Monday, August 19, 2019
Ford Motor Company: The River Rouge Manufacturing Complex :: American America History
Ford Motor Company:  The River Rouge Manufacturing Complex      The first piece of material I gathered was a picture via the internet.   This picture is of the River Rouge assembly plant in Dearborn, Michigan.   This picture shows the manufacturing of the fender for a Ford Motor Company  product. It also shows the facilities of the Rouge plant and how the plant  itself was state of the art.    This plant was the largest of its kind at the time of its construction.   The Ford Motor Company at the time was one of the leaders in labor  relations.  This picture shows the size of the plant as well as the working  conditions in the facility.    When viewing the photograph you can see the array of pipes and collection  devices to aid in the circulation of air and the collection of dust and  other by products made in the plant.    The next component I found is another picture of the interior of the Rouge  plant.  This picture is one of many conveyer belts in the plant.  This belt  is moving engine parts from the engine assembly to the final assembly.   Henry Ford was a pioneer in the use of the assembly line in the automobile  industry, and the Rouge plant was the ultimate in that use of the assembly  line.  This photo shows the depth of the plant, being able to manufacture  all components of the cars without having to ship parts to or from other  locations in the country.    The next collection of photographs is of the exterior of the Rouge plant.  These photos were obtained from the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.  These pictures are of the Rouge during the switch of all production, from  the Highland Park plant, to the Rouge.  It was also the time that the Model  A was beginning production.    This collection shows examples of four exterior views of the plant, allude  to the many different factories within the Rouge plant.  The Rouge was a  steel mill, a foundry, a power producer and, an assembly line.  This all  encompassing idea helped ford relegate all aspects of the production of  their product.    Along with the exterior, the interior showed the extent of the all  encompassing Rouge plant.  The interior photographs, which were also care  of the Henry Ford Museum, show more factories within the factory.  For  example, the four photos in this collection display metal forming, and  metallurgical operations.  These pictures included forging, the blast  furnaces, removal of slag and, even salvaging scrap from metal ships.    The interior had two collections to view and the second reaffirmed what the    					    
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