Starting the Real Business • 35
nothing could go too fast for him. He wired to Salt Lake City and on came
a professional bicycle rider named Barney Oldfield. He had never driven a
motor car, but he liked the idea of trying it. He said he would try anything
once.
It took us only a week to teach him how to drive. The man did not know
what fear was. All that he had to learn was how to control the monster.
Controlling the fastest car of to-day was nothing as compared to controlling
that car. The steering wheel had not yet been thought of. All the previous cars
that I had built simply had tillers. On this one I put a two-handed tiller, for
holding the car in line required all the strength of a strong man. The race for
which we were working was at three miles on the Grosse Point track. We kept
our cars as a dark horse. We left the predictions to the others. The tracks then
were not scientifically banked. It was not known how much speed a motor car
could develop. No one knew better than Oldfield what the turns meant and
as he took his seat, while I was cranking the car for the start, he remarked
cheerily: “Well, this chariot may kill me, but they will say afterward that I
was going like hell when she took me over the bank.”
And he did go. … He never dared to look around. He did not shut off on
the curves. He simply let that car go—and go it did. He was about half a mile
ahead of the next man at the end of the race!
The “999” did what it was intended to do: It advertised the fact that I
could build a fast motorcar. A week after the race I formed the Ford Motor
Company. I was vice-president, designer, master mechanic, superintendent,
and general manager. The capitalization of the company was one hundred
thousand dollars, and of this I owned 25 1/2 per cent. The total amount sub-
scribed in cash was about twenty-eight thousand dollars—which is the only
money that the company has ever received for the capital fund from other
than operations. In the beginning I thought that it was possible, notwith-
standing my former experience, to go forward with a company in which I
owned less than the controlling share. I very shortly found I had to have
control and therefore in 1906, with funds that I had earned in the company, I
bought enough stock to bring my holdings up to 51 per cent, and a little later
bought enough more to give me 58-1/2 per cent. The new equipment and the
whole progress of the company have always been financed out of earnings.
In 1919 my son Edsel purchased the remaining 41-1/2 per cent of the stock
because certain of the minority stockholders disagreed with my policies. For
these shares he paid at the rate of $12,500 for each $100 par and in all paid
about seventy-five millions [sic].
* * *
Sorensen and Williamson (1956, p. 166) report, however, that six stock-
holders who invested $33,100 in 1903 were bought out for $105 million,
36 •
The Expanded and Annotated My Life and Work
or $3,172 on the dollar. The exact
return varied by stockholder, with the
Dodge brothers, John Anderson, and Horace Rackham taking $2,500 on
the dollar, while James Couzens held out for substantially more; $2,500
would come to an annual compounded gain of 63%, but even the figure
shown above, $125 on the dollar, comes to a 35.2% annual compound gain.
This does not include the dividend payouts along the way.
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