Woodhaven Stamping Plant - UAW-Ford National Programs Center
Transcription
Woodhaven Stamping Plant - UAW-Ford National Programs Center
U AW - F O R D SIXTY YEARS OF PROGRESS 1941-2001 © 2001 UAW-Ford National Programs Center. All rights reserved. A publication of the UAW-Ford National Programs Center, 151 W. Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Michigan 48232. www.uawford.com This book has been designed, written and manufactured in the United States of America by Union Labor. UAW Local 509/ Los Angeles PDC UAW Local 1892/ Maumee Stamping Plant UAW Local 863/ Sharonville Plant UAW Local 387/ Woodhaven Stamping Plant UAW Local 36/ Wixom Assembly BORN OUT OF adversity, the relationship between the UAW and Ford Motor Company now spans sixty years. Through the sacrifice and struggle of the early UAW pioneers and their families, an agreement was reached with the Ford Motor Company on June 20, 1941. Over the years, the UAW and Ford Motor Company have worked together to meet the challenge of building great cars and trucks. But today, more than ever in their history, the UAW and Ford understand that their goals and responsibilities go beyond the design and production of great cars and trucks. They take to heart two inspiring missions: to support employees and to dazzle customers. Supporting employees means many things. It means supporting education, families, community involvement. It means encouraging employees to express the best of themselves, to pursue with energy, imagination, and good judgment the perpetual reinvention that it takes for Ford Motor Company to succeed as a world-class company. It means that the UAW and Ford support the daily efforts of their employees to ensure quality and to satisfy the needs of their customers. This book is written to celebrate the achievements of the hundreds of thousands of men and women of the UAW and Ford Motor Company. This 60th Anniversary is an occasion to acknowledge the struggles and accomplishments of the past, and it is an occasion for looking forward to building on a proud tradition of working together to produce world-class cars, trucks and services. This history book and additional archived photos will be available online through the UAW-Ford National Programs Center website at www.uawford.com. Foreword he 60th Anniversary of the Collective Bargaining relationship between the UAW and Ford Motor Company is an occasion for celebration. I congratulate all the men and women who have contributed to the making of a great legacy and who have made possible a great future for UAW-represented Ford employees. Sixty years from the signing of the first agreement between the UAW and Ford Motor Company, the UAW remains an important and integral part of our lives today. Thanks to the courage and hard work of our members, the UAW can look forward to even more progress in the new millennium. I was proud when I first joined the UAW in 1956, and I am truly honored to be the President of such a great organization today. As a member of a union family, I am grateful for the opportunity to serve as a part of our UAW team. Over the years, your UAW team has worked with Ford Motor Company to create a model of labor-management relations that other companies look to as a standard. In the coming year, we will be going even farther to lead the way. The UAW and Ford have a proud past and a bright future. Once again, I would like to congratulate all the active and retired UAW members for all they have contributed over the years. Each and every one deserves our thanks. I recognize that making a difference in the world isn’t possible unless we all work together. I appreciate everyone’s efforts, and I look forward to realizing the kind of future that we have worked so hard, and for so long, to achieve. T Sincerely, Stephen P. Yokich President United Auto Workers 4 he 60th Anniversary of Ford Motor Company’s relationship with the United Auto Workers union is an opportunity for us to recognize the people who have contributed so much over the past six decades. They deserve our thanks for building a strong foundation. Today, it is our job to build a future for our company, our union, our people, and our communities on that foundation. Our industry defined the century with personal mobility, mass production, and growing prosperity. In the 21st Century, new inventions and new technologies are transforming our business and, once again, we are changing the world. What hasn’t changed at Ford is our unique sense of family, and our belief that we are only as strong as our people. I am proud of the legacy of Ford Motor Company and the UAW, and I am committed to our future together. I feel strongly about making positive impacts in fundamental yet farreaching ways: taking care of our employees, supporting our communities, and improving our environment. With our collective talent and resources we can build better cars and better trucks, a better company and a better world. I know that we can make a real difference in the 21st Century—for us, for our children and for our communities. T Sincerely, William Clay Ford, Jr. Chairman of the Board 5 ll of us in the UAW National Ford Department have a great deal of personal respect for the men and women in our past who forged the way and spent their lives building our union, so that we could enjoy the contracts of today. The 60th Anniversary of our first contract gives us yet another opportunity to reflect on their sacrifices and struggles, as well as express our appreciation for their commitment. It is our responsibility to continue that same dedication and strengthen our union for future generations. The steadfast resolve of those who built our union and those who followed them created the foundation that exists for our membership and leadership to face the future together in solidarity. The UAW is strong, spirited and visionary, and we are grateful for the opportunity to play a role in serving our membership in this challenging new century. It is an exciting ever-changing time to be a UAW member employed at Ford Motor Company. As a union, we are bringing an uncompromising vigilance to the issues of health and safety in the workplace, and the quality of the products and services that we offer. We are also expressing our commitment to diversity