20th century , 1919 The
Henry Ford Company was Henry Ford's first attempt at a car manufacturing company and was established on November 3, 1901. This became the
Cadillac Motor Company on August 22, 1902, after Ford left with the rights to his name. In 1903, the Ford Motor Company was launched in a converted factory, with $28,000, , in cash from twelve investors, most notably
John and
Horace Dodge, who later founded the
Dodge Brothers Motor Vehicle Company. The first president was not Ford, but local banker
John S. Gray, who was chosen in order to assuage investors' fears that Ford would leave the new company the way he had left its predecessor. During its early years, the company produced just a few cars a day at
its factory on Mack Avenue and later at its
factory on Piquette Avenue in
Detroit, Michigan. Groups of two or three men worked on each car, assembling it from parts made mostly by supplier companies contracting for Ford. Within a decade the company led the world in the expansion and refinement of the
assembly line concept, and Ford soon brought much of the part production in-house, via
vertical integration. Henry Ford was 39 years old when he founded the Ford Motor Company, which became one of the world's largest and most profitable companies. It has been in continuous family control for over 100 years, and is one of the largest family-controlled companies in the world. The first gasoline-powered
automobile was created in 1885 by the
German inventor
Karl Benz, with his
Benz Patent-Motorwagen. More efficient production methods were needed to make automobiles affordable for
middle class people; Ford contributed to this effort through a variety of innovations, including the introduction of the first moving
assembly line in 1913 at the Ford
factory in Highland Park. , introduced in 1908, photographed in
Salt Lake City Between 1903 and 1908, Ford produced the Models
A, B, C, F, K, N, R, and S. Hundreds or a few thousand of most of these were sold per year. In 1908, Ford introduced the mass-produced
Model T, which totaled millions sold over nearly 20 years. In 1927, Ford replaced the T with the
Model A, the first production car with
laminated safety glass in the windshield. Ford launched the
first low-priced car with a V8 engine in 1932. truck (based on the Model A) displayed in
Kilgore, Texas In an attempt to compete with General Motors' mid-priced Pontiac, Oldsmobile, and Buick, Ford created the Mercury in 1939 as a higher-priced companion car to Ford. Henry Ford purchased the Lincoln Motor Company in 1922, in order to compete with such brands as Cadillac and Packard for the luxury segment of the automobile market. In 1929, Ford was contracted by the government of the
Soviet Union to set up the
Gorky Automobile Plant in Russia initially producing Ford Model A and AAs, thereby playing an important role in the
industrialization of that country and consequently the Soviet war effort during
World War II. To that end, in 1944, Stalin wrote a letter to the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce stating that Henry Ford was "one of the world's greatest industrialists". bombers being mass-produced at Ford's
Willow Run assembly plant, 1944 During World War II, the
United States Department of War picked Ford to mass-produce the
Consolidated B-24 Liberator bomber at its Willow Run assembly plant.
Ford Werke and
Ford SAF, Ford's subsidiaries in Germany and France, respectively, produced military vehicles and other equipment for
Nazi Germany's
war effort. Some of Ford's operations in Germany at the time were run
using forced labor. The creation of a scientific laboratory in Dearborn, Michigan, in 1951, doing unfettered basic research, led to Ford's involvement in
superconductivity research. In 1964, Ford Research Labs made a key breakthrough with the invention of a superconducting quantum interference device or
SQUID. Ford offered
the Lifeguard safety package from 1956, which included such innovations as a standard deep-dish steering wheel, optional front, and, for the first time in a car, rear seatbelts, and an optional padded dash. Ford introduced child-proof door locks into its products in 1957, and, in the same year, offered the first retractable hardtop on a mass-produced six-seater car. In late 1955, Ford established the Continental division as a separate luxury car division. This division was responsible for the manufacture and sale of the famous
Continental Mark II. At the same time, the
Edsel division was created to design and market that car starting with the 1958 model year. Due to limited sales of the Continental and the Edsel disaster, Ford merged Mercury, Edsel, and Lincoln into "M-E-L", which reverted to "Lincoln-Mercury" after Edsel's November 1959 demise. In 1965, Ford introduced the seat belt reminder light. With the 1980s, Ford introduced several highly successful vehicles around the world. During the 1980s, Ford began using the advertising slogan, "Have you driven a Ford, lately?" to introduce new customers to its brand and make its vehicles appear more modern. In 1990 and 1994, respectively, Ford also acquired
Jaguar Cars and
Aston Martin. During the mid-to-late 1990s, Ford continued to sell large numbers of vehicles, in a booming
American economy with a soaring stock market and low fuel prices. With the dawn of the new century, legacy
health care costs, higher fuel prices, and a faltering economy led to falling market shares, declining sales, and diminished profit margins. Most of the corporate profits came from financing consumer automobile loans through
Ford Motor Credit Company.
