Why is Henry Ford a giant? Because he put the world on wheels. Henry Ford did not invent the motor car, nor for all the claims did he invent the assembly line or mass production. But more than anyone before or since he is remembered as the man who almost singlehandedly took an expensive contraption of doubtful utility and recast it as a machine which in a real and profound sense changed the world forever. In an industry with many giants –André Citroen, Louis Renault and Giovanni Agnelli of Fiat – Henry Ford stands tallest as the greatest ever motor mogul. A Michigan farmer's son who became a dollar billionaire, a ruthlessly single-minded autocrat who became a folk hero, a pacifist who went on to inspire Adolf Hitler - he was a boss who paid his workers twice as much as his competitors yet waged an unrelenting war on unions and badly abused the power he had worked so hard to attain. David Long has been an author and journalist for thirty years, and has regularly appeared in The Times, Sunday Times and many magazines, here and abroad. He is a celebrated author of over twenty titles and has ghostwritten many more.
The Hats that Made Britain : A History of the Nation Through its Headwear
David Long
bookLondon Murders : In the Footsteps of the Capital's Killers
David Long
bookBerättelser ur verkligheten : extrem överlevnad
David Long
bookA History of London in 50 Lives
David Long
bookHenry Ford: pocket GIANTS
David Long
bookProtect and Keep : The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II
David Long, Gavin Whitelaw
bookLondon's 100 Strangest Places : London's 100 Strangest Places
David Long
bookLondon's Secret Square Mile : The Secret Alleys, Courts & Yards of London's Square Mile
David Long
bookLondon's 100 Most Extraordinary Buildings : London's 100 Most Extraordinary Buildings
David Long
bookBeyond the Gatehouse : The Eccentric Lives of England's Aristocracy
David Long
bookThe Little Book of the London Underground
David Long
bookThe Little Book of London
David Long
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