Founders - #128 Henry Leland (Cadillac)
Episode Date: May 31, 2020What I learned from reading Master of Precision: Henry Leland by Ottilie Leland and Minnie Dubbs Millbrook.----Get access to the World’s Most Valuable Notebook for Founders by investing in a subscri...ption to Founders Notes----[0:17] Henry Leland laid the foundation for the future of American industry. He had established manufacturing procedures never previously so effectively employed and took a position of leadership. In the next decades would be comparable in statute with, although quite different from, William Durant, Henry Ford and Alfred Sloan. [0:40] It should be pointed out that Leland's contribution to the development of the motor car was the establishment of high standards of manufacturing. [2:33] Henry Leland always got deep satisfaction out of anything which was made right. He had—in high degree—the pride of craftsmanship that had marked the master workman down the centuries. [3:07] He developed the Cadillac, the self-starter, The Lincoln car, held up high standards of performance for the industry, and established the first notable school of automotive mechanics. [4:05] A lesson Henry Leland learned from his Father: He bequeathed a singularly trustful disposition to his son, who could never believe that other men were not inherently as good and honorable as he himself. He was several times to pay a stiff penalty for this faith in human nature. [4:56] A lesson Henry Leland learned from his Mother: “There is a right way and a wrong way to do everything. Hunt for the right way and then go ahead.” This simple admonition was to become a creed that would govern all of his actions as he rose in industry. [6:10] He lives through the beginning of two industries in his life: Manufacturing in general and the automobile industry in specific. [7:24] Henry Leland was not sure he wanted to become an apprentice machinist. The hours were long—10 hour days, 6 days a week—and most factories did not pay high wages. Moreover, farming was still the traditional American operation, which offered a possibility of independence and did not shut a man indoors with noisy machinery. [9:06] Henry was already discovering the education that could be mined from books. At first, the fond of reading, he had been attracted by cheap adventure novels, which he borrowed from the local library. One night a stranger there, seeing what he was taking out exclaimed, “Surely don't read that trash!” Henry replied, “What better use can I make of my time than to read?” The stranger answered, “It makes a lot of difference what you read,” and then suggested some better books. The episode was a revelation to young Leland and he was soon reading volumes that acquainted him with American genius in literature, government and invention. [9:55] Abraham Lincoln was his idol. Lincoln Motor Company—which Henry founds when he is in his 70s— is named after Abraham Lincoln. If we want to continue the conversation that Steve Jobs and Larry Ellison were having [about who is history’s greatest person] in The Billionaire and The Mechanic—Jobs said Gandhi. Ellison said Napoleon. Leland’s answer would be Abraham Lincoln. [12:05] Even if he experienced a financial penalty, Henry Leland wanted to do the honorable thing. [12:44] Henry wanted to work where he could render the greatest service to his country [during The Civil War]. He had learned that the U.S. Armory needed expert mechanics, and he had determined to help with war production. The particular lesson he learned in the Armory was the value of order and neatness in a work shop. Everything was clean and systematic, a state of affairs not common in early factories. [14:37] Precision was his god. His personal work was outstanding. [14:56] The discipline and subordination of factory life ran counter to American individualism. [16:31] A nervous breakdown drove him from the shop to the far for rest. [16:48] His mind, independent and teaming with ideas, made it difficult for him to work with others. He longed for a business in which he might put his theories to work but he had no money, a family to support, and his father and mother were in need of aid. [20:00] The manufacture of the hair clippers [which he invented and brought to market against the opposition of his bosses] was spirited and rose to an output as much as 300 daily. For this I received a ‘Thank you’ and 50 cents a day more in my pay envelope. That was on of the times I thought I ought to quit making other men rich and go to work for myself. [20:41] Henry Leland was good at sales by not trying to be good at sales. He wanted to educate people. He was gifted at selling because he gave the customer useful advice. [22:26] As usual there was little money left over for saving. And yet Henry Leland was more hopeful of going into business for himself than ever before. He had brought his skill and experience to the service of the ambitious industrialists of the west and they had shown him in return the financial method that had put them in business. Each had organized a company by selling stock. “Eureka,” said Henry Leland to himself, “I have found it,” for he had great experience and he was sure he could raise a little money. His dream of an independent business might come true after all. [23:40] Henry Leland had a lifetime of experience before he starts his first company. He was 47 years old. He had been working in factories since he was a teenager. [25:03] Leland was a missionary for precision. He held people to high standards. [26:07] Horace Dodge trained directly under Leland for two years before starting a machine shop of his own. [27:45] The building up of a business, which expands rapidly and must be financed primarily from its own earnings, is often a discouraging process. [27:56] How Henry Leland advertised the services of his foundry: We appeal for business only to those who want the best. We do not attempt to compete with the average foundry on price. We believe no other foundry can successfully compete with us on quality. [29:57] “There always was and there always will be conflict between Good and Good Enough. In opening up a new business one can count on meeting resistance to a high standard of workmanship. It is easy to get cooperation for mediocre work, but one must sweat blood for a chance to produce a superior product.” —Henry Leland [35:10] Henry Leland founds Cadillac when he is almost 60 years old: Henry Leland now embarked on the great adventure of his life; he would play an important role in the organization of Detroit’s first successful automobile company. [35:27] Cadillac was making $2 million per year in profit when Billy Durant buys Cadillac for $4.5 million. [37:21] Other men had built cars for many reasons—for the fascination of creation, for the profits in it—but Henry Leland agreed to build a car because he did not want to see a pet engine unappreciated and unused. [38:53] Henry Leland was an expert in a field where experts were still uncommon. [41:13] We buy the best parts we can find. I have always contended price should be considered last by a manufacturer in selecting materials for his product. [45:10] His theory was that the one essential ingredient of success was mastery of one’s self as well as one’s job. [47:57] A story: If you do the right thing people will remember. [52:10] Henry Leland is 77 years old when he starts Lincoln Motor Company [54:21] Henry Leland did not believe in quitting: It was manifestly impossible for the Lelands, men of tender heart and unswerving integrity, to take a cold, dispassionate view of the financial straits of the Lincoln Company. Many automobile companies had had money troubles; some had undergone a variety of reorganizations, combinations and other stratagems to keep alive and their directors and management had not been considered dishonest or insensible of their trust even though investors may have lost a portion or all of their equity. But such a course was unthinkable for the Lelands; as long as there was breath in their bodies they would oppose it. They had invested everything they owned in the company. [1:01:05] Henry Ford and Henry Leland were like oil and water: We see a difference in management culture. Leland led from the front. Ford beat you down from above. [1:02:27] How Ford management described the Lincoln organization: The whole organization is unusually harmonious and uniformly competent. [1:05:40] A letter from Henry Leland to Henry Ford: I cannot but feel certain that you intended to keep those pledges when you made them to me personally and, while I cannot understand the long delay on your part, I still hope and trust that you will not shake my life long faith in humanity. ----Get access to the World’s Most Valuable Notebook for Founders by investing in a subscription to Founders Notes----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested, so my poor wallet suffers.”— GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book. It's good for you. It's good for Founders. A list of all the books featured on Founders Podcast. ----Founders Notes gives you the ability to tap into the collective knowledge of history's greatest entrepreneurs on demand. Use it to supplement the decisions you make in your work. Get access to Founders Notes here. ----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Just a quick note before today's podcast, I changed the cover art that appears in your podcast player back to the original one that says Founders.
I just think it looks better than the previous one that said Misfits.
I just wanted to let you know that you're on the right feed.
The Misfits feed is the only place where you can find full-length episodes.
So that's it. I hope you enjoy this podcast.
Henry Leland laid the foundation for the future American industry.
He had established manufacturing procedures never previously so effectively employed and took a position of leadership. He was to maintain it and in the next decades would
be comparable in stature with, although quite different from, William Durant, Henry Ford,
and Alfred Sloan. In comparing Leland with Durant and Ford, it should be pointed out that Leland's
contribution to the development of the motor car was the establishment of high standards of manufacturing.
Ford, of course, through the moving assembly line, also developed standards, but for the manufacture of a cheap car.
He himself recognized Leland's great contribution.
