Source: My Forty Years with Ford, 1956, p. 49-50
“Early one morning in the winter of 1906-7, Henry Ford dropped in at the pattern department of the Piquette Avenue plant to see me. 'Come with me, Charlie,' he said, 'I want to show you something.'
I followed him to the third floor and its north end, which was not fully occupied for assembly work. He looked about and said, 'Charlie, I'd like to have a room finished off right here in this space. Put up a wall with a door in big enough to run a car in and out. Get a good lock for the door, and when you're ready, we'll have Joe Galamb come up in here. We're going to start a completely new job.”
The room he had in mind became the maternity ward for Model T.
Source: My Forty Years with Ford, 1956, p. 96 ; As cited in: EyeWitness to History, " Henry Ford Changes the World, 1908 http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/ford.htm," www.eyewitnesstohistory.com (2005).
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Charles E. Sorensen 10
American businessman 1881–1968Related quotes

Recollections of Thomas R. Marshall: A Hoosier Salad (1925), Chapter XVII
“I'd have to lock the door of the paint room. He wouldn't allow anyone in. I was like a prisoner.”
1999, Cited by Amy M. Spindler
Source: My Forty Years with Ford, 1956, p. 110 ; As cited in: EyeWitness to History (2005)