Everitt Byron Forbes "Barney" Everitt was born in 1873 at
Ridgetown, Ontario, and learned wagon-building in
Chatham, Ontario. In the early 1890s he worked for carriage-maker Hugh Johnson in Detroit. In 1899 he started his own coachwork company, with orders from
Ransom Olds, and then
Henry Ford. In about 1904 his own first assembled car was the Wayne. The car model bearing his name was the
Everitt, 1909-1912.
Metzger William E. Metzger was born 1868 in
Peru, Illinois. He was one of the first car salesmen, a buyer and reseller and, in the late 1890s, established possibly the first United States automobile dealership, in Detroit. He was a key figure in the
Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers, and also promoted early races at
Grosse Pointe. In 1902 he became affiliated with the
Northern Motor Car Company and the same year helped organize
Cadillac before taking orders at the
New York Automobile Show in January 1903.
Flanders Walter E. Flanders was born March 4, 1871, in
Waterbury, Vermont. He was a machinist who started with servicing sewing machines during an apprenticeship at
Singer Corporation, followed by an association with
Thomas S. Walburn in general machining in
Cleveland, Ohio, in the late 1890s. An order came from Henry Ford in Detroit to the company for a thousand
crankshafts, and Ford was impressed by the response. Then in the early 1900s Flanders again worked with Walburn, this time for Ford at the
Ford Piquette Avenue Plant at the corner of Piquette and Beaubien Streets in Detroit. Flanders became manager of manufacturing at the plant, where he also worked with the two future vice-presidents in charge of manufacturing,
Peter E. Martin, and
Charles E. Sorensen. Flanders was replaced by those two when he resigned abruptly on 21 April 1908. Flanders' skill was in setting up and effecting timesaving procedures and methods at the plant, where engineers had developed the
Model T in late 1907, which then began production in 1908, and led eventually to invention of the new moving
assembly line to meet skyrocketing demand for the Model T in 1910. == Overview ==