Durant, as the founder of General Motors, was a promoter, but made contributions as the head of an organization,
offering a variety of cars,
and the establishment of companies supplying parts. Sloan reorganized General Motors on a
sounder basis and established its highly successful system of financial controls.
The Dodge Brothers would be included by some experts as a major force in the early automobile
industry, and in the 1920s, Walter P. Chrysler took a prominent place
in the industry. Leland's period of eminence might be set as 1908 through 1922. How had he
reached this eminence? Let's go back and follow the Leland story from its beginnings. It takes us
first into an earlier industrial era, goes hand in hand with the steady rise of American manufacturing
through the bicycle and the pioneer automotive stages, enables us to understand more fully the maturing of the motor
car in the United States, and still has relevance to the developments that are taking place today.
That's an excerpt from the book that I'm going to talk to you about today, which is Master of
Precision. All right, so I want to start there because after I took a slight detour doing a three-part series on Larry Ellison, I'm back on this multiple-part series on the early days of
the automobile industry in the United States. And every single person listed there I've already done
podcasts on or I will do podcasts on in the future. I just had to wait for some books to arrive.
Okay, so let's start in the introduction. There's an overview of his personality here
and I would say a brief overview of his general life story.
Henry Leland is the founder of both Cadillac and Lincoln.
So it says, Henry Leland always got deep satisfaction out of anything which was made right.
He had in high degree the pride of craftsmanship that had marked the master workman down the centuries. Originality of conception had to be matched with close attention to practical effectiveness,
and both had to be crowned with artistry of form.
And so that paragraph really gives us insight into how Leland approached his work.
He had by far the highest standards in terms of quality standards than any other early automobile pioneer.
It continues, Leland's role was an inspiring and
often a successful one. He developed the Cadillac, the self-starter, the Lincoln car. He held up high
standards of performance for the industry and established the first notable school of automotive
mechanics. Unfortunately, near the end of his life, he saw his company, the Lincoln Motor Company,
go into receivership. Eventually, it passed under the control of Henry Ford, who at first proposed to keep Leland and his son in the
industry as a public service, but in the end failed to live up to his professions. I would
say he failed to live up to his promises. The authors go fully into this painful episode as
they do in all phases of Leland's career. So that's a good overview of where we're going to
be going. Okay, so I want to get right into his early life. His family, like most Americans at the time,
they were farmers. Henry Leland transitions. The transition that happens on an individual
basis in his life from farmer to somebody working in factories is not only taking place in his life,
but in American culture at large. So here the author is talking about what Henry learned from his father, who was also a farmer.
He bequeathed a singularly trustful disposition to his youngest son,
who could never believe that other men were not inherently as good and honorable as he himself,
and was several times to pay a stiff penalty for this faith in human nature. Remember that sentence when we get towards the end of Leland's life story,
where he's dealing with Henry Ford, and Henry Ford betrays him.
Here's a lesson that he learned from his mother.
Although but six years of age at the time, he already had a few duties.
One was to drive the cows in from the woods to the barn lot to be milked.
He had a small boy's fear that one of the bears might come out of the woods. This is her talking to her son. to do everything, hunt for the right way, and then go ahead. Although he did not know it then,
this simple admonition was to become a creed that would govern all his actions later as he rose in
industry. So his family has really poor luck on the farm. They decide that they're going to escape
the farm. And they were essentially, they were in perpetual, I would say, poverty. And so they
decided to try to escape that by moving to New England,
where there's a lot more manufacturing that's starting to take place.
But every member of the family, even Leland as a really young boy,
must get a job and continue to work.
So it says, but even he found a small job.
He was given the task of feeding and watering 400 chickens
and of keeping separately the eggs of several fancy breeds of poultry. And so eventually he starts working in factories as he gets a little older.
And what's interesting about this time is we see the transition in Henry's life also mirrors the overall transition that's happening in American life where people are leaving the farms to work in an entirely new industry.
He lives through the beginning of two industries in his life.
One is the manufacturing in general and factories,
and then the automobile industry in specific.
The author is going to tell us a little bit more about this time.
Americans of the 18th century understood how to till fields,
sail ships, fell forests, and run sawmills,
but they knew little of complex machinery or factory operations. This is where Leland becomes
an expert, right? Native manufacturing skills, therefore, were scarce, and the first concern of
all new undertakings was to produce experienced operatives. Later on, Henry realizes the same thing is playing out in the
automobile industry. So he starts one of the first schools for mechanics. He's like, we don't have
enough high skilled workers, as many that we need. As the Industrial Revolution accelerated,
the Lelands, like thousands of others who had no land and no hope of continuing in their traditional
farm life, began entering these rudimentary factories and shops, some forced by the necessity of making a living
and others attracted by a broadening opportunity
to exercise their latent ingenuity.
So Henry takes a few jobs in factories.
He proves himself, even as a young person,
he's a teenager at this time,
he's very competent.
So he gets the opportunity to become an apprentice.
And I thought his response was interesting.
It says it was an opportunity,
but Henry Leland was not sure that he wanted to become an apprentice machinist. The hours were long. And I thought his response was interesting. with noisy machinery so eventually he takes the
position and it says once in his new position the young man perceived that it offered many
possibilities he was learning something all the time his new job held promise for the future
even the gibbs of his older shopmates merely fired him with a determination to master his craft
so what they're talking about there is
he's working with a lot of Englishmen. And at the time, there was no respect for American
craftsmanship. They're saying Americans made crappy products. They didn't have the skills
that all the greatest products in the world came from, you know, wherever, Europe. So they're
telling a young, largely ignorant Henry Leland this.
And I thought this section was really interesting.
It was simply impossible, they smugly pointed out, for any Americans to achieve real competence in mechanics.
Americans had no really skilled workmen, inventors, writers, statesmen.
In fact, there were no great men but Englishmen.
So that's what his older co-workers were telling him.
Of course, that's not true, but he doesn't know. Henry doesn't have a large education at this time,
so he doesn't know any better. So this is where he learns the value of reading.
While he resented the chafing, he lacked the background of reading and experience that would
have afforded him an effective rebuttal. So he starts, he gets access to a bunch of books,
and this is a result. Henry was
already discovering the education that could be mined from books. At first, though fond of reading,
he had been attracted by cheap adventure novels, which he borrowed from the local library.
One night, a stranger there, seeing what he was taking out, exclaimed,
surely you don't read that trash. Henry replied, what better use can i make of my time than to read
the stranger answered it makes a lot of difference what you read and then suggested some better books
he's saying you know you're on the right track for reading but you're just reading the wrong stuff
the episode was a revelation to young leland and he was soon reading volumes that acquainted him
with american genius in literature, government, and invention.
So right about this time, the Civil War is going on.
So it says his reading and his feeling of the necessity to defend his country had made him deeply patriotic.
Abraham Lincoln was his idol.
So Lincoln is named the Lincoln Motor Company, which Henry founds when he's in his 70s, by the way,
is named after Abraham Lincoln
who he thought was the greatest person to ever live
if we want to continue that conversation
that Steve Jobs and Larry Ellison were having
I think it was on the podcast about the billionaire and the mechanic
where Jobs is saying Gandhi's the best person
Ellison is saying Napoleon
well we have Leland's answer
his was Abraham Lincoln
his brother Edson had enlisted
into the army he's a little older than
Leland Leland's actually under age
at this time and although Henry was under age
and his parents had refused their permission
for him to become a soldier he determined
that he would join up
so he goes down and enlists
but his mother follows him there
to stop this so it says but his mother follows him there to stop this.
So it says, but his mother guessed his intention, followed him to the recruiting office and had his name removed from the role of eligibles and then sent him back to work.
And his mother probably saved his life.
His older brother serves in the war, gets captured, then winds up getting sick and dying.
I think he died of some some kind of pneumonia-like disease
um and so henry leland survives the civil war uh because he was too young to enter in so but
he's extremely patriotic and we're going to see this later on where i'm not going to say it's the
greatest mistake in his life he's because what he wanted to do but he he quit cadillac and resigned
because billy durant would not let uh billy durant was a pacifist and would not let Henry Leland create weapons for use of the Cadillac factory to create weapons for during World War One.
