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Henry M. Leland

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Henry Martyn Leland

(born Feb. 16, 1843, Danville, Vt., U.S. — died March 26, 1932, Detroit, Mich.) U.S. engineer and manufacturer. Trained as a machinist, he founded Leland & Faulconer Manufacturing Co. in Detroit in 1890 to build engines for automobile makers. In 1904 he merged the company into his newly founded Cadillac Motor Car Co., where he created the successful Model A Cadillac. In 1917 he founded the Lincoln Motor Co., which was purchased by Henry Ford in 1922. He was known for his rigorous standards; his innovations included the V-8 engine and adoption of the electric starter.

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Henry M. Leland

Henry Martyn Leland (February 16, 1843 – March 26, 1932) (born Barton, Vermont, died Detroit, Michigan) was a machinist, inventor, engineer and automotive entrepreneur who founded the two premier American luxury marques, Cadillac and Lincoln. [1]

He learned engineering and precision machining in the Brown & Sharpe plant at Providence, Rhode Island,[2] and subsequently worked in the firearms industry, including at Colt. These experiences in toolmaking, metrology, and manufacturing steeped him in the 19th-century zeitgeist of interchangeability. He applied this expertise to the nascent motor industry as early as 1870 as a principal in the machine shop Leland & Faulconer, and later was a supplier of engines to Ransom E. Olds's Olds Motor Vehicle Company, later to be known as Oldsmobile. He also invented the electric barber clippers, and for a short time produced a unique toy train, the Leland-Detroit Monorail. He created the Cadillac automobile, bought out by General Motors. He also founded Lincoln, later purchased by the Ford Motor Company.

In 1902, William Murphy and his partners at the Henry Ford Company hired Leland to appraise the company's factory and tooling prior to liquidation. Leland completed the appraisal, but he advised Murphy and his partners that they were making a mistake to liquidate, and suggested they instead reorganize, building a new car powered by a single-cylinder engine Leland had originally developed for Oldsmobile. The directors lost no time in renaming the company Cadillac.[3] At Cadillac, Leland applied many modern manufacturing principles to the fledgling automotive industry, including the use of interchangeable parts.

The Cadillac won the Dewar Trophy for 1908.[4][5]

Leland sold Cadillac to General Motors on July 29, 1909 for $4.5 million, but remained as an executive until 1917. With Charles Kettering, he developed a self-starter for the Cadillac, which won its second Dewar Trophy in 1913 as a result.[6] He prodded Kettering to design a workable electric starter after a close friend was hit in the head and killed by a starting crank when the engine backfired.[7]

He left General Motors over the company's involvement in the war effort and formed the Lincoln Motor Company to build Liberty aircraft engines. After the war, the company's factories were retooled to manufacture luxury automobiles.

In 1922, Lincoln became insolvent and was bought out by Henry Ford's Ford Motor Company. Ford's bid of $8 million was the only bid at a receivers sale. Ford had first offered $5 million, but the judge would not accept it for a well-equipped company whose assets were conservatively estimated at $16 million.[8] After the sale, Leland and his son Wilfred continued to run the company, believing they would still have full control to run the company as they saw fit. Ford assigned a number of their people to Lincoln, they said to learn. However, it soon became clear they were there to streamline their production and stop the loss of money that had bankrupted Lincoln. Relations between the Henry Ford and Leland workers continued to deteriorate. On June 10, 1922, Ford executive Ernest Liebold arrived at Lincoln to ask for the resignation of Wilfred Leland. When it became clear that Leibold had the full authority of Henry Ford, Henry Leland resigned as well. That afternoon both men were shown out of the factory they had created.[9]

The Lincoln continues to be part of the luxury line of Ford to this day.

Leland has no connection to the Lincoln Motor Car Works, a marque sold by Sears-Roebuck from 1905-1915.

Footnotes

  1. ^ A Cadillac history by Motorera.com. Retrieved December 30, 2008.
  2. ^ Roe 1916:214–215.
  3. ^ Lacey 1986, pp. 60-61.
  4. ^ The award was actually presented in 1909.
  5. ^ The birth of a company: CADILLAC.
  6. ^ URL apparently now dead. Retrieved June 30, 2007.
  7. ^ Cadillac Model 30, 1912 Model 30 at Conceptcarz.com.
  8. ^ Lacey 1986, p. 277.
  9. ^ Lacey 1986, p. 280.

Bibliography

External links

Short biography page by a relative
Detroit News retrospective
Olds history with a bit on Leland
Historical article
Another..
Vermont historical marker
Article about the Lincoln Continental

 
 

 

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