in real, down-to-earth terms. Our 1999 negotiations theme of “Bargaining for Families” resulted in unprecedented gains for our members, our families, retirees and the communities in which we live and work. On behalf of the National Ford Department staff and clerical, I would like to congratulate all of our members for their dedication and support of our union over the last 60 years. In this new millennium we are privileged to uphold the traditions of all of those who came before us by paving the way for those who will follow. A Fraternally and sincerely, Ron Gettelfinger UAW Vice President Director, National Ford Department 6 or the past sixty years, Ford Motor Company and the UAW have combined forces to produce the best products in the world. We owe a debt to those who came before us. To repay that debt, we must continue to work together, to make Ford Motor Company a world leader. Ford and the UAW are continually refining the processes in which each member of the workforce can draw on his or her knowledge and experience in improving manufacturing operations. Our goal is to give our customers the best cars, trucks, and services in the industry, and more. We want to give them what they want in quality, product innovations, services, environmentally responsive policies and community engagement. Together we have the capacity and the vision to make Ford Motor Company the world’s leading consumer company for automotive products and services. The people of Ford Motor Company and the UAW understand our place in history. We are grateful for the opportunities to meet the challenges of an ever-evolving industry, to collaborate and innovate with our fellow employees, and to work hard to make our company the best in the world. F Sincerely, Jacques Nasser President and CEO Ford Motor Company 7 am proud to join Ford Motor Company and the UAW in celebrating the 60th anniversary of their durable and successful partnership. Visteon will soon mark its first complete year as an independent company, and we will continue to build on the trust and mutual respect from which this relationship has grown. Visteon’s vision is to become the world’s leading supplier of integrated automotive systems. To get there we must meet and exceed the expectations of our customers. The UAW can and will play an integral role in delivering better quality, service and technology than our competitors. We at Visteon are just beginning to build our legacy. We won’t hesitate to embrace new processes and technologies that will help us better serve our customers. Yet we will maintain and improve upon the best elements of our heritage from Ford. The best example of that is the labor-management bond we are commemorating today. I want to thank the UAW leaders with whom I have bargained over the years for their unwavering role in creating this strong partnership. These include Steve Yokich, Ernie Lofton, Ron Gettelfinger, Doug Fraser and Owen Bieber. Again, I am proud to have played a modest part in building this partnership, and I look forward to many more years of mutual success. I Sincerely, Peter J. Pestillo Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Visteon Corporation 8 UAW Local 882/Atlanta Plant Contents UAW Local 174/ Vulcan Forge Plant UAW Local 182/ Livonia Plant The Beginning 10 The Years of War, Peace, and Prosperity 28 The Evolution of Modern Collective Bargaining 65 The Future 89 UAW Local 600/ Dearborn Assembly Plant It all starts with the individualist from Dearborn, Michigan, born July 30, 1863 The Beginning The first Ford, a Quadricycle, 1896 TWO CYLINDERS. Four bicycle wheels. A leather drive-belt. A wooden cabinet to sit on. On April 2, 1896, Henry Ford, an employee of the Edison lluminating Company, took hold of an ax and knocked out the narrow doorframe of his woodshed behind 58 Bagley Avenue, his home in Detroit. And then, with his wife, Clara, watching, he pushed his Quadricycle out into the light of history. THE FIRST FORD Henry Ford, who had moved with Clara from Dearborn to Detroit in 1891, did not invent the automobile. Henry had a gift for assimilating the ideas of others and an obsession with improving upon them. For years, Henry, along with three friends from Edison Illuminating Company, had been working with small engines and ignition systems until they decided to build their own car, which turned out to have significant advantages. That two-cylinder, bike-wheeled buggy that Henry pushed out of his woodshed in 1896 was lighter, faster, and made of cheaper materials than other cars of the time. It weighed 500 pounds. It could go twenty-miles an hour. And, most importantly, it got Henry Ford thinking. 11 First Ford factory on Mack Avenue, Detroit. Henry Ford and his 1901 Racer. Henry Ford, right, with Barney Olfield and the 999 race car, 1902. Henry Ford built this car in 1907 and used it in winning the famous Selden Patent Lawsuit, which broke Selden’s monopoly on the infant auto industry. 12 His first two automobile companies failed, but he won fame with his 1902 red racer, the 999, in which Henry himself managed to exceed 60 miles an hour. The first Ford Motor Company factory was built at Bellevue and Mack Avenue. More than 5000 Ford runabouts were sold by 1905. In 1908, two things happened that changed everything. First, the Model T was designed, at $850, to be a car the average person could afford to own. It was a vehicle that would change lives and alter the American landscape. Second, Walter Flanders, the leading industrial engineer in America at the time, was hired to redesign production, and, by 1913, the first moving assembly line was proving its power by cutting production time in half. The world—both outside the factories and in them—would never be the same again. Highland Park Plant. Assembly of magnetos, 1914. Part of a day’s production of Model T’s at the Highland Park plant, 1913. Crankshaft Plant, Highland Park, 1914. The Highland Park Ford plant was the birthplace of the moving assembly line. Designed by the noted architect Albert Kahn, the plant was made entirely of steel, concrete and glass. It was the largest building in Michigan at the time, with 50,000 square feet of glass in its walls and ceilings. By 1920, the plant was producing a car every minute, and one out of every two automobiles in America was a Model T. The plant was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1978. Chicago Assembly, 1917. In 1913, Henry Ford introduced the assembly line at the Ford Plant in Highland Park, Michigan. THE ARRIVAL OF UNIONISM Auto workers first tried to organize into unions in 1913. At Ford’s Highland Park plant, union organizers distributed leaflets and handbills, but they were arrested by police. To keep them from the influence of organizers, the company didn’t let Ford workers leave the plant during lunch or breaks. At that time, workers were earning twenty to twenty-five cents an hour, or about two dollars a day. Final Line Testing, Highland Park Plant, 1924. Eugene Debs, pictured here during his 1912 campaign for president, was the father of industrial unionism in North America. 