And Cadillac, I would say, is, you know, it was extremely high quality company, extremely profitable most of his life, and he was in control of it, which that's where
he runs into a lot of trouble later on is that Lincoln was not on solid financial ground,
was eventually overtaken by Henry Ford, and he lacked control. And so Henry Ford had all
the power. But the reason I bring that up is because he was guided by this,
I don't know if you want to call it like an internal honor. He would,
regardless of if he experienced a financial penalty, that's not what drove Henry Leland.
He wanted to do the honorable thing. Remember it said his dad taught him that, you know,
to have faith in his fellow human beings. And Leland definitely did. And you also see that
in how he created his products, but also how he managed his company, which I'll get to.
Okay. So anyways, back to this patriotic time during the Civil War, he's like, okay, if I can't serve as a soldier,
I want to serve other ways. And he references the job he gets. Later on, he says, I made guns for
Lincoln. Okay. So he starts making weapons for the Union Army during the Civil War. And he's also
learning about manufacturing complex machines here. So it says Henry wanted to work where he
could render the greatest service to his country. So the same thing he's doing learning about manufacturing complex machines here. So it says Henry wanted to work where he could render the greatest service to his country.
So the same thing he's doing now as a young teenager, he does during the Civil War, he does during World War I.
He had learned that the U.S. Armory needed expert mechanics, and he had several years of experience,
and he had determined to help there with the war production.
He did so, and he remained at the armory until hostilities ceased
in April 1865. As he said afterward, the particular lesson he learned in the armory
was the value of order and neatness in a workshop. So remember the title of the book,
Master of Precision. He means master of precision in all things, including the cleanliness of your
workspace, right? Everything was clean and systematic. A state of affairs not common in the early cluttered factories and
machine shops. So the war's over. He needs a job. It says he found employment the very next day at
the Colt Revolver factory. So he's going back to making weapons. Now, what was interesting is this.
He's had several years working in factories in New England. Then he works for the armory during
the Civil War. Now he's working at the Colt Revolver factory.
But again, Leland was reluctant.
He was already developing a unique set of skills, but he wasn't sure if he was meant for factory work.
He liked being outdoors.
He liked autonomy.
He liked control.
And as a worker in the factory, you don't have those things.
Now, once he has his own business, then he can run things as he sees fits.
But at this point in his life, he doesn't like the lack of autonomy.
So here we see like his inner, this inner dialogue that's happening, this struggle of what am I doing with my life?
One would expect Henry Leland to have joined enthusiastically in the exhilarating movement for the development of the American industry.
Actually, it seems not to have fired his imagination. He was only 22 in 1865, and it is a
question whether he recognized then the dynamic possibility of the interchangeability of machine
parts. To be sure, precision was already his god, and his personal work was outstanding, but
apparently he lacked any soaring industrial vision
that would come with further experience the truth was that he had not yet accepted factory life
as his permanent and passionate concern the discipline and subordination of factory life
ran counter to american individualism and so like many people in life, especially in the early 20s,
he doesn't know what he's going to do. He has a lot more years ahead of him than he does have
behind him. So he's testing out a lot of different things. He's still working in the factory. He
winds up buying a farm and working there on weekends. He's like, maybe I'll do that. He
tries to study law like his idol Lincoln. He becomes a police officer uh for a time and he also uh works on
volunteer fire department so i thought this was hilarious uh so the note of myself is there's
still no grand purpose in life he's still not sure what to do and then gangs of new york so
i'm referencing that classic movie and i'll tell you why in a minute uh there now followed a period
in which leland was active in church and town, but seemed to lack a sure sense of his purpose in life.
So this is when he starts volunteering for these volunteer fire departments.
They call them companies.
And there's a scene in Gangs of New York which plays out exactly like what's happening in Leland.
This is a crazy time.
So it says, every company, meaning fire company, strove to get to the fire first and each sought to wash out its closest rival.
So not only are the fire companies trying to put out the fire, they also get engaged.
It's almost like a gang. And they do these at the scene of every fire.
There's fistfights and brawls after every fire.
There was likely to be a rough and tumble fistfight between companies. So there's a scene in gangs of new york that shows us leland was active in the fire department for about five years
then a nervous breakdown drove him from the shop to the farm for a rest and so it's after this
breakdown again he's got a ton of anxiety about what his life is going to be he finally figures
out what he's going to do he finally makes his commitment so it says lena now took a long hard look at his future his mind uh his mind independent
and teeming with ideas made it difficult for him to work with others he longed for a business in
which he might put his theories to work but he had no money he had a family to support and his
father and mother were in need of aid it would be years before he could save the necessary capital to launch a business.
But he reflected that he could prepare himself for the time when he might start a business.
Accordingly, he decided to go into the best factory he could find
and learn all there was to be learned there.
This is an extremely smart move by himself.
He's like, all right, I got to commit to something.
I'm going to commit to factory work.
And if I'm going to commit to it, I want to learn from the masters. I want to learn from the best people. And in New England at the time, the most
precise, the company that had the reputation for the highest quality work was this company called
Brown and Sharp. And that is where he's going to work. And it's during this time that not only we
see that he's dedicated to his craft, but he also has a strong belief in his abilities.
So he's making a series of screws for Brown and Sharp right now, and they're getting rejected as not being high enough quality.
And he thinks that's incorrect.
And he winds up being correct.
And the reason I bring this up is because this is the first time that he ever felt thrilled with his work.
So it says, the inspector who checked the output rejected thousands
of screws, which Leland thought fully
met specifications. He studied
his machines and even scraped some of them,
but he could find nothing to account for
inaccuracy. He then examined
the gauges used in inspection
and was able to demonstrate that a number
of these were worn and
inaccurate, so that
the rejected screws actually met qualifications.
So he takes that confidence of being correct and starts to reevaluate the way the factory
is doing certain things and realizes, hey, there's a lot of room for improvement here.
He says he noted that a number of parts were being made on lathes, which he felt could
be turned out better and cheaper on the screw machines.
Indeed, he thought that on some items he could produce as much a day on the screw machine as the lathe could put out in a week or more. Accordingly, he proposed
certain shifts to the superintendent who authorized him to go ahead. So he's known his entire career
for doing this, for redoing factories, not only as a salesperson for Brown and Sharp later on,
but also as an engineer in his own company. So it says, the shift was made and so successfully
by the time he left the department,
he was supervising 60 machines
when at first he had just been supervising six of them.
And for the first time,
he felt the thrill of real accomplishment
in his chosen life work.
So not only is he improving
the overall productivity of the factory,
he's also inventing new products.
So he invents what some consider the first pair of electric hair clippers. And he does so after
overcoming a lot of adversity. The leaders of the company push back over and over again,
no, we don't want to diversify into this product line, whether it's we don't have to dedicate the
time or they doubted that they would actually sell. The product becomes extremely successful.
And the reason I bring this up is because it's important.
This is where he realizes I have to have my own company.
I'm not going to be able to get my ideas out the way I want them unless I'm in control.
She says the manufacturer, the Clippers, was spirited and rose quickly to an output as
much as 300 daily.
For this, I received a thank you and 50 cents a day more in my pay envelope.
That was one of the times I thought
I ought to quit making other men rich
and go work for myself.
Okay, so now he's only becoming
an extremely skilled machinist.
He's understanding how to make a factory more productive,
but he's also goes out on sales calls.
So he goes to other factories
because Brown and Sharp are producing machines that are used in other factories. Right. And so Leland was a gifted
salesperson, but he's not gifted the same way Billy Durant was or the reason Billy Durant was,
who was extremely personal, positive. Leland was gifted at sales by not trying to be good at sales.
He wanted to educate people. He was gifted at selling because he gave the customer useful advice.
And here's an example of that.
He claimed he never was a salesman and never expected to bring home orders.
He just talked about jobs and machines.
When he found a tool or machine not being used in the most advantageous manner, he would stop and give proper instructions.
