Archive for the 'ANNIVERSARY' Category

MOVING ASSEMBLY LINE DEBUTED IN 1913

October 7, 1913 Moving assembly line debuts at Ford factory“For the first time, Henry Ford ...



For the first time, Henry Ford’s entire Highland Park,
Michigan automobile factory is run on a continuously
moving assembly
line when the chassis, the automobile’s
frame is assembled
using the revolutionary industrial
technique.          

       
A motor and rope pulled the chassis past workers and
parts on the factory floor, cutting the man-hours required
to complete one “Model T.”    

Within a year, further assembly line improvements reduced   
productivity effected by Ford’s use of the moving assembly
line allowed him to drastically reduce the cost of the
Model T.

History: Bottom Lines: Ford’s assembly line, 1913 style

This Day in History: Moving Assembly Line

On December 1st, 1913, the world's first moving assembly line debuted. - Survivalist Briefing

This Day In History: Henry Ford Introduces The Assembly Lines Into His Factory (1913)

 

      

 

 

        
        
       

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‘’THE BAMBINO’’ SETS WORLD SERIES RECORD

Babe Ruth Hits 3-Home Runs "Johnny Sylvester" 1926 World Series Program

On October 6, 1926, Yankee slugger Babe Ruth hit a record three
homers
against the St. Louis Cardinals in the fourth game of the
World Series. The Yanks won the game 10-5, but despite Ruth’s unprecedented performance, they lost the championship in the
seventh game.

In 1928, in the fourth game of another Yanks-Cards World
Series, Ruth tied his own record, knocking three more
pitches out of the same park.

Babe Ruth 1926 World Series Photograph - Babe at Bat (PSA Type I)

Babe Ruth | Biography, Quotes & Death | Study.com
George Herman "Babe" Ruth
(February 6, 1895 – August 16, 1948)

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A MOVING TRAIN ROBBERY ON THIS DAY IN 1866


On October 6, 1866, the brothers John and Simeon Reno staged
the
first train robbery in American history, making off with
$13,000 from an Ohio and Mississippi railroad train in Jackson
County, Indiana.

Of course, trains had been robbed before the Reno brothers’
holdup. But these previous crimes had all been burglaries of
stationary trains sitting in depots or freight yards.

The Reno brothers’ contribution to criminal history was to stop
a moving train in a sparsely populated region where they could
carry out their crime without risking interference from the law
or curious bystanders.

The gang was broken up by the lynching’s of ten of its members
by
vigilante mobs in 1868.        
        
        
        

        
        
 A Holdup for the Ages - True West Magazine      
From left: John and Simeon Reno

Reno Brothers:

Highwaymen of the Railroad – Legends of America

This Day In History: The Reno Brothers Stage The First Train Robbery (1866)
Colt 45 the favorite gun of the train robbers.

       

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CAR MAKER MADE DEBUT AS DRIVER IN 1919

October 5, 1919 - Enzo Ferrari enters his first race - This Day In Automotive History

On October 5, 1919, a young Italian car mechanic and engineer
named
Enzo Ferrari took part in his first car race, a hill climb in
Parma, Italy. He finished fourth. Ferrari was a good driver, but
not a great one: In all, he won just 13 of the 47 races he entered.

Many people say that this is because he cared too much for the
sports cars he drove: He could never bring himself to ruin an
engine in order to win a race.

In the mid-1920s, Ferrari retired from racing cars in order to
pursue his first love: building them.

Enzo Ferrari: The Racing Driver

14 agosto 1988, addio Enzo Ferrari | Universy.it      
Enzo Anselmo Giuseppe Maria Ferrari  (1898 – 1988)        
        
       

14 Agosto 1988 Muore Enzo Ferrari - MDN Network

Download Ferrari Logo PNG Image for Free

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WORK BEGAN ON MONUMENTAL SCULPTURE

Explore Photographs of Mount Rushmore During Construction

84 Years Later: The Making of Mount Rushmore | TIME

On October 4, 1927, sculpting began on the face of Mount
Rushmore
in the Black Hills National Forest of South Dakota.

It would take another 12 years for the granite images of four
of America’s most revered presidents—
George Washington,
Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt 
to be completed.

The monument was the brainchild of a South Dakota historian
named Doane Robinson, who was looking for a way to attract
more tourists to his state. He hired a sculptor named Gutzon
Borglum to carve the faces into the mountain.

The Lakota Sioux people, who consider the Black Hills to be
sacred ground, strongly opposed the project.
 

    
    
    
    
    
   
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Jonah LeRoy "Doane" Robinson
(October 19, 1856 – November 27, 1946)

Mount Rushmore & Beyond – 10-4 Magazine
John Gutzon de la Mothe Borglum
(March 25, 1867 – March 6, 1941)

84 Years Later: The Making of Mount Rushmore | TIME

MR. HALL'S AMERICAN HISTORY CLASS: Mount Rushmore

Workmen on Mount Rushmore

Popperfoto.The Book. Volume 1.Page: 93. Picture: 9. A man on the head of George Washington at Mount Rushmore, South Dakota, U.S.A. circa 1930.

NOEM HOPES FOR MT RUSHMORE FIREWORKS IN 2024 - KSCJ 1360

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