14 The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), right, and the Carriage and Wagon Workers Union, above, were among the earliest predecessors of the auto unions. Henry Ford on the plant floor. HIGHLAND PARK AND THE ROUGE Henry Ford was by this time envisioning the construction of a superplant. In 1915, the Highland Park plant was the world’s largest factory complex, making a quarter of a million Model T’s a year. When war was declared in April of 1917, the plant also made steel helmets, ammunition boxes, airplane engines, tractors, and gas masks. But Henry wanted to control the raw material that went into production: rubber, wood, coal, and iron. And that required something that had never before been built. Henry bought land for a large manufacturing complex on the banks of the Rouge River, which flowed into the Detroit River. The Rouge Complex was designed by Albert Kahn, who designed the Highland Park Plant. This was the beginning of a tumultuous period in the development of Ford Motor Company. Internally, there were power struggles, which resulted, by 1919, in the consolidation of ownership in the hands of the Ford family. The year of 1920 saw Ford reorganized as a corporation, and it saw the first operations of the steel-production part of the Rouge complex. Five years after Henry Ford imagined it, the Rouge complex was beginning to rumble to life. Ford Trimotor, 1920s. Model A Line at the Dearborn Assembly Plant, 1928. Ford Tractor assembly, 1920s. Model A Assembly, 1928-29. A NEW MODEL AND HARD TIMES The last Model T (number 15,007,033) came off the line in May of 1927, and 60,000 Ford workers were laid off. The city of Detroit saw its welfare roll expenses increase by a million dollars as a result of the unemployed workers. In 1928, when the Model A was introduced, to be manufactured at the now-complete Rouge complex, most laid-off workers reapplied for work. Foremen and superintendents, if rehired, were rehired as production workers. And then, in 1929, the stock market crashed. 16 Workers were again laid off, and wages were cut. Some men were working 14-hour days for ten cents an hour. At the depth of the Depression, Ford shut down for five months to switch from the Model A to the V8. Thousands of people were in dire straits. Many groups were protesting the unbearable conditions of the times. On March 7, 1932, protesters in a Hunger March approached the gates of the Rouge to petition for relief. Four marchers were shot, and a fifth died later of injuries. On March 7, 1932, thousands of workers marched to Ford’s Rouge Plant, chosen as a symbolic target of their protest for jobs and relief in the aftermath of the Depression. Police threw gas. Protesters responded with rocks. Police and guards then fired hundreds of shots into the crowds. At least 50 were wounded. Four died on the spot, and a fifth died later from injuries. The Great Depression In September 1933, a year and a half after the Hunger March, over 10,000 unemployed war veterans form a line over two blocks long to apply for jobs at Ford. Henry Ford had announced that he would hire 5,000 local veterans at $3 a day. Ford Model T with early Ford service mark. Akron Tire Company promotional poster. Model T Ad. 1935. Early Ford Motor Company Advertising 18 1924. Akron Tire Com pa promotional pos ny ter. Early Union Handbills 19 The first National Council Meeting of the United Automobile Workers Federal Labor Union, 1934. THE NEW DEAL With the boost from President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal social programs, the country managed to struggle out of the pits of the Depression. Workers across America were reinvigorated with the mission to organize into unions. And the unions were legitimized and given real bargaining leverage with the passage of the National Labor Relations Act. Ford Motor Company, however, refused to recognize the labor unions. The Ford Service Department, headed by Harry Bennett, kept the workers under strict surveillance and practiced systematic intimidation to keep the workers from organizing. This Charter established the UAW as an International Union, dated August 26, 1935. 20 THE FAMILY BUSINESS Three-years old when his father built the 1896 Quadricycle, Edsel Ford grew up around his father’s workshop. Edsel was driving at ten and had his own car at fifteen. In 1912, Edsel decided to forego college in order to work in his father’s company. He became the president of the company when he was twenty-five-years old. On January 18, 1937, President Edsel Ford posed in the 25 millionth Ford passenger car with his father, Henry Ford, in his first car built in 1896. Edsel and his father shared a complex relationship. Overshadowed by the man who had invented the Model T and changed the world, Edsel struggled to make his own mark on the company and in the industry. “Father made the most popular car in the world,” Edsel once said. “I want to make the best.” To that end, Edsel established his own design studio and set to work. In 1932, Diego Rivera, the artist who had been commissioned to produce a mural based directly on the Rouge factories for the courtyard of the Detroit Institute of Arts, visited Edsel’s studio and found him working on early designs of a new swooping, sensuous Lincoln coupe. Impressed by Edsel’s good character and kindness of spirit, Rivera created a painting of Edsel working in his studio. Rivera felt that Edsel was an artist in his own right. Proving Rivera right, Edsel finalized his early sketches of a new Lincoln and worked with a world-class designer to build it. He brought out the Lincoln Zephyr in 1935. The Museum of Modern Art called the Zephyr “the first successfully designed streamlined car in America.” Edsel was indeed making his mark. But his crowning achievement was yet to come: the Lincoln Continental of 1939. 