Launch of the Ford Model T - This Day in History

Posted on Wednesday, October 1, 2025
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by The Association of Mature American Citizens
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Young boy driving a Ford Model T in 1908

On October 1, 1908, the Ford Motor Company rolled out a landmark model that would change transportation forever: the Model T. What began as a single production car in Detroit’s Piquette Avenue plant became the prototype for mass mobility in the 20th century.

Before the Model T, automobiles were primarily luxury items, expensive and built in limited quantities. When Ford introduced the Model T, the aim was audacious but simple: make a car “for the great multitude.” The initial price was about $825—a large sum at the time (roughly $18,000 in today’s dollars)—but far more accessible than many earlier automobiles. The car was powered by a 22-horsepower, four-cylinder engine, weighed about 1,200 pounds, and was built using a heat-treated steel that made it both lighter and stronger than many predecessors. It could reach speeds up to 40 miles per hour, and early versions even offered the ability to fuel on hemp-based fuel in addition to gasoline.

One of the keys to the Model T’s success was Ford’s decision to keep its design and offerings simple. By focusing on a single model, Ford could standardize components and streamline production. This standardization facilitated easier assembly, reduced waste, and kept costs lower. In 1913, Ford introduced the moving assembly line, further accelerating output and reducing manufacturing time dramatically.

As production efficiencies increased, the Model T’s price fell, making it truly attainable for ordinary Americans. At its peak, Ford was turning out thousands of Model Ts per week. Over its production life, from 1908 to 1927, more than 15 million units were built—making it the longest continuous production run of any automobile model until it was later surpassed by the Volkswagen Beetle.

Though immensely popular, the Model T eventually faced changing tastes and expectations. By the 1920s, drivers wanted more variety, more style, and more features. Ford famously limited the car’s color options—“you can have any color so long as it’s black”—largely because black paint dried fastest under their assembly conditions. In 1927, the final Model T rolled off the production line, closing a transformative chapter in American industry and mobility.

The unveiling of the Model T on October 1, 1908, marked more than just a new car—it signified a shift in how people thought about transportation. It set in motion the age of the automobile for the middle class, catalyzed mass production techniques, and laid the foundation for the sprawling car culture that would come to define much of the 20th century.

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