The most significant aspect of Henry Fordâ??s assembly line process was the fact that it shortened production. Prior to the assembly line workers worked in groups to build one car at a time.
The bessemer process was invented by Sir Henry Bessemer.
It was either Eli Whitney or Henry Ford...
Assembly line
That would be Henry Bessemer, inventor of the Bessemer Converter which allowed the processing of Steel on an industrial scale. The process involves the removal of impurities (an important factor in Steel manufacture) through oxidation.
Henry Bessemer developed a way to make steel by melting and burning pig iron. Pig iron is the result of mining and refining iron ore. Before steel, he worked with glass, but his glass making process was not practical.
The most significant aspect of Henry Fordâ??s assembly line process was the fact that it shortened production. Prior to the assembly line workers worked in groups to build one car at a time.
Henry Ford
Henry Ford invented a Auto moving assemble line in 1913
Henry Ford was a famous businessman. He was the founder of the Ford Motor Company. He also started the assemble line.
The bessemer process was invented by Sir Henry Bessemer.
henry
Henry Cort was responsible for developing the puddling process in iron smelting. This process involved stirring molten iron in a reverberatory furnace to remove impurities and produce higher quality iron. Cort's method played a significant role in the Industrial Revolution by improving the efficiency of iron production.
Try contacting Henry Firearms for a free manual. http://www.henryrepeating.com/index.cfm Henry Repeating Arms 110 8th Street, Brooklyn New York 11215 Telephone: 718-499-5600
NOTHING John Cabot did it all
William Henry Fox Talbot (11 February 1800 - 17 September 1877) was the inventor of the negative / positive photographic process, the precursor to most photographic processes of the 19th and 20th centuries.
He started the reformation by breaking away from Rome.
Henry VIII broke away from the Roman Catholic Church and founded the Church of England.