In some shops, his advice led to a change in the
whole system of manufacturing. One day, he was roundly criticized by another salesman who heard
him recommend a Pratt & Whitney machine to do a certain job. Surely this was disloyalty,
this helping to sell a competitor's machine instead of his own. But a year later, the manager of whom he had recommended the rival machine sent for him.
A new building had been erected and was to be equipped with new tools.
And he wanted Leland's advice and recommendations for the installation.
So what does that mean?
He trusted Leland.
And so now a year later,
he's got a much bigger job.
Many Brown and Sharp machines were ordered.
And so this delay would happen all the time. They'd go to Henry.
They'd be like, Henry, we're getting all these new orders in and we don't have a record of anybody ever going and trying to sell them.
Did you visit this factory? And Henry would be like, oh, yeah, I talked to them six months ago or three months ago or whatever it was.
And again, he didn't view it as a sales call.
He went in there trying to improve their business and sharing the knowledge that he'd already accumulated. It's just a very smart move.
Now, around this time, he's meeting a lot of successful founders and industrialists,
and he learned something. Just as he's teaching them, he's learning from them as well. And
specifically, how do I get money to start a business? So he says, this is the time in his
life where he's like, okay, I'm going to make the jump from employee to founder.
As usual, there was very little money left over for saving.
And yet at this very time, Henry Leland was more hopeful going into business for himself than ever before.
He had bought his skill and experience to the service of the ambitious industrialists of the West. He's traveling all over the country trying to sell for Brown and Sharp.
And they had shown him in return the financial method that had put them in business.
With a background of experience
and only a little money as a nucleus,
each had organized a company
and by selling stock secured the further capital needed.
Eureka, said Henry Leland.
I have found it.
For he had great experience
and he was sure he could raise a little money.
His dream of an independent business might come true after all.
Now this business, he's not going to start out as an automobile manufacturer.
He's making, he's a machinist, just like the Dodge brothers.
He's going to make machines and products for a wide variety of companies,
but eventually a lot of automobile companies.
And that, he's actually asked to take over an automobile company because his products were so high quality and the way he
ran his business. And I'll get there in a minute. But for this, he's got to move. He's got to,
he's going to move to Detroit. So he moves to Detroit and raises money for his own machine
shop. Okay. I skipped way ahead. This is something very important about the life story of Henry Leland. He had a lifetime experience
before he starts his company.
He's 47 years old
and he's been working in factories
since he was, let's say, 17.
So it says Leland located in Detroit
because in that city
he found the financial backing he needed.
So he partners up with this guy named Faulkner.
They're going to start this company
called Leland and Faulkner.
There's another guy,
but I'm going to ignore him because he leaves the partnership later.
Faulkner was looking for an opportunity to invest the money he had made in lumbering.
We saw this in the Billy Durant story too. A lot of people in Flint, Michigan made money in lumber
and then they dumped it into early automobile companies. Leland's compelling arguments persuaded
him to put most of the money for a machine shop. Like the rest of the United States,
Detroit was much taken with the bicycle craze.
So they started making parts
for bicycle manufacturers as well.
The new firm was formally organized
in September of 1890.
So we're about 13 years
from the birth of the automobile industry.
There's, of course, people still making cars before this,
but this is when they're starting to produce
thousands and thousands of cars every year now something to
know about Leland is he's very much uh you remember Jeff Bezos told us that if you had to choose
between a missionary and a mercenary you always choose missionaries because they uh they make
better products um Leland's very much a missionary in fact he evangelizes he's a missionary for
precision so a lot of the way he talks and some people didn't like this because um he held people um, Leland's very much a missionary. In fact, he evangelizes, he's a missionary for precision.
So a lot of the way he talks and some people didn't like this because, um, he held people
to high standards. Uh, I don't think he was ever trying to be disrespectful, but he would
evangelize that we need to do better, that we can constantly improve and the products that we're
making can be better. Uh, so it says with his own shop, Henry Leland was able to organize his work
in what to him was the very best way.
He would inoculate into his
co-workers his standards of precise
and planned production.
Many a man learned practical
engineering as Henry Leland had learned it,
starting out with nothing more than his own natural
aptitude and some mechanical
training. To be progressively
developed, taught, and encouraged
by the old pro from Brown and
Sharp.
That's Leland.
We're going to see somebody we covered.
So he's might be, I would say he's probably the single most influential person in the
early automobile industry.
Well, let me read this part to you and then I'll expound on that.
Okay.
So it says after two years in that pioneer, after two years in that pioneer machine shop, one of the workmen went on to a rather fabulous career of his own.
His name was Horace Dodge, so he trained directly under Leland.
He and his brother John established a machine shop of their own, furnished the first motors for Henry Ford, and went on to manufacture a motor car, which still carries the Dodge name.
So the reason I say he's probably the single most influential person is like Henry Ford, when he ran into problems, he'd go and ask Henry Leland how to solve them.
Alfred Sloan dedicated more words to what he learned from Henry Leland than anybody else in his autobiography.
Same thing with Billy Durant. Again, he was almost like an older brother, maybe like a father figure.
He was much older than a lot of the early automobile pioneers.
And as such, he had a lot longer time to accumulate a set of skills that, you know, they just could not match.
And you also see this.
We talk about the difference between stated preference and revealed preference a lot.
And so you see this because when they had the opportunity to go buy their own car, Alfred Sloan, other people, they would buy
Cadillacs. They're clearly saying, hey, this person has higher standards. He makes the single
best product out of anybody else in his field. As with any new business, there's a lot of series
of struggles that Leland has to overcome. And one of them is, you know, they had a lot of success
because they had a great reputation, right? And again, they're not, they don't have products yet. They're still
looking for products, but they're being hired almost like contractors, right? And they have
a lot of customers, but here's the problem. Because of the small capitalization and the
need for more and more shop equipment and material, there were times when after the men were paid,
not much money was left for Mr. Leland. The building up of a business which expands rapidly and must be financed primarily
from its own earnings is often a discouraging process. So Leland winds up becoming extremely
financially successful, but that was not his primary motivation. In fact, he got a lot of
criticism because he's constantly investing in the best materials. And he does this to an extreme. For an example, they couldn't find a foundry of high
enough quality. So Henry's response to this is, okay, I guess we're going to have to make our own.
And we see once he starts a foundry and advertises its services, we're going to see right here
how he views, remember, they said precision is his God quality is his god the new foundry stated we
this is in the advertisement for them ready we appeal for business only to those who want the
best we do not attempt to compete with the average foundry as concern on concerns of price we believe
no other foundry can successfully compete with us concerning quality for months mr leland
personally inspected every wagon load of casings delivered and the effort and then this is this
shows his extreme nature here and in the effort to get workmen and foremen educated to his own
critical viewpoint he would throw out piece after piece for any slight deviation from pattern or form or he'd go
through the foundry pick up a casing and throw it with force onto the floor if it broke it was
defective if it remained whole it was satisfactory for a time perhaps half the product although fully
up to the commercial standard of most foundries, meaning that they would be acceptable for customers, went back for remelting.
So it's saying that what the customer would accept,
half of what the customer would accept,
were below the standards that Leland put for himself.
This went on until it began to be whispered around the works.
The old man is going crazy.
And so his theory was that, listen,
there's always going to be people willing to pay for quality.
Do not compete on price. Just make the very best product.
And he winds up being correct.
So it says he predicted that after the quality of his casings had become recognized,
people would come begging for them, even at the higher price.
Here's a quote, direct quote from Leland.
There always was and there always will be conflict between good and good enough and in opening up a new
business or in a new department one can count upon meeting this resistance to a high standard
of workmanship it is easy to get cooperation for mediocre work but one must sweat blood
for the chance to produce a superior product time upheld his judgment for when he himself needed all
his foundry input output this is when he does catalog. For when he himself needed all his foundry output, this is
when he does catalog, right? For when he himself needs all his foundry output and had to drop his
outside customers, they begged, this one company begged for another year's supply and offered to
pay 20 cents a pound. Why is that 20 cents a pound important? Because they previously, when the
foundry was open outside customers, he was selling his casings for $0.08 a pound.
So they found the quality so high that they would almost pay three times more than they were before just to not lose out on the quality of the product.
So Henry Leland is kind of pulled into the automobile industry.
