In a space of less than ten years at the beginning of this century, the founder of Ford Motor Company developed three separate and distinct concepts, any of which would have assured him an honored niche in history.
He designed and built the Model T Ford car, “the car that put the world on wheels.” He inaugurated the moving automotive assembly line and developed the process of mass production on which modern industry is based. By instituting a five-dollar wage for an eight-hour day, he promulgated a new economic concept that opened the door to mass distribution.
Henry Ford was also a pioneer in the field of aviation and in the development of the farm tractor.
Location
Sources
More markers in Wayne
David Dunbar Buick
Detroit, MI
David Dunbar Buick, for whom the Buick automobile is named, came to Detroit from Scotland with his parents in 1856 at age two.
The Landing of Cadillac
Detroit, MI
After departing Montreal June 5, 1701, Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac and his convoy of twenty-five canoes sailed down this river, and on...
Johnson's Tavern
Wayne, MI
In 1824 George M. Johnson purchased eight acres of land from the government and erected a log tavern at this location, a day’s journey...
First Jewish Religious Services
Detroit, MI
Near this site in 1850, a small group of German-Jewish immigrants gathered at the home of Isaac and Sarah Cozens and formed the Beth El...
Reverend John A. Lemke
Detroit, MI
John A. Lemke, the son of one of the founders of Detroit’s first Polish Roman Catholic parish, was born in Detroit in 1866.