21st century , great-grandson of Henry Ford, serves as the
executive chairman at the board of Ford Motor Company.
William Clay Ford Jr., great-grandson of Henry Ford (better known as "Bill"), was appointed executive chairman in 1998, and also became chief executive officer of the company in 2001, with the departure of
Jacques Nasser, becoming the first member of the Ford family to head the company since the retirement of his uncle,
Henry Ford II, in 1982. Ford sold motorsport engineering company
Cosworth to
Gerald Forsythe and
Kevin Kalkhoven in 2004, the start of a decrease in Ford's motorsport involvement. Upon the retirement of president and chief operations officer Jim Padilla in April 2006, Bill Ford assumed his roles as well. Five months later, in September, Ford named
Alan Mulally as president and CEO, with Ford continuing as executive chairman. By 2005, both Ford and
GM's corporate bonds had been downgraded to junk status as a result of high U.S. health care costs for an
aging workforce, soaring gasoline prices, eroding market share, and an overdependence on declining
SUV sales. Profit margins decreased on large vehicles due to increased "incentives" (in the form of rebates or low-interest financing) to offset declining demand. In the latter half of 2005, Chairman Bill Ford asked newly appointed Ford Americas Division President
Mark Fields to develop a plan to return the company to profitability. Fields previewed the plan, named
The Way Forward, at the board meeting of the company on December 7, 2005, and it was unveiled to the public on January 23, 2006. "The Way Forward" included resizing the company to match market realities, dropping some unprofitable and inefficient models, consolidating production lines, closing 14 factories and cutting 30,000 jobs. Ford moved to introduce a range of new vehicles, including "
Crossover SUVs" built on
unibody car platforms, rather than more
body-on-frame chassis. In developing the hybrid electric powertrain technologies for the
Ford Escape Hybrid SUV, the company licensed similar Toyota hybrid technologies in order to avoid patent infringements. Ford announced that it would team up with electricity supply company
Southern California Edison (SCE) to examine the future of
plug-in hybrids in terms of how home and vehicle energy systems will work with the electrical grid. Under the multimillion-dollar, multi-year project, Ford is to convert a demonstration fleet of
Ford Escape Hybrids into plug-in hybrids, and SCE is to evaluate how the vehicles might interact with the home and the utility's electrical grid. Some of the vehicles are to be evaluated "in typical customer settings", according to Ford. In December 2006, the company raised its borrowing capacity to about $25 billion, placing substantially all corporate assets as collateral. Chairman Bill Ford has stated that "bankruptcy is not an option". Ford and the
United Auto Workers, representing approximately 46,000 hourly workers in North America, agreed to a historic contract settlement in November 2007 giving the company a substantial break in terms of its ongoing retiree health care costs and other economic issues. The agreement included the establishment of a company-funded, independently run
Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association (VEBA) trust to shift the burden of retiree health care from the company's books, thereby improving its balance sheet. This arrangement took effect on January 1, 2010. As a sign of its currently strong cash position, Ford contributed its entire current liability (estimated at as of December 31, 2009) to the VEBA in cash, and also pre-paid of its future liabilities to the fund. The agreement also gave hourly workers the job security they were seeking by having the company commit to substantial investments in most of its factories. The automaker reported the largest annual loss in company history in 2006 of $12.7 billion, and estimated that it would not return to profitability until 2009. However, Ford surprised
Wall Street in the second quarter of 2007 by posting a $750 million profit. Despite the gains, the company finished the year with a $2.7 billion loss, largely attributed to finance restructuring at
Volvo. On June 2, 2008, Ford sold its Jaguar and Land Rover operations to
Tata Motors for $2.3 billion. in 2008 which was a critical time for the automaker due to the
2008–2010 automotive industry crisis During congressional hearings held in November 2008 at Washington D.C., Ford's Alan Mulally stated that "We at Ford are hopeful that we have enough liquidity. But we also must prepare ourselves for the prospect of further deteriorating economic conditions". He went on to state that "The collapse of one of our competitors would have a severe impact on Ford" and that Ford Motor Company supported both Chrysler and General Motors in their search for government bridge loans during the