And he's pulled in by Ransom Olds.
Ransom Olds is the founder of Oldsmobile.
And this is what Henry Leland learned from Ransom Olds.
Ransom Olds will always occupy an important niche in the automobile hall of fame,
for he demonstrated that the motor car was a practical vehicle,
which could be manufactured in quantity and would attract buyers by the thousands.
He was the first successful mass-produced automobile manufacturer.
Not on the scale, of course, like the Model T, but still selling thousands of vehicles a year.
It now seemed likely that the automobile industry
might grow to considerable proportions.
Henry Leland believed that it had a great future,
yet he had no idea of entering the business himself.
So this idea, this belief that it has a great future
came directly because he was supplying parts
for Ransom Olds,
and he saw how fast the growth was occurring.
The engine intrigued him, meaning the automobile engine intrigued him as any complicated machine
which he thought could be improved now i finally got to the birth of cadillac now this is really
interesting where it come it um where it's birth from hey before uh henry ford had two failed
automobile companies before his third and his final and successful
automobile company right that that second company which starts out as the Henry Ford company
eventually turns into Cadillac and this is that story the Henry Ford company uh so it's financed
by this guy named Murphy okay the Henry Ford company was incorporated in 1901 and Henry Ford
again took his place as an engineer difficulties and disagreements ensued and though some cars
were built Ford left the company by 1902 so he
lasted less than a year he lasted the five months actually the directors had decided on liquidation
when approached henry leland promised he would go to the plant and look over the machinery so they
had murphy hires leanley's like hey again this is this speaks to the reputation uh that that
leland worked his entire life to achieve hey Hey, go tell me what my machines are worth, okay?
Because we're going to liquidate this failed Henry Ford company.
The fact that this young automobile concern had failed to survive did not surprise Leland.
The auto craze had fallen upon Detroit,
and half the mechanics of the city were concocting cars in their home workshops.
So the numbers vary depending on when you're
looking but from from what i understand there was about 2 000 individual car companies and almost
100 years later only three survived um so it says uh now this is henry leland's son talking about
what's taking place at this time when father accepted the job of appraising the automobile company's equipment, he must have had a further flash of inspiration.
Some days later, he appeared with a high powered motor.
He was doing his own tinkering and realized, hey, I actually have improved this motor.
I think it's the best motor and maybe we should manufacture it.
So he goes to this meeting and they want to know how much the equipment's worth.
And he starts doing this pitch. He's like, well, why don't we try to
manufacture this motor? I can build the motor for you. So he says, he wasted no time in telling the
men before him what values he had found in their equipment. I have done what you asked me to do,
but gentlemen, I believe you're making a great mistake and going out of business.
And from there, he launched into an exposition of faith in the future development of the motor
car industry. His enthusiasm grew, but he's an evangelosition of faith in the future development of the motor car industry.
His enthusiasm grew.
He's an evangelist.
Remember that.
I have brought you a motor.
It has three times the power of the old motor, meaning the ones that's in the old mobile.
Its parts are interchangeable, and it is not temperamental.
So it says when he said it's not temperamental, the audience laughed.
Why did they laugh?
Because at this time in history, most cars would fail.
So it says, I can make these motors for you at less cost than I make the others for the Oldsmobile.
They were sold on both the motor and the salesman.
The wealthy men decided to stay in business if Mr. Leland would join them in the reorganization of their firm.
He thought he was just going to sell motors.
They're eventually going to pull him into this company.
And then they're going to say, hey, now you're going to pull you into
this company. You got to run this. So why they're laughing. When Cadillac starts going,
it's such a reliable motor. This is where it reminds me of Henry Royce, Rolls Royce,
who did the same thing. The advertisements say that when you buy Cadillac, it comes with a round
trip. And the reason being is because a lot of people would get in their cars and then eventually
on their outing, they'd find themselves broken broken down and so they couldn't get back to their their point of origin with a Cadillac you could
now it's also really important to understand that Henry Leland when he found Cadillac he's almost 60
years old Henry Leland now embarked on the great adventure of his life he would play an important
role in the organization of Detroit's
first successful automobile company.
What that means is not only is the product successful,
but the company's financially successful.
I'll get to when Billy Durant buys a company from him,
but they're making about, I think, two,
they're making $2 million a year in profit.
And Billy Durant is able to buy the company
for $4.5 million.
And even when GM gets in trouble later on, he had, you know, Billy Durant is able to buy the company for $4.5 million.
And even when GM gets in trouble later on,
Billy Durant has all these other crappy automobile companies.
Buick and Cadillac are funding all the non-profitable companies that Billy Durant rolls into General Motors.
So Cadillac was by far, if not the most successful early automobile automobile company one of it's one of two he's
either the first or the second b-works the other one again this is way before ford uh hits the
model t oh and i forgot to mention something so i'm about to tell you when this is when henry
agrees to become an automobile founder he's working on the engine but he's still running his
his machine shop leland and faulkner so he starts working on Cadillac and he thinks it's going to be like a part time job.
And then he falls in love with the work and he realizes the opportunity that he winds up dedicating all his time to Cadillac.
So it says, remembering those days, Mr. Leland would say, I never intended to get into the automobile business.
There was too much trouble in it.
But to the directors, it seemed reasonable that if the Lelandens could do such a good job on their part of the process they could probably handle the
whole operation much better than it was being done so these are you know wealthy people that
made money in other domains they don't really want to run the car company nor do they actually
have the skill set to do so so that's when they kind of force lindens hand they're like we're
going to shut down if you don't run this whole thing. That's what it means that he was pulled into it.
Finally, as the difficulties multiplied,
Murphy and Bowen came again to call Henry.
They were very definitive.
Either you fellows come and run the factory for us
or we will go out of business.
So the Leland's became automobile manufacturers.
Other men had built cars for many reasons,
for the fascination of creation,
for the profits in it. But Henry Leland agreed to build a car because he did not want to see a pet
engine unappreciated and unused. The Leland's had agreed that they would assume general direction
of the Cadillac operation and would spend at least two or three hours there every day,
though still giving their major part of their day to L&F, that's his other company. Yet from the first day, they found themselves devoting more and more attention to Cadillac
and less and less to their own establishments.
The Lelands were happy at Cadillac.
Henry went to work at once, systematizing the operation and winning the friendship of
the personnel as he introduced his way of efficiency and ideal of precision.
So I want to call your attention to that, that he's winning
the friendship and the loyalty of the personnel. He leads from the front. Later on, I compare
Henry Ford and Henry Leland as oil and water. Henry Ford was an autocrat. There was no, he just, he wanted essentially pegs in a machine.
Leland was not like that.
He valued the individual contributions and he thought that if he had the highest scale, most educated workers, they'd make the best product.
Ford had a completely different approach to manufacturing.
So it says on a dollar for dollar basis, the Cadillac was in all probability the best car in the market. It appeared at a time when there was still a premium upon reliable performance
and Leland was an ex, this is such an important sentence, and Leland was an expert in a field
where experts were still uncommon. Competitors would learn, they would find out by trial and
error, the ways Henry Leland had learned through a lifetime spent in factories among machines.
But it would take time for them to catch up.
So Henry's level of quality was so high that he changed the perception.
So other countries at this time thought American massive manufacturing, they called it nasty.
And so Leland's dedication to quality actually changed that impression so he insists
on precision um and his work the main takeaway from this section is he insists on precision and
his work was appreciated because of this so it says Fred Bennett remained with Cadillac throughout
his life and came to know Henry Leland well so now um he's right later in his life Bennett is writing
uh Henry's son about his father.
There is one thing which I always tell present-day manufacturers, and that is the real basis of the modern standardized car can be put down to the strong religious sense of your father.
He insisted on complete accuracy in manufacturing for the reason that it would be wrong to put fine limits
onto blueprints and not carry them out into the manufactured article there's a ton of examples
just like this one in the book that henry insisted on excellence from everyone around him
leland was a holy terror to automobile suppliers so in this book it reprints um the the story that
that alfred sloan tells in his autobiography whenography when he's selling bearings to Cadillac and just Leland tears into him about they're not precise enough that you can do better.
