Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Mass Market Paperback Ford: We Never Called Him Henry Book

ISBN: 0812594029

ISBN13: 9780812594027

Ford: We Never Called Him Henry

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$38.89
Almost Gone, Only 2 Left!

Book Overview

~~~Henry Ford helped shape America when he created the standardized car and produced it with assembly-line methods for the common man. In only 23 years, Ford's original investment of $28,000 returned... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Good job Mr. Bennett, I wish I had been there to watch it happen.

A very good book based on the thirty years or so Mr. Harry Bennett had immediate contact with the Great Henry Ford. Harry knew Mr. Ford like no other. When he says Mr. Ford was a supersticious man and would scarcely move on a Friday the 13th one has to believe it. Footnote: Superstition is the irrational belief that future events are influenced by specific behaviors, without having a causal relationship. Thanks Wikipedia...he apparently had a great belief in re-incarnation also. Harry's office was in the basement, but this was really Mr. Ford's Office also, as there was a secret door that they would both use. Henry Ford had a plush office on Mahagony Row but he was never there, he would be doing something like walking down the railroad tracks finding iron still in the railroad iron ore slag and ordering 700 men to pick it up by hand and re-cycle it because it still had iron in it. The greatest shock in the book, to me, was the fact that Henry Ford's Father was an orphan and never knew his Mother and Father. Henry spent a great deal of time and money trying to determine who they were. With the DNA studies available, maybe the family can now determine who they really are..... Henry Ford and the Ford Motor Company in 1927, at the end of the Model T were rolling a finished Model T out of the Factory at a rate of 1.6 Fords a minute, made over 15 million of them at a gross of 7 Billion dollars, not including the sales of the Fordson Tractor..... The book is one of those rare ones you can scarcely set aside, when you are away from it you wish you were there reading it. Mr. Harry Bennett, you did a wonderful job writing this book and letting the world see some of the idiosyncracies of one of the greatest men in History........what Henry's Company acomplished is amazing by any standard. The iron ore could be in the ground on Monday and someone be driving a new car, made from it, on Thursday. I received great pleasure from Mr. Bennetts efforts. EYE-OPENING James Dixon Graves Jr. Lone Star, Texas

Family folklore

I read this book in the mid '50s. I agree that a Henry Ford buff will find this interesting reading. But this book is interesting to me for another reason. My grandfather worked for Ford Motor for years, and then for the Henry Ford Museum until he retired about 1952. From time to time he would see Mr. Ford. He told us that the Ford family had been offended by this book and had bought up as many copies as it could lay it's hands on. If true, that could explain why it is so difficult to get copies of the original 1951 Gold Medal Book publication today.After the pages of his original copy fell out of their binding , he stacked the leaves, drilled holes thru the margin cover-to-cover, and bound them all together with two pieces of string. When he died (1958), his copy passed into my mother's hands. About four years ago, it came into mine. I was fortunate to stumble on another copy at a garage sale in the early '90s (for $.25). Also fortunately, it's binding is still pretty-much in tact. It's the only other copy that I've ever seen.

Void

Why hasn't anyone found me this book?

Good reading for the Ford Automobile history buff

Harry Bennett's story of his life as Henry Ford's right hand man. Bennett served as Henry Ford's assistant for many years - almost running Ford Motor Company at times. Hated by the majority of the Ford family and even by many Ford employees; nevertheless, Bennett seemed to have unequalled power within the organization. This is his account of his role in the automobile manufacturer's interesting history and struggle's with the Ford family. Written years after his retirement from Ford Motor Company. Interesting reading but keep in mind that this is Bennett's story and could be considered one-sided.
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured