HENRY FORD’S STORY OF SUCCESS: How Purpose, Vision & Perseverance Built an Industrial Empire - Henry Ford (1917) cover art

HENRY FORD’S STORY OF SUCCESS: How Purpose, Vision & Perseverance Built an Industrial Empire - Henry Ford (1917)

HENRY FORD’S STORY OF SUCCESS: How Purpose, Vision & Perseverance Built an Industrial Empire - Henry Ford (1917)

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(00:00:00) HENRY FORD’S OWN STORY (00:04:50) 1. One Summer’s Day (00:12:32) 2. Mending a Watch (00:21:10) 3. The First Job (00:28:21) 4. An Exacting Routine (00:36:03) 5. Getting the Machine Idea (00:44:38) 6. Back to the Farm (00:53:22) 7. The Road to Hymen (01:01:10) 8. Making a Farm Efficient (01:08:45) 9. The Lure of the Machine Shops (01:15:19) 10. “Why Not Use Gasoline?” (01:22:59) 11. Back to Detroit (01:29:37) 12. Learning About Electricity (01:36:20) 13. Eight Hours, but Not for Himself (01:43:51) 14. Struggling with the First Car (01:51:34) 15. A Ride in the Rain (01:59:09) 16. Enter Coffee Jim (02:06:45) 17. Another Eight Years (02:13:58) 18. Winning a Race (02:22:08) 19. Raising Capital (02:29:50) 20. Clinging to a Principle (02:37:50) 21. Early Manufacturing Trials (02:47:01) 22. Automobiles for the Masses (02:54:21) 23. Fighting the Seldon Patent (03:02:01) 24. “The Greatest Good to the Greatest Number" (03:09:46) 25. Five Dollars a Day Minimum (03:18:24) 26. Making It Pay (03:27:05) 27. The Importance of a Job (03:34:52) 28. A Great Educational Institution (03:42:24) 29. The European War (03:50:01) 30. The Best Preparedness HENRY FORD’S OWN STORY: How Purpose, Vision, and Perseverance Built an Industrial Empire - Henry Ford (1917).Henry Ford’s Own Story offers an authentic, firsthand account of the life, principles, and struggles of the man who turned the automobile from a curiosity into a necessity and reshaped modern industry. It traces his journey from a Michigan farm boy with a fascination for machinery to the founder of the Ford Motor Company — a man whose vision made cars affordable and industry humane. More than a simple autobiography, it is a chronicle of Ford’s ideals: hard work, self-reliance, efficiency, fair wages, and the belief that business must serve humanity:1. One Summer’s Day: The book opens in rural Michigan, where young Henry Ford’s curiosity awakens. Surrounded by fields and farm tools, he finds machinery more fascinating than crops or animals. He takes apart clocks and tools to understand their workings, displaying early traits of analysis, order, and a drive to make things better — qualities that would define his life.2. Mending a Watch: As a teenager, Ford gains a reputation as a skilled “watch repairer.” Without training, he dismantles and reassembles watches, learning precision and patience. This early mechanical work teaches him that every complex problem is simply a collection of smaller, solvable ones. The habit of breaking things down systematically becomes a lifelong method for solving industrial challenges.3. The First Job: Leaving the farm for Detroit, Ford begins work as a machinist’s apprentice. Long hours, modest pay, and strict routines give him a deep respect for craftsmanship. He learns endurance, punctuality, and detail — virtues that later shape his manufacturing philosophy. Each task, no matter how repetitive, becomes a lesson in mastery.4. An Exacting Routine: Ford learns to find meaning in routine. Instead of resenting repetitive work, he studies it for opportunities to improve. This mindset — making repetition efficient — becomes the seed of the assembly line. To Ford, efficiency is not just a technical matter, but a moral one: the duty to waste neither time nor energy.5. Getting the Machine Idea: Working in Detroit’s machine shops, Ford envisions the potential of mechanical power to transform labor. He experiments with small steam and gas engines, realizing that energy, properly harnessed, can serve as a great equalizer. Machines, he concludes, can uplift humanity when used for useful and affordable purposes.6. Back to the Farm: Ford returns to his father’s farm, applying his mechanical insights to agriculture. He rebuilds plows, improves tools, and introduces greater efficiency to daily work. These experiments show his belief that industry and farming are partners in civilization. The farm becomes his first real laboratory for invention.7. The Road to Hymen: Here, Ford’s personal life takes focus. He meets and marries Clara Bryant, whose faith in him never wavers through years of poverty and uncertainty. Their marriage becomes the emotional foundation for Ford’s later success — a partnership built on quiet trust and shared perseverance.8. Making a Farm Efficient: On the farm, Ford continues experimenting with machinery and work systems. His improvements reflect his conviction that mechanical thinking applies everywhere — from the field to the factory. These early insights would later inform his industrial organization and his belief in harmonizing man, machine, and nature.9. The Lure of the Machine Shops: The pull of innovation draws Ford back to Detroit. Immersed again in the hum of the machine shops, he meets engineers and thinkers whose enthusiasm for progress matches his own. The contrast between farm simplicity and urban industry fuels his lifelong mission to make technology serve human ...
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