21 Several Headquarters for Early Organizing Drives The Second Annual Convention of the International Union United Automobile Workers of America, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1937. Roy, Victor and Walter Reuther at the UAW’s 1937 Convention, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 22 “Watch the Fords Go By,” a lithographic billboard by A.M. Cassandre for Ford Motor Company, 1937. 1937 Ford Coupe. Robert Kantor, Walter Reuther, Richard Frankensteen and J.J. Kennedy. THE BATTLE OF THE OVERPASS On May 26, 1937, around fifty union supporters, mostly women, were led by organizers Walter Reuther and Richard Frankensteen. They had been granted a city permit to distribute union handbills to Ford workers at the Rouge Plant. Union organizers Reuther, Frankensteen, Robert Kantor, and J.J. Kennedy walked onto an overpass above Miller Road, which ran the length of the Rouge Plant. Despite the presence of many newspaper reporters and photographers, Ford servicemen surrounded and severely assaulted the union men. Other Ford servicemen attacked handbillers at the gates, beat up many people, and knocked down and kicked some of the women who had come to distribute the handbills. Sixty people were treated for injuries. 207 handbillers were arrested during this period. 24 Two hours before the Battle of the Overpass, May 26, 1937, Walter Reuther handed out leaflets to members of the UAW Women’s Auxiliary. Because the event was photographed and communicated to the nation and the world, the Battle of the Overpass became a seminal rallying point for union organizers everywhere. Even today, the images convey the dark spirit of the times in which the union pioneers were struggling to survive. Ford Service Department men beat up Richard Frankensteen. A member of the Women’s Auxiliary of the UAW identifies the Ford Service Department men who pushed her onto a streetcar, 1937. Early CIO and UAW leaders, left to right, UAW President Homer Martin, UAW First V.P. Wyndham Mortimer, UAW Second V.P. Ed Hall, CIO Publicity Director Len DeCaux, UAW Secretary-Treasurer George Addes, Adolph Germer of the CIO, CIO Chairman John L. Lewis, Attorney Lee Pressman, and CIO Director Joseph Brophy. Homer Martin became aligned with a faction in opposition to the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO) and wound up in league with Harry Bennett in the creation of an internal company union at Ford. This newspaper reported on the outcome of a labor-board investigation into this and related matters of the time. 1939 was the year that Ford Motor Company was held guilty of violating the National Labor Relations Act in Detroit. Ford appealed the decision. The decision was upheld in the Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati, and, in February of 1941, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the case. While Reuther and others were actively working on strengthening the union in the plants, the stage was being set for the company and the union to meet head on. 1939 Ford Convertible Coupe Assembly Line, V-8, 1940. THE START OF A NEW ERA Henry Ford and Edsel Ford By the middle of the Thirties, there were few Model T’s left to be seen on the roads. Other models had taken the place of the historic icon. “I see by the new Sears Roebuck catalogue that it is still possible to buy an axle for a 1909 Model T Ford, but I am not deceived,” wrote E.B. White in a famous 1936 essay published in The New Yorker. “The great days have faded, the end is in sight. Only one page in the current catalogue is devoted to parts and accessories for the Model T; yet everyone remembers springtimes when the Ford gadget section was larger than men’s clothing, almost as large as household furnishings. The last Model T was built in 1927, and the car is fading from what scholars call the American scene—which is an understatement, because to a few million people who grew up with it, the old Ford practically was the American scene.” By the end of the Thirties, the American scene was to change its character again. The rise of the UAW was imminent. Walter Reuther was fast becoming a public figure. And the rise of Edsel’s son, Henry Ford II, was in the making. Henry Ford II, Henry Ford and Edsel Ford Walter Reuther is pictured celebrating his first election to UAW President in 1946. He held that office until his death in 1970. Reuther is riding on the shoulders of Brendan Sexton, president of UAW bomber Local 50 at Willow Run, and to the left of Sexton is Walter’s brother, Roy Reuther. The Years of War, Peace, and Prosperity Henry Ford II is pictured here in 1945 at age twenty-eight at the Rouge complex. He led the Ford Motor Company from 1945 until 1975. The signing of the first UAW-Ford Agreement, World War II, and the transformative years of a strong and vital post-WWII America Michael Widman, on left with his tie undone, and Richard Leonard, standing at the microphone, 1941. William McKie David Miller Francis Dillon Richard Frankensteen Who was First? The complex origin of the UAW at Ford In the early years in order to organize the workers at Ford, Bill McKie and David Miller, both Ford workers, approached Francis Dillon, the AFL organizer (who was to become the first UAW president in 1935). The AFL (American Federation of Labor) had been founded in 1881. Dillon told them that workers were to be divided according to craft. McKie and Miller believed that divisions would make for a weak union. Believing in strength in numbers, they wanted to organize Ford workers into a single industrial union. So, with McKie as the elected president and Miller vice-president, their small group applied for a federal charter from the AFL in Washington, D.C. In 1935, Congress had passed the Wagner Act and created the National Labor Relations Board. The Wagner Act strengthened the ability of unions to organize production workers. Eventually, McKie’s small Ford group received a federal charter and, in 1935, became Federal Local 19374, the precursor to UAW Local 600. 