And again, some people might not like to be talked that way.
Sloan realized it invigorated him.
He's like, wow, this guy, I thought I had high standards.
This guy has way higher standards.
And so we see that and we see the result.
Incidentally, talking about all these stories get passed down about how strict he is.
So it says he had spread a little farther the Cadillac's reputation for excellence. So as they tell friends and other people in the industry about how relentless Henry Leland's drive for quality is,
all that does is now you have people out there saying, hey, this guy make he has the highest quality products and this is the result when Mr. Sloan
bought a car for his own personal use he bought a Cadillac uh this is Henry Leland talking we buy
the best parts we can find I have always contended price should be considered last by a manufacturer
and selecting materials for his product now I'm skipping forward there's. There's a lot of, it's not, you know,
you don't start cataloging and everything goes well.
They have a lot of sales,
but they don't have a lot of like large financial backing.
So then there's, they're constantly short of money,
even though they're making profit.
And so this is why they sell to GM
because although they fight back from,
when there's like a financial panic,
they're close to, you know, running out of money.
And then the overall economy picks up.
They do more sales.
They become more profitable.
And even though they're making $2 million a year, they're just like, you know, this is too anxiety inducing.
And they thought, you know, the pitch from Billy Durant is that he has access to a lot more money.
I think the early GM was capitalized at something like $60 million, which was huge in the early stages of the automobile industry so it says despite their present success with principal uh despite the present success the principal
stockholders thought it would be a relief to be quit of the worry in connection with the business
they had built up after so many years of anxiety and uncertainty and they were willing to sell it
if they could liquidate their investment with some profit and so henry leland is also difficult
in his dealings with durant durant's buying all these companies with stock.
And Leland's like, no, you're paying cash for this, buddy.
And in this section, there's also a description of like, why are so many people starting car companies?
Before they were actual manufacturing concerns, they were just assemblers.
And so they had a lot.
They realized there was a limit to how successful this business model would be.
But they could still make a lot of money on a small investment. This is an example of that. One of the fascinating features of the early automobile
business was that it was possible to make so much money on a small initial investment.
Oldsmobile went into production with not more than $200,000. And in less than three years,
it had paid 105% in cash dividends. And the value of the stock had risen to two million dollars
henry ford's third venture started with much less not more than 29 500 in cash and in four years
its net profit was over a million it cost cadillac backers 178 000 for three attempts and two failures
at the game before they finally got into successful production and the company sold seven years later
for 4.5 million.
And so like a lot of the people that we cover on the podcast,
Henry Leland thought of himself as a teacher,
so much that he made a school, he made one of the first schools,
if not the first school, to teach people mechanics, right?
And this is the section, I'll tell you the note I left myself after.
Henry Leland always wanted to share with others
some of the good things he had found in life.
So one was his religious experience.
He would preach out of the Bible every day at lunch.
The other was his technical skill and the rewards it had brought.
When he went into business for himself,
he never stopped instructing his men in a better way to do things.
He labored to teach his workmen, his suppliers, his stockholders, and even his customers.
He's teaching everybody around him.
Anybody could apply to him for advice, and many did. Henry Ford, in the early days, came over to
ask him how to grind his pistons so they would not stick when they got hot. So he would constantly
share. Even though he's competing with these people, he'd share his information. This reminds
me of one of my favorite quotes by the founder of Intel, Bob Noyce, who was also the mentor of Steve Jobs.
And he says, knowledge is power.
Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
And I think if Henry Leland had heard that quote, he would definitely agree.
Not only did he do the school mechanics, at first they thought, OK, we need more skilled laborers.
But eventually people went to his school and they wouldn't even go.
They'd work for his competitors.
He still kept the school open.
It was very important for him.
He thought this opportunity was so great because if you were a skilled worker in the early automobile industry, you could make a lot of money compared to other labor opportunities that you had.
So Henry Leland thought it was some kind of like, I wouldn't say like mission,
but he thought he was doing a greater good by teaching people how to take care of themselves and as a result being able to provide for their families.
I would also say a trait about his personality I particularly admire, he was dedicated to self-improvement.
His theory was that the one essential ingredient of success was mastery of oneself as well of one's job.
So now we get to the point where he's going to leave Cadillac.
So he's going to resign, him and his son are going to resign,
after Durant refuses to let them make airplane engines.
So before, Durant was true to his word.
He's like, no, no, we're going to buy the company, but you run it.
He was hands-off. He wouldn't even go to the factory.
Leland, later on in life, I think, thought he would have a similar arrangement. Henry Ford, Henry Ford was not like that at all. And I'll get to that in a little bit. But this is where the Leland's resigned, because, again, to him, it's an honor thing, patriotism and helping. airplane engines for the war uh the war will end sooner and less people will die and so he thought
it was a i don't i don't know if his motivation was religious but he talked about it in a religious
sense that he was saving lives that's what he believed and again he's going to walk away
from his greatest professional achievement that he'll ever see and probably the best position he'd
ever been in he could have probably stayed at cadillac till you know he's in his 60s he's like 77 something like that when he
when he founds lincoln lincoln car company um which starts out the lincoln company first is
organized to to produce uh liberty engines for the war and then after the war is over it's repurposed
into automotive manufacturing but this is where Leland walks away from the greatest opportunity in his life.
When his son returned with his uncompromising answer, meaning Durant's not budging, Henry
Leland blew off many months of anxiety and a mighty explosion of wrath.
They decided to send in their resignations to Durant and General Motors and find a way
to help the war effort independently.
It was a heart-rending decision to choose between the solid, well-built
Cadillac organization, again, probably the most successful single brand, early automobile brand
at this time, culmination of their life's work and nebulous. So they're saying, hey, we're going to
throw away a well-built Cadillac organization and the culmination of their life work for a nebulous
half-formed form plan meaning they
don't know they know they're going to help with the war effort they don't know how they're going
to do it okay it's not like they had a backup here uh more hope it was more hope than plan
they want to build motors for the government and help win the war more cautious more calculating
men would have waited until the future was more plain and the plans of the government more clearly defined before taking
such a decisive step but the leelands had a way of following their ideals and in this case they
delayed not one moment to count the cost so there's one story from this time that i want to
share with you and it gives you an insight into the way Henry conducted his life
and his relationships with other people
and the fact that he was constantly trying to help people around him.
So at this time, everybody's trying to go after the same supplies, right?
They need different tools.
They need steel.
They need all the same materials
because the war effort in America is being galvanized, right?
And so Lincoln's set up.'s set to set up uh to
manufacture engines for the war but they can't get they're saying hey they're placing orders
and saying okay we need this in two weeks they're trying to give us in nine months and so he winds
up getting placed at the head of the line because he wound up helping this person out in the previous
time in their life so it says mr leland Leland called Sweet, this guy is helping him,
to his home and gave him a letter with instructions to deliver it personally
to the president of a New England company
which made a certain type of machine that he needed.
It was an order for a large number of machines to be delivered in 30 days.
Sweet protested that the plant probably had advanced orders of a year or more. Henry
replied, I know, I know, but just do as I tell you and then come home. When the messenger delivered
the letter to the toolmaker, this is now the president of the company, this is his response.
Doesn't Mr. Leland know our plant is booked to capacity with orders for at least a year?
Sweet answered, he does because I told him that would be the case. Pondering a
moment, the manufacturer said, go back and tell Mr. Leland he will have the machines in 30 days.
Sweet was astonished and asked for an explanation. The toolmaker told him the story. Now this direct
quote from the toolmaker. 20 odd years ago, I had invented this machine and then used all my
available money in making up a number of models.
These were shipped to manufacturers in different parts of the country with the request that they be given a trial.
If satisfactory, I would manufacture as many as the company could use.
If not satisfactory, I asked that they be shipped back at my expense with a report.
