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Fordson Tractors Discussion Forum

Origins of name Fordson

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Martyn Nutland

07-01-2004 00:52:02




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I have read (somewhere) that Ford came up with the name Fordson because a sharp American called Ford was making tractors which were inferior to Henry's product and hoping to capitalize on the already celebrated name.

I have also read that when Henry Ford wanted to build a tractor the directors were not very keen so he established a new firm and called it Fordson - presumably 'son of Ford'

Which is true?

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Bill(Wis)

07-06-2004 05:20:33




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 Re: Origins of name Fordson in reply to Martyn Nutland, 07-01-2004 00:52:02  
There were many unscrupulous tractor manufacturers in the early days. One of them was a Minneapolis firm that had hired a man named Ford so that they could use that famous name for their tractor. When Henry & Son decided to build tractors, they found that they couldn't use the name Ford.



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tractorfix

07-01-2004 05:47:51




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 Re: Origins of name Fordson in reply to Martyn Nutland, 07-01-2004 00:52:02  
Your first guess is correct.



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James Frazier

07-08-2004 15:32:06




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 Re: Re: Origins of name Fordson in reply to tractorfix, 07-01-2004 05:47:51  
Really, the other Ford tractor company was not named after the owner. The name Ford was put on the tractor as a marketing scheme by a man named Baer Ewing. He had a mechanic in his shop with the last name "Ford" and proclaimed that he invented the tractor. These ford tractors were a joke, and Ewing was soon closed for business. You can read more about this in a book called The Orphan Tractors.



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Martyn Nutland

07-06-2004 11:07:16




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 Re: Re: Origins of name Fordson in reply to tractorfix, 07-01-2004 05:47:51  
Thank you all for clearing this up.

Best wishes

Martyn



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Martyn Nutland

07-01-2004 07:57:22




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 Re: Re: Origins of name Fordson in reply to tractorfix, 07-01-2004 05:47:51  
Thanks for answering my question about the origins of the name Fordson so promptly.



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Butch H

07-05-2004 19:32:05




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 Re: Re: Re: Origins of name Fordson in reply to Martyn Nutland, 07-01-2004 07:57:22  
Henry started a new company in partnership with his son Edsel. This company had no ties with the Ford Motor Company and was named "Henry Ford & Son" The tractor was named Fordson. Later, around 1922 the company was reformed as part of the Ford Motor Co. This is why earlier tractors have a different logo on the tank end.



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Another Fordson Operator

07-06-2004 14:31:21




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Origins of name Fordson in reply to Butch H, 07-05-2004 19:32:05  
In 1916-17 Henry Ford & his son Edsel demonstrated a prototype of the Model F to representatives of the British Ministry of Munitions. (Britain was fully embroiled in World War I and needed to compensate for the thousands of its farmers serving in the trenches of France. Keeping a reliable supply of food on British tables was vitally important to the war effort, of course.)

The UK's subsequent order for 6,000 tractors got Henry Ford & Son, Inc. up and rolling (and enabled the father-son duo to begin production for the civilian market here in the U.S., as well). This corporation had offices in Highland Park/Dearborn, Michigan, and also in the UK. When sending a Telex to the new firm's offices, the address used was "Fordson". The name stuck, and shortly thereafter it was trademarked and a new logo appeared on the radiator tanks of the tractors produced for American farmers.

The Henry Ford and Son Company, which was wholly owned by Henry Ford, did not merge with the Ford Motor Company until all non-family stockholders had been bought out in 1919.

During the ten years that Fordson Model F tractors were manufactured in the United States (in 1928 all of the factory's tooling was relocated to Cork, Ireland and the tractor's design slightly modified to become the "Model N"), over three-quarters of a million were sold, effectively revolutionizing American agriculture and going a long way toward Henry Ford's goal of "lifting the burdens of farming from flesh and bones."

If you have any other questions, ask away -- you can see that there are a number of folks in this group who have a lot of details filed away...

Kind regards,
Another Fordson Operator in Maine,
Third-generation operator of my family's 1922 Fordson Model F tractor

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