30 At the 1935 AFL convention, John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, and other industrial unions defied the AFL and set up the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO). The CIO was formed by AFL-affiliated unions seeking to organize workers in steel, rubber, auto, and mass-production industries. The AFL and the CIO were rivals from the start. The 1936 convention marked the founding of an independent UAW. Homer Martin was elected to be the UAW-CIO president. Vice presidents were Ed Hall, Wyndham Mortimer, and Walter Wells, with George Addes as secretary-treasurer. In September of 1936, Walter Reuther, in his late twenties, was elected president of the UAW local 174, a west side Detroit local. In 1937, Homer Martin appointed Richard Frankensteen the UAW director of organizing for Ford. In 1939, at the UAW convention, R.J. Thomas was elected president. In 1940, Michael Widman was appointed UAW director of organizing for Ford. In 1941, Richard Leonard became the UAW Ford Director. THE FORD FAMILY Henry Ford and Clara Jane Bryant married in 1888 and, in 1893, had one son, Edsel Bryant Ford. Edsel married Eleanor Clay in 1916. They had four children: Henry II, Benson, Josephine Clay, and William Clay. Edsel was 25-years old when he became president of Ford Motor Company in 1918, and he held that position for the rest of his life. He was in charge of sales, marketing, and accounting, and he also developed a sense of design, an area in which he contributed much during his years at Ford, including the design of the classic 1939 Lincoln Continental. He died in 1943. Henry II married Ann McDonnell in 1940. They had three children: Charlotte, Anne, and Edsel Bryant Ford II. When Henry II became president of Ford in 1945, he did so on the condition that he would be free to make any changes in the company that he saw fit, which meant that Harry Bennett would have to go. William Clay Ford married Martha Firestone in 1947, the year Henry Ford passed away. They had four children: Martha Parke, Sheila Firestone, William Clay, Jr., and Elizabeth Hudson. As vice president and general manager of the Continental Division, William Clay drew on his father’s 1939 Continental design when he oversaw the development of the 1956 Mark II. Henry Ford II and his grandfather look over a model of the Rouge complex. The brothers Henry Ford II and William Clay Ford. Pictured are the UAW African-American Organizers who spearheaded the effort to build support for the UAW in the African-American community and the Rouge Complex. Left to right: Joseph Billups, Walter Hardin, Christopher Alston, Veal Clough, Clarence Bowman, Leo Bates, and John Conyers, Sr. Michael Widman, Walter Reuther, and George Addes, 1941. UAW Secretary-Treasurer George Addes and Richard Leonard, who was in charge of the Ford organizing drive, distribute union leaflets at the Rouge plant. 32 Women played a crucial role in the organizing drives. In May of 1941, the union won elections in preparation for the negotiations with Ford Motor Company. Holding the banner, on the left is Michael Widman. On the right, R. J. Thomas. ORGANIZING BEFORE THE 1941 AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE UAW AND FORD By the end of 1937, the UAW had 300,000 members. But from 1937 to 1941, over fourthousand Ford workers were fired for suspected union membership. During this time, the UAW was beset by struggles for leadership. In 1940, Michael Widman led the organizing drive at Ford, the last of the auto companies to resist recognizing the unions. Leaflets and handbills were distributed relentlessly. Workers wore union buttons to work. Within a few months, several thousand had joined the UAW. On April 1, 1941, Harry Bennett, head of the Ford Service Department, fired eight members of the Rouge grievance committees, and UAW workers at the Rouge went on strike. Henry Ford had resigned from the presidency in 1918. Since that time, his son Edsel had acted as the company president. But Henry maintained strong control and influence over key company decisions and policies, effected and enforced through Harry Bennett. When the 1941 Rouge strike broke, Edsel rejected the hard line taken by Bennett and argued to persuade his father to settle with the union. Ten days after the strike had begun, Ford Motor Company agreed to recognize a grievance procedure in which unresolved issues were to be mediated. Workers returned to the plant, with the understanding that a full contract would be negotiated after the UAW held its elections in May. 33 The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1941. Standing, from left to right : William Ducharme, James Cowbray, James G. Couser, Alfred Bardelli, Percy Llewellyn, James Sullivan, Frank Morgan, Anthony Leone, Arthur J. McNally, George J. Buckwick, Joseph D. Twyman, Carl Lee Smith, Martin Jensen, Frank Neuman, William Taylor, George Sherinian, Joseph A. Lynch. Seated from left to right: Samuel M. Bitner, Richard T. Frankensteen, George F. Addes, Allan S. Haywood, Shelton Tapps, Philip Murray, R. J. Thomas, Richard T. Leonard, Michael F. Widman, Jr. THE SIGNING OF THE FIRST AGREEMENT Negotiations began on June 1, 1941. UAW Ford Director Richard Leonard led the UAW team. Harry Mack headed the Ford team, but Harry Bennett supervised. In the negotiations, the Company granted an almost totally closed union shop, agreed to pay back wages to more than 4,000 workers wrongfully discharged, and committed to a grievance procedure. The Company also agreed to match the highest wage rates in the industry and to deduct union dues from workers’ pay. The terms were the most generous in the history of industrial relations. But Henry Ford still had to agree to the terms. When Bennett brought the terms to Henry Ford, who had taken no part in the negotiations, 34 Henry Ford rejected them out of hand. That night, his wife Clara pressed him on the union issue. She knew that Edsel wanted to settle, and, having followed the long battles over the years, she had had enough of the rancor and violence. Clara sided with Edsel in favor of ending the strike and pressured Henry to settle. But Henry’s consideration was influenced by other factors, as