I soon began to get my machines back with such comments as no good, not practical,
too many defects. Then a letter came from the Cadillac Motor Car Company over a signature of
Henry Leland. He wrote that he believed I had a machine that would prove of great value to the
industry if certain defects were corrected. He enclosed a check to cover the expense of my sending one of my expert mechanics
to work with him in perfecting my machine. If successful, he concluded, we will place a
substantial order. The defects were corrected and our mechanic returned with a good order
and a check in full payment. That was our beginning. What you see here now is that result. You may tell Mr. Leland
his order will be filled and delivery made as requested. And so I would summarize that section
as if you do the right thing, people will remember. So now the war is over. I'm fast forwarding.
And they start manufacturing a car. Now keep in mind, Henry Leland is the opposite of Henry Ford. Henry Ford is making a $250, $300 car.
Henry Leland is making a luxury product.
He wants to make the best car in the world, right?
Unfortunately, this is the worst possible time to manufacture an expensive luxury car.
Here's some details about that.
At any rate, the advent of the new Lincoln car had been delayed almost to the very day
when the economic depression of the early 20s made itself felt.
Five days after the long
heralded beauties, they're talking about the Lincoln car, made their debut, other manufacturers,
disturbed by the slackening of demand, announced price cuts. It was a most unprosperous time to
launch an expensive car, no matter how great its virtues. It is a high quality car, but no one has
any money. Instead of going immediately into profitable production, cancellations of orders came pouring in,
and the company, with a large and expensively obtained inventory of material on hand,
was forced not only to curtail its production quickly, below a profitable level,
but also to pay out large sums in refunding deposits to dealers.
So not only are they experiencing bad economic times,
but they're also playing roles they're not used to.
Henry is 77 when he starts Lincoln Car Company, okay?
And he's doing something completely new,
and this is a description of that.
They're much more involved in the financial aspect of that,
and they were not really skilled in that domain.
The Lelands were now playing a new role,
one in which they had no experience and for which they had neither training nor heart.
Remember, he's 77 years old.
Between them, father and son, they designed, created, organized, produced, and managed.
But they'd never before been the major financial sponsors of a great business venture, meaning they have a lot of their own money at stake here, including raising money from people that believed in them.
So it says, previously, the financial responsibility of their business operations had been borne by others. Mr. Faulkner had put up money for LNF. That's his first company. Messrs. Murphy and Bowen had provided the capital for Cadillac until General Motors took over. While the Leland's had started out independently in the Liberty Motor Project, in the end, the United States government had underwritten the operation. So they're doing government contracts while they're making engines for the war. That's what they're
talking about there. But in this case, they have a lot of their own
money in the line. They're also working with
people. There's going to be a split in the board,
right? And so they're losing money, they're losing
money. They have a lot of debt.
And they're all in
and they have partners that are around,
Henry has partners that are around his age, right?
But they're getting advanced in age that
their sons are now coming and other family members are now coming and involved in the business.
And they slowly convince the older people in their family that, hey, we're throwing a lot of good money after bad.
Because to get out of this, they're going to need a couple million dollars.
They think Lincoln will be profitable enough.
Henry and his son believe that Lincoln will be profitable enough that they can pay off the debt when the economy improves.
But the younger people, the people that were not involved, that had no previous experience in the automobile industry, convinced longtime associates of Henry to not continue to fund the company.
So when the company is put into receivership, Ford's going to buy it out of receivership.
The final board meeting, they're coming out and, you know, they're crying.
There's tears in their eyes because they feel they betrayed, you know, their lifelong friend Henry.
And they're just like, we had to vote with my family.
And so Henry and his son, they did not believe in quitting. And so I would say this is an example of
Henry Leland had an honorable personality and he wanted to keep going so he could pay back the
people that believed in him. So it says it was manifestly impossible for the Lelands,
men of tender heart and unswerving integrity, to take a cold, dispassionate view of the financial
straits of the Lincoln Company. Many automobile companies had had money troubles. Some had
undergone a variety of reorganizations, combinations, and other strategies to keep alive,
and their directors and management had not been considered dishonest or insensible
of their trust, even though investors may have lost a portion or all of their equity.
But such a course was unthinkable for the Leland's.
As long as there was breath in their bodies,
they would oppose it.
They had themselves invested everything they owned in the company.
So even though their partners in previous financiers say,
okay, we're going to put the company in receivership,
we give up.
The Leland's no longer runs into receivership.
They don't own the company anymore, right?
And so they're still
going around. They're taking meetings in New York with all kinds of bankers. They're trying to find
somebody to give them money so they can get the company back and run it and then pay back their
shareholders. So they wind up doing a deal with Henry Ford. But Henry Ford, remember at this time
when we covered the book, My 40 Years with Ford, talked about the end of his life. He was extremely,
like he was jealous he
started getting jealous of charlotte the author of that book was charles sorensen and um if anybody
gave if anybody received credit for anything that was not henry ford he found that distasteful um
he also would refuse to compromise or he was he's seemingly rigid he's like this is you know he's
the most arguably the most successful entrepreneur in the world at the time.
So he was not bending.
So and he's also known to be two-faced where he tells publicly he decides to buy Lincoln, right?
Because he does a deal because he talks to Henry's son, Wilfred.
And the way Ford spins this is like, you know, Henry Lynn is one of the most important people in the automobile industry.
Lincoln's a good car. It's going to be a profitable, profitable endeavor.
And I'm also doing a good deed. So he's like, we're going to make money, but I'm really doing a good deed because, you know, this guy is almost 80 years old.
He's played an important role and we're going to help him. That's not. That's that's not true. That's not why he does it.
He has a fanatical distaste for anybody else getting any kind of credit.
So it says, Wilfred left the... This is how the Leland's...
The reason I need to bring this up to you right here is because
Henry Ford, according to the Leland's,
purposely misled them and lied to them and then wind up firing them later.
OK, so this is how the Leland's thought about the deal with Ford or what he agreed to.
Wilfred left the Fords convinced that the understanding between the parties were complete on all the important points.
They would reimburse the creditors and stockholders. They would keep the distributors and retention of the Leland management.
Right. Him and his son were going to both be running company.
The Leland's were believers in this case, of course,
that the Ford offer was extremely fortuitous.
They were years of struggling to try to get a deal.
Sore and defeated as they were,
the Ford proposal was bombed to their long-tired souls.
It seemed logical to them that an experienced automobile manufacturer
not only could appreciate the virtues of the Lincoln car
and the excellence of the factory organization, but also could better foresee its certain brilliant future than the mechanically ignorant money conscious capitalists of the former Lincoln directorate.
These are the younger people that convinced their old the older family not to keep investing money.
There was another bond of understanding between the Leland's and Henry Ford beside an interest in things mechanical.
And that and that was a certain distrust of coldly calculating financiers.
This transaction was directly between father and son and father and son.
So you have Henry and Edsel Ford and you have Henry and Wilford Leland, all honorable men.
And there was no need to consider the careful dispositions of the financial world.
Wrong.
Wrong.
Henry Ford's not putting this in writing on purpose.
And they get an indication of this because there's a journalist that's kind of in Ford's pocket.
He writes for Detroit News.
And he's the one that always gets like exclusives from Ford.
And his name is Sweetheart.
Swineheart.
And we start to see this idea where Ford is now spinning the publicity and the public relations of this deal.
The trend of Swinehart's story must have been somewhat of a surprise to the Lelands,
who would believe that Ford saw good business as well as charitable reasons for investing in the Lincoln Company and retaining the Leland management.
However, the headline was, Ford saves Lelands.
That's exactly what Ford wanted people to believe.
And the gist of the announcement that followed was that Ford neither wanted nor needed the Lincoln.
But through the intercession of Mrs. Ford and her kind heart, and because of the constant pleading of the Leland's,
Henry Ford's own kind heart was touched and he decided to help.
Okay, so at this point, the deal is done.
Again, Henry Ford initially agreed Leland's going to run this.
And then this is where we see the Lincoln Organization and the Ford Organizations are like oil and water, just like their founders are.
And again, as I read this section, I want you to keep in mind, Henry Leland is almost 80 years old when he does this certainly henry leland began his employment with henry ford in
a cooperative mood understandingly eager for success in this last chance to save lincoln
and end his career on a successful note but he was also a man of independent spirit and he resented
the contemptuous indifference of his authority the continued calculated insult to his position
so he fought back so ford sends over
a bunch of guys they start like redesigning his factory they start firing people there's no chain
of command at all um so he fought back he countermanded orders which had been given without
his knowledge uh he fired men installed in the place of his employees they'd fire leland's
employees and and put in their own people and then Leland would
fire them. One day when
Sorensen paused, now this is
Charlie Sorensen playing
the bad guy role too.