2008–2010 automotive industry crisis. Together, the three companies presented action plans for the sustainability of the industry. Mulally stated that "In addition to our plan, we are also here today to request support for the industry. In the near-term, Ford does not require access to a government bridge loan. However, we request a credit line of $9 billion as a critical backstop or safeguard against worsening conditions as we drive transformational change in our company". GM and Chrysler received government loans and financing through
T.A.R.P. legislation funding provisions. On December 19, the cost of
credit default swaps to insure the debt of Ford was 68 percent of the sum insured for five years, in addition to annual payments of 5 percent. That meant $6.8 million paid upfront to insure $10 million in debt, in addition to payments of $500,000 per year. In January 2009, Ford reported a $14.6 billion loss in the preceding year, a record for the company. The company retained sufficient liquidity to fund its operations. Through April 2009, Ford's strategy of
debt-for-equity exchanges erased $9.9 billion in liabilities (28% of its total) in order to leverage its cash position. These actions yielded Ford a $2.7 billion profit in fiscal year 2009, the company's first full-year profit in four years. In 2012, Ford's corporate bonds were upgraded from junk to investment grade again, citing sustainable, lasting improvements. On October 29, 2012, Ford announced the sale of its climate control components business, its last remaining automotive components operation, to Detroit Thermal Systems LLC for an undisclosed price. On November 1, 2012, Ford announced that
CEO Alan Mulally would stay with the company until 2014. Ford also named Mark Fields, its president of operations in the Americas, as its new chief operating officer Mulally was paid a compensation of over $174 million in his previous seven years at Ford since 2006. The generous amount has been a sore point for some workers of the company. In April 2016, Ford announced a plan to modernize its Dearborn engineering and headquarters campuses through a ten-year building project. The result would see the number of Ford employees working in these areas doubling, to 24,000. During construction, some 2000 of the employees were relocated out of the campus to a temporary location in a disused section of the local shopping mall. Facilities would also be altered to allow ride-sharing and electric and self-driving vehicles. Estimates of the construction cost were $1.2 billion. was purchased by Ford Motor Company in May 2018 and is expected to undergo a significant four-year renovation. On January 3, 2017, Ford
CEO Mark Fields announced that in a "vote of confidence" because of the pro-business climate being fostered in part by
President-elect Donald Trump, Ford had canceled plans to invest $1.6 billion in a new plant in Mexico to manufacture the
Ford Focus; instead, the company would invest $700 million in
Michigan, which it planned to use to create 700 new jobs. The Focus would now be manufactured in the existing plant in Mexico. Also in 2017, Ford began development of a new mixed-use urban campus in
the Corktown neighborhood of Detroit, with its purchase, renovation, and occupation of The Factory at Michigan and Rosa Parks. The new site was expected to have a major focus on the development of
autonomous vehicle and
electric vehicle technology. Ford later began buying up other parcels of land in Corktown including a very high-profile purchase of
Michigan Central Station which is planned to become the hub of its Corktown campus, and the adjacent
Roosevelt Warehouse. Ford expects to move 2,500 of its employees, roughly 5 percent of its southeast Michigan workforce, to the campus with space for an additional 2,500 entrepreneurs, technology companies and partners. Bill Ford envisioned the first-floor concourse of the train station to be a public gathering place with retail outlets and restaurants. In February 2017, Ford Motor Co. acquired majority ownership of
Argo AI, a self-driving car startup. In May 2017, Ford announced cuts to its global workforce amid efforts to address the company's declining share price and to improve profits. The company is targeting $3 billion in cost reduction and a nearly 10% reduction in the salaried workforce in Asia and North America to enhance earnings in 2018. Jim Hackett was announced to replace Mark Fields as CEO of Ford Motor. Mr. Hackett most recently oversaw the formation of Ford Smart Mobility, a unit responsible for experimenting with car-sharing programs, self-driving ventures and other programs aimed at helping Ford better compete with
Uber,