well. Thousands of pro-union workers had filed claims with the courts. Ford had defense contracts the government threatened to revoke if Ford didn’t improve its labor policies. And, by 1941, labor was a major force in American life. Ford was the only auto company that hadn’t yet settled with the UAW. The agreement was signed on June 20, 1941. Left to right: Richard Leonard, Allan Haywood, Philip Murray, Harry Bennett, R. J. Thomas, and George Addes. Signing of the First National Agreement, 1941 Seated, left to right: Philip Murray, Harry Bennett, R. J. Thomas, George Addes. The UAW National Negotiating team at Ford, 1942. From left to right: Emil Mazey, Harold Bessey, W.G. Grant, Percy Llewellyn, John Brinly, Frank Ellis, Forest Doren, Thomas Thompson, secretary, M.A. Williams, William Kimberling, Richard T. Leonard, director, UAW-CIO Ford Department, and William McKie. Not Pictured: Joseph Twyman. Scenes from factory work, 1943-1944 FACTORIES SUPPORT THE WAR EFFORT On December 7, 1941, Japanese fighter planes bombed Pearl Harbor in Hawaii and drew the United States into World War II. The last car off the line before the company converted to wartime production. Between 1942 and 1945, the auto companies dedicated their operations to the war effort, the UAW agreed to a no-strike pledge. Ford produced no cars for civilian use. Instead, they manufactured military equipment, including tanks, trucks, engines, bombs, airplanes, and ammunitions. Before the end of war, the elder Henry Ford and Harry Bennett left Ford Motor Company for good, and, in 1945, Henry Ford II brought in a talented new management team. The new, young managers were more disposed to accept and work with the UAW. By the end of the war, UAW membership was over 1.2 million, of whom about 350,000 were women. The UAW had become the largest union in the world. 36 Touring the Willow Run bomber plant, UAW Local 50, in the fall of 1942 are, left to right, Under-Secretary of War Robert Patterson, Henry Ford, Michigan Governor Murray Van Waggoner, UAW President R.J. Thomas, and Edsel Ford. Foundry worker, 1944. B-24 bombers were built by members of UAW Local 50 at Willow Run, Michigan. Women worked in the plants in large numbers during the war. A veteran of WWII in a Ford plant. The Whiz Kids 38 The Whiz Kids, in the first row, a group of Ford Executives from left to right: Arjay Miller, F “Jack” Reith, George Moore, James Wright, Charles “Tex” Thornton, Wilbur Anderson, Charles Bosworth, Ben Mills, J. Edward Lundy, Robert McNamara. Jack Davis is in the second row between Wright and Thornton. 1946 Ford Sportsman Convertible, with maple and mahogany wood paneling. THE PROMISE OF PEACE In the postwar period, the country was ready to return to normalcy. Ford advertisements capitalized on the allure of a bright future for those making a transition from the sacrifices of war to the prosperities of a quickly growing middle class, which included more and more auto workers who now had solid earnings and job security. Home ownership increased, and many workers now drove their own cars to work. 39 REUTHER ELECTED UAW PRESIDENT Born on the eve of Labor Day, September 1, 1907, in Wheeling, West Virginia, Walter Reuther grew up a member of the working class just as the modern factory with its new processes, unique environments, and productive capacities came into being. At 19, he was hired as a die maker by Ford Motor Company for the production of the Model A in the Rouge. By 1946, Walter Reuther had a strong reputation in the UAW and had been elected its president. In the 1947 convention, UAW President Walter Reuther battled the Thomas-Addes faction for control of the union. Leadership was fractious and bitter. Under the slogan, “Teamwork in the leadership and solidarity in the ranks,” Reuther promised an end to factional infighting. And he won. With this victory, Reuther made possible the creation of a more cohesive, democratic UAW. Reuther Slate supporters, UAW Convention, 1947. Voter registration for Lincoln workers of UAW Local 900, 1947. 40 Emil Mazey, Leonard Woodcock, and Walter Reuther, UAW Convention, 1947. On April 20, 1948, Reuther barely escaped assassination. Home from an evening union meeting, he was standing in his kitchen when a gunman fired a shotgun through the window. Reuther’s right arm was shattered. Even after years of rehabilitation, his arm never regained full strength. Thirteen months later, Victor Reuther was shot in his Detroit home. He was shot in the eye, but he survived. Neither shooting was solved by investigation, and no one was ever prosecuted. Reuther, arm in a brace, is pictured here with Ken Bannon in July of 1948. The 1949 Speedup Strike In the winter of 1948, the union identified pension plans as its next goal in bargaining with Ford. On September 29, 1949, under the threat of a strike, Ford agreed to company-paid pension plans for workers. Seated, left to right: UAW Ford Director Ken Bannon; Walter Reuther; Ford Vice-President John Bugas; and Mel Lindquist, Ford manager of industrial relations. Standing, between Bugas and Reuther, is a very young William Clay Ford. The 1949 UAW Convention. 42 1949 Mercury Station Wagon 1949 Club Coupe 1949 Henry Ford II is pictured here in 1952, the year “automation” became a buzzword for Ford Motor Company. Implementation of the concept of automation began at the Buffalo stamping plant and continued with the construction of the Cleveland engine plant in 1952. In 1947, 97,000 production workers built about one million Ford cars and trucks. By 1960, 120,000 workers doubled production to 2.2 million. Cars and trucks coming off the line, 1950. First UAW Ford Pensioner, 1950. Ford Motor Company Administration Committee, 1953. From left to right, in the first row: William Clay Ford, Ernest Breech, Henry Ford II, Benson Ford; in the second row: J.R. Davis, L.D. Crusoe, W.T. Gossett, J.S. Bugas, D.S. Harder, T.O. Yntema, I.R. Duffy; in the third row: W.A. Williams, J. Dykstra, R.H. Sullivan, A.J. Weiland, E.S. MacPherson, S.W. Ostrander, C.F. Moore, Jr., R.S. McNamara. Edsel Ford 1939 Lincoln Continental Convertible 1955 Lincoln Continental Mark II LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON On October 2, 1939, Edsel Ford unveiled his Continental. It was Edsel’s finest design