One day when Sorensen paused to question a heap of
cylinders thrown aside by the
inspector and after a cursory review
said to the workmen at hand, use them.
Henry came along with a sledgehammer
and smashed every one of them
beyond use or repair so he's using sledgehammers breaking things almost 80 years old and he's doing
that because he does his own qualities like his his own quality testing he's like these parts are
not good enough and then his employees are saying well the ford people told us to use it and henry's
like i don't care what they say we're not going to use lower quality products in our in the lincoln
automobile so we also see a difference in management culture uh like i said earlier henry leland led from the
front uh henry ford beat you down from above so it says though neither the lelands nor many others
knew it at the time this kind of behavior by ford supervisors were not uncommon at ford plants and
with ford's knowledge and approval so they hit, they'd like smack their employees,
they'd fire them if they, it was just extremely,
I would not want to work in a Ford factory
is what I'm saying, especially at this time.
Men were not allowed to sit down at all.
If they so much as leaned against the machine,
they were liable to be fired.
Strange and devious ways were used to discipline men.
And this is a quote from this other author
that wrote a book on Ford.
It says, if the work of certain clerks in the shop
is not wanted,
why tell them so?
Meaning, why are we going to tell them?
They wouldn't tell them.
This is childish behavior.
I cannot believe this.
Smash their desks.
Expensive tools of skilled workmen are scattered over the floor.
This is foolish, insulting, humiliating.
Not at all.
This is now Ford management technique.
It takes the conceit out of
a man who prides himself on his work no what kind of quality person is going to let their
desk be smashed your tools thrown about smacked in the face like this is this is ridiculous
it was such a surprise to the leland's but it was funny to me is there's a report that is
commissioned by the ford management to like not spy i guess to give them a report of how leland manages and listen to the report the whole this is now a ford guy
describing lincoln management the whole organization it appears to us is unusually harmonious
and uniformly competent yeah isn't that what you want so now we get a like the contrast
it says in contrast here were the lelands who led and did not drive.
With them were men, many of the employees from the LNF days. So people had been working them for multiple decades.
They expected to talk things over with their executives before coming to a decision.
And then by the same process, explain to the men under them the reasons underlying decision, which is so important.
We've seen over and over again. We have to know people have to know why the reasons underlying decision and thus secure cooperation to the swiftly moving Ford bosses.
Such a method seemed ridiculously slow and cumbersome.
In fact, the whole Leland organization seemed clumsy to the Ford people.
This is now the difference how they view things.
Manufacturing was to them a matter of logistics layouts and systems not human
engineering this is a summary of how the leland saw this time the whole period was to them a
confusion of spit in your eye hit and run tactics plenty of action but little consideration
conference or explanation so this goes on for several months.
They try to talk to Henry Ford.
First, he's receptive.
He has him over to their house.
And then eventually he disappears.
He won't speak to them.
And to me, he does something that's completely dishonorable.
He doesn't have the courage to fire Henry Leland.
So he does.
This is the order,
the order.
There's all this infighting.
So Ford tells one of his lieutenants,
hey,
go tomorrow to Lincoln and tell Wilfred that we don't need him any longer.
And what do you think?
What do you think Henry's response,
Leland's response to that's going to be?
You're going to fire his son and you think he's going to,
this is an honorable person.
What would any honorable father do?
I'm going to do exactly what Henry Leland did.
He's like, you're firing my son.
I'm gone too.
And so Ford's not dumb.
He's an autocrat.
He's extremely ruthless and relentless, but he's not dumb.
He knew what he was doing.
That's just, that's just hard to swallow.
So it says for a time after the their dismissal
the lelands hoped to have some discussion and settlement with henry ford they received two
weeks advanced salary as terminal pay and that ended their association with the great ford motor
company they were not to talk with either of the fords again so they never spoke to henry or etzel
again so that just seems to be like a real cowardly way to do things.
And not only that, there's tons of,
there's a lawsuit that's going to happen.
There's testimony from both sides.
There's depositions.
A bunch of other people that are not just the Leland family
said Henry Ford made all these promises
and he did not keep them.
And so I want to bring up,
so Leland gets some money because again, Henry Ford said he was going to make all the shareholders
whole, right? The people that invested and believed in Leland. And so he doesn't do that.
Henry Leland winds up having to sue the Ford company to try to get this resolved. And I want
to go back to remember that lesson he learned from his father when he was a young boy. He's now
writing a letter to Henry Ford. This is Henry Leland writing to Henry Ford Henry Ford
just ignored him again he never talked to him again and this is what Henry Leland says
I cannot but feel certain that you intended to keep those pledges when you made them to me
personally and while I cannot understand the long delay on your part. I still hope and trust that you will not shake my lifelong faith in humanity.
And so this is the final hurrah of Henry Leland's life.
And he fights.
There's multiple years.
It goes on, I think, four to six years of him trying to get Henry Ford to honor his word
where he said he'd pay back the shareholders.
And they wind up, again, he doesn't have it in writing.
He has promises with accountants and attorneys, but he does not have this in writing.
And so Henry Ford never did.
It says, so after almost four years of litigation, the Leland's had to notify the stockholders that all the efforts had been exhausted on their behalf.
Again, this is Henry Leland just trying to be an an honorable person and he's doing this right before he dies he's in
his late 80s at this point so it says on september 1st 1931 henry leland wrote this last letter to
the stockholders of lincoln motor company i am 88 years of age on the threshold of the exit from life ready to meet my maker and i am unwilling
that this case be ended without my putting myself on the record i have followed every step of this
fight to obtain our day in court to me this case has meant the fulfillment or the failure of the
agreement i obtained from henry ford for those individuals who suffered loss directly because of their faith in me.
This suit was not brought in my own behalf, for Mr. Ford paid me personally the amount agreed upon.
I have brought this, and together with my son Wilfred, entirely financed this suit on behalf of those others whose benefit disagreement was made. We have no further recourse to law.
There is no step we can take at this time to gain for you the day in court,
which every American citizen is entitled.
But the equities and the Ford obligations have not changed.
Henry Ford, by the terms of his agreement,
owes you the amount of your stock investment in the Lincoln motor company.
And so response to this,
a lot of stockholders sent him letters,
most of them with,
you know,
they were sympathetic and they were appreciated him fighting on this.
Here's one.
He says,
I'm just in receipt of your copy of the form letter,
which you addressed the stockholders and Lincoln motor company.
I want to thank you for it.
It was,
I was a very star small stockholder in your company,
having invested between 1000 or $1,100 into it.
I learned to drive on your splendid car, the Cadillac,
and I knew the Lincoln was going to be a great achievement as well.
So I went into this with the little money I had.
My father was an admirer of yours.
I once met you at my father's house when I was making him a visit.
I know the account of what you say took place between you and Henry Ford is true,
and I feel grateful to you for the long and bitter fight you have made to obtain justice for your shareholders.
I wish I could say don't worry about it anymore.
I can say so for myself, and I do.
So again, he's a great man.
He deserved a better ending than this.
One consolation alone remained.
They had tried.
Perhaps it had been a fragile chance from the beginning, but they had not turned it away. One consolation alone remained. They had tried.
Perhaps it had been a fragile chance from the beginning,
but they had not turned it away.
In a measure, while they had lost their case,
they retained their reputation for personal integrity and responsibility.
The business and industrial world was better for this attempt to keep an obligation,
no matter what the cost in failure, ridicule, and slander.
But the time was not long for Henry Leland.
He had fought his last fight, finished the course, and kept the faith as best he could.
When he wrote he was on the threshold from the exit from life, he had but six months more, including another birthday.
With his son at his side, he died on March 26, 1932.
And that is 128 books down, 1,000 to go.
If you buy the book using the link that's in the show notes,
you'll be supporting the podcast at the same time,
and I'll talk to you again soon.