Alphabet Inc. and other tech giants looking to edge in on the auto industry. On April 25, 2018, Ford announced that it would discontinue passenger cars in the North American market in the next four years, except for the Mustang, due to declining demand and profitability. The Focus Active, a crossover SUV based on the newly unveiled fourth-generation Focus, was also intended to be marketed in the United States. Due to the vehicle being manufactured in China, Ford later announced that it would not release the Focus Active in the United States, due to
tariffs imposed by the Trump administration on Chinese exports. In March 2020, the Detroit
United Auto Workers union announced that after discussion with the leaders of
General Motors, Ford, and
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, the carmakers would partially shut down factories on a "rotating" basis to mitigate the
COVID-19 pandemic. On March 24, representatives of Ford announced that production in the US, Canada, and Mexico would not resume on March 30 as originally planned, amid the further coronavirus pandemic spread. In the first quarter of 2020, Ford's sales dropped by 15%, entailing the loss of $2 billion. With the change in the demand for the sport vehicles, on January 6, 2021, Ford reported a sales fall of 9.8% in the fourth quarter, selling 542,749 vehicles, compared to 601,862 in 2019. In April 2021, Ford said that it would provide COVID-19 vaccines for its employees, who were to obtain them at the company; at the beginning the vaccination program would be in southeast Michigan, Missouri and Ohio, but it was to be expanded later on to other locations. In May 2021, Ford announced a battery joint venture,
BlueOval SK, with
SK Innovation in North America. In September 2021, Ford entered a partnership with self-driving startup
Argo AI and American multinational retail corporation
Walmart, and introduced a multi-city service for Walmart customers to have their online orders of groceries delivered to their homes by Ford's self-driving test vehicles with Argo's self-driving system. In March 2022, Ford announced that it would restructure the company into three separate divisions. Ford Model E is to focus on electric vehicles; Ford Blue is to focus on internal combustion vehicles; and the existing commercial division is to be rebranded as Ford Pro, to focus on vehicle distribution and service. In February 2023, Ford announced that it was going to cut 3,800 jobs across Europe, with the job cuts mainly focusing on its German and British workforce. Ford will be cutting 2,300 jobs from Germany, 1,300 from the United Kingdom, and an additional 200 jobs in the rest of Europe, according to the head of Ford Germany, Martin Sander. The cuts will mainly be done to the company's engineers. Ford also announced during the year that its electric vehicle business had lost $3 billion before taxes over the past two years and will lose a similar amount in 2023 as the company looks to significantly invest in Electric Technology. The Ford Model E is expected to be profitable by 2026. In April 2023, United Kingdom ministers approved Ford's
BlueCruise technology. Because of this assisted driving technology, Ford drivers can now legally take their hands off the wheel on certain roads. Its top speed is . BlueCruise uses sensors and cameras to regulate the car's speed and to keep track of speed limits and road signs. It also monitors and keeps a safe distance from other vehicles. It also comes equipped with an eye-tracking system. If the driver stops looking at the road then the car will gradually reduce its speed. This technology will initially be offered in Ford's 2023 model of the electric Mustang Mach-E SUV. According to Thatcham Research, an automotive research company, this model is not a self-driving car. It is classified as a level 2 or partial automation assistance system. This means that technology controls two or more driving aspects but still requires human driver control in cases of emergencies. The driver is still legally responsible for accidents. In August 2024
Pennsylvania State Police filed charges against a driver that killed two men while using BlueCruise. In November 2024, Ford announced that it would cut 800 jobs in the UK and 2,900 in Germany to try to reduce costs. In September 2025, Ford announced the relocation of its headquarters from the
Henry Ford II World Center, commonly known as the "Glass House," to a new facility in Dearborn. The new
Ford World Headquarters opened on November 16, 2025, with all operations expected to relocate by mid-2026, after which the Glass House is slated to be demolished. In December 2025, Ford announced write-downs totaling $19.5 billion on its investments in
electric mobility. Originally, nearly half of all vehicles sold were supposed to be hybrids or electric cars by 2030. However, as part of the
second Trump administration’s cuts to subsidies, several planned electric models were scrapped in order to focus on hybrid and internal combustion engine vehicles.
Logo history ==Corporate affairs==