achievement. Long, low, and sculpted, the Continental had a twelve-cylinder engine and a smooth, gliding ride. It was a enduring classic statement, and people loved it. It was such an enduring statement and so well-loved that, in the decades following its creation, people begged for new models that were based on it. In the early Fifties, responding to customer demand, William Clay Ford and his design team returned to his father’s 1939 Continental. They took cues from its proportions, its long hood and short rear deck. They incorporated one of its most distinctive features, its rear-mounted spare-tire container. Their intention for the Mark II, called “II” in recognition of the 1939 Continental as the “I,” was to resurrect Edsel’s graceful triumph, and their goal was to make a serious mark on the luxury-car market. William Clay Ford While the design achievement of the Mark II could not be denied, commercial success would not be achieved until the Mark III. In the late Forties, the public image of the company was embodied by Henry Ford II and his Whiz Kids. In the Fifties, the three Ford brothers came to represent the company’s public image. Benson Ford had been in charge of the Mercury division since 1948. William Clay Ford headed the Continental division. But, soon after the launch of William Clay’s Mark II, the Continental division was folded into the Lincoln division, and the Mark II got lost in the shuffle. Benson Ford stepped down from Mercury in 1956 to head Lincoln-Mercury dealer relations while William Clay Ford left Continental to become a vice-president in the Styling division. Ten years passed until, in April of 1968, the Lincoln Continental Mark III came out. It was an instant commercial success. It outsold the Cadillac Eldorado and established Ford Motor Company firmly in the luxury-car market. 47 Introduced in 1955, the Thunderbird, with its distinctive design and its V8 engine, became an instant classic. It was a new kind of sports car, one that incorporated luxury and elegance. From 1955 through 1966, it went through a series of refinements and reinterpretations. Revived for inspiration in the new millennium, a Thunderbird will once again be bringing its unique blend of style and luxury to the streets. The Ford Heritage website maintains a history of the Thunderbird, including vintage ads, at www.fordheritage.com. The 1955 Thunderbird UAW President Walter Reuther and UAW Ford Director Ken Bannon, 1955. In 1955, Albert Einstein died, President Eisenhower had a heart attack, the stock market crashed, and the AFL and CIO combined. In the 1955 negotiations between the UAW and Ford, the significant gain was the Supplemental Unemployment Benefits program. The philosophy behind SUB was that auto workers should not be penalized for being unemployed due to conditions beyond their control. It was a major gain for the union. Time magazine put Reuther on its cover because of it. And it was timely. From 1956 to 1959, the company paid out more than $105 million to unemployed workers, mainly as a result of the 1958 recession, during which national unemployment rose to 7 percent. 1955 Contract Signing Ford Vice President John Bugas and UAW President Walter Reuther sign the 1955 Agreement. To the right of Reuther is UAW Ford Director Ken Bannon and Gene Prato. Seated with bow-tie is Mr. Lindquist. Standing behind Mr. Lindquist from left ro right: Mr. Johnson, Malcolm Denise, Ray Busch, Carl Stilleto, Art Speed, Horace L. Sheffield, John Orr. This 1956 billboard advertisement captures perfectly the American Dream of the times. The large and wealthy post-WWII middle class wanted suburban homes and two-car garages. “56 for ‘56” was the slogan of the year. Fifty-six dollars a month for three years, after a 20% down payment, and you could have a ’56 Ford. The slogan was the idea of a young Lee Iacocca, a Philadelphia district sales manager, and the idea was applied nationally, helping to sell an extra 75,000 units. It was also the year that Ford went public, and Ernest Breech was made chairman of the board. In the 1957 Edsel are William Clay Ford, Benson Ford, and Henry Ford II. The 1958 Strike From left to right: Charles Gillette, Angelo DeNardo, S.E. Foster, John Galvin, Earl Parker, Pat O’Mara, Ray Busch, Nelson Samp, Ken Bannon, UAW-Ford department director, Gene Prato, committee chairman, Jerry Wilse, Owen Hammons, Carl Stilletto, Joe Morgan, Jesus Chantres, Charles Brown, James Burwell. 1958 UAW-Ford Negotiating committee. A recession hit in 1958. Car companies built a million cars that went unsold. Leonard Woodcock and Senator John Kennedy at the 1959 UAW Convention. The UAW shows support for civil-rights in a 1960 demonstration. 52 Ford President Robert McNamara and Henry Ford II in 1960, a year in which the leadership at Ford seemed to be in flux. Ernest Breech, after just four years as chairman, resigned under pressure from Henry Ford II. For a few months, Henry Ford II was both president and chairman until, in November of 1960, he named Robert McNamara as Ford president. It was President McNamara who recommended Lee Iacocca to run the Ford Division. On January 3, 1961, McNamara left Ford to accept the position of Secretary of Defense in the Kennedy Administration. The sudden vacancy in the Ford presidency was filled by John Dykstra. Despite the years, from 1945 to 1960, that Henry Ford II had spent constructing a sensible corporate structure with an atmosphere of teamwork, uncertainty was prevailing. While he had learned all too well the dangers of autocracy from the example of his grandfather, Henry Ford II felt drawn to taking the reins of the company in hand. 53 Labor Day, Detroit, 1961. The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1961. Standing from left to right: John Galvin, Alex Garcia, Mr. Bishop, Gene Prato, Mr. Kirby, Mr. Baldwin, Mr. Williams, Carl Stilletto, Sam Fishman. Seated from left ro right; Walter Dorash, UAW Vice President and Director of the UAW Ford Department Ken Bannon, UAW President Walter Reuther, Ross Riley. John Dykstra and Henry Ford II. In April of 1961, after the abrupt departure of Robert McNamara, Henry Ford II tapped John Dykstra, a production manager, for the position of Ford president. Dykstra’s expertise was in the manufacture of cars and trucks and the management of assembly plants. This left Henry Ford II to concentrate on financial development, including diversification. 54 1963 March on Washington. Prior to the March on Washington, the UAW with Walter P. Reuther helped to give leadership to the Detroit Freedom March, 1963. Walter Reuther, a long-time member of the NAACP board of directors, mobilized the UAW and other labor organizations into participating in Martin Luther King’s 1963 march on Washington, D.C. The march was historic. Martin Luther King delivered his “I Have A Dream” speech, and the stage was set for the passage of the civil-rights acts of 1964 and 1965. The Ford Heritage website maintains a history of the Mustang, including vintage ads, at www.fordheritage.com. The first Mustang debuted at the New York World’s Fair in 1964. Named after the legendary WWII fighter plane, the Mustang was a hit, filling a gap in Ford’s line-up by appealing to young drivers who wanted a sporty car. Sales in 1966 reached 549,400 units, the highest ever. The first Mustang to appear on the big screen was a yellow Mustang convertible in the James Bond film Goldfinger. The Mustang was not the brainchild of Lee Iacocca, but Iacocca was responsible for selling the Mustang to a Ford leadership that was still smarting from the failed Edsel venture. In 1965, in recognition of the success of the Mustang, Iacocca was promoted to vice-president. Walter Reuther shakes hands with Ford lead negotiator Malcolm Denise at the conclusion of the 1964 Contract negotiations. 56 The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1964. Seated from left to right: Carl Stiletto, Gene Prato, Chairman, UAW Executive Board Member At-Large and National Ford Director Ken Bannon, UAW President Walter Reuther, Irving Bluestone, Alex Garcia. Standing from left to right: Robert Biblo, Earl Parker, Doyle Williams, Jeff Washington, James Tate, Tom Bladen, Charlie Gillette, Ross Riley, Walter Dorash. 1967 Negotiations. From left to right: Top Ford Negotiators Sidney McKenna, and Malcolm Denise with UAW President Walter Reuther. In 1967, following a two-month strike at Ford, the Supplemental Unemployment Benefits program became a genuine annual-wage guarantee. The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1967. Seated from left to right: Nelson Samp, Gene Prato, UAW Vice President and Director of National Ford Department Ken Bannon, Alex Garcia, Stan Rowe. Standing from left to right: Charles Gillette, Al Hendricks, Don Dewyea, Harry Ather, Frank Bono, Ray Casteel, Robert Battle III, William Donovan, Sam Carr, Walter Dorash. Vice-chairman Arjay Miller, Ford President Semon E. “Bunkie” Knudsen and Chairman Henry Ford II. During the Sixties, Henry Ford II worked to reform and modernize the company. Arjay Miller took over the Ford presidency from Dykstra in 1963, and, in 1968, Henry Ford II relieved him of it and installed him, instead, as vice-chairman. Much of the changes in leadership at Ford can be explained by Henry Ford II’s desire to overcome General Motors’ sales dominance. He wanted Ford to be the number-one automobile company in the world. In 1968, Chairman Henry Ford II accepted President Lyndon Johnson’s appointment of him to head the National Alliance of Businessmen. So Henry Ford II made Bunkie Knudsen, who had been passed over for the presidency of GM, the new president of Ford. Knudsen was eager to continue the chase after GM. But he only lasted until the fall of 1969, when Henry Ford II replaced him with the three presidents, Lee Iacocca, Robert Stevenson, and Robert J. Hampson, each with responsibilities over different divisions. It didn’t last. Ford made Iacocca sole president in December of 1970. Walter Reuther, 1907-1970. In April of 1970, Walter Reuther led what would be his last UAW convention. The membership was experiencing some divisions, and the bargaining would be tough. Reuther was sixty-two years old and looking forward to a retirement in which he could educate a future generation of union activists. The building of the UAW Family Education Center on scenic land near Black Lake in northern Michigan was the last project of Reuther’s life. The center was to conduct a range of activities to train union members, explore the prevailing issues of the times, and share ideas and concerns about the course of the UAW. It was also to accommodate recreational activities for visiting UAW members and their families. Reuther did not live to see the center completed. On the night of May 9, 1970, Walter, his wife May, his nephew and bodyguard Billy Wolfman, and the center’s architect, Oscar Stonorov, left Detroit in a plane bound for Black Lake. In a light rain and low clouds, the plane hit the top of a tree during its descent and crashed into a stand of trees near the airport in Pellston, Michigan. All passengers and the two pilots were killed. On May 13, 3,400 people attended his memorial service in Ford auditorium, and the major automotive companies shut down their lines for three minutes to mourn his passing. By 1970, the UAW was the largest racially integrated organization in the United States. The death of Walter Reuther in 1970 coincided with the decline of the long postwar boom. Henry Ford II considered Reuther “a central figure in the development of modern industrial history.” While the industry would continue without the man, history would preserve his legacy. “You can’t opt out of life,” Walter Reuther reflected in 1968. “You’ve got to make up your mind whether you’re willing to accept things as they are, or whether you’re willing to try to change them.” “He was the only friend I had.” Alexander Cardozo, retired auto worker, mourns the death of Walter Reuther. The Brothers Ford: Standing is Henry Ford II. Sitting on the left is Benson Ford, and sitting on the right is William Clay Ford. Henry Ford II worked doggedly to drum up the financing for the construction of the Renaissance Center from 1971 until 1977 when it was finally completed. In 1978, Henry Ford II fired Lee Iacocca. Soon after, Benson Ford passed away. In 1979, Henry announced that he was stepping down as chairman but staying on as a director of the company. He made Philip Caldwell Chief Operating Officer. William Clay Ford was vice-chairman. After the death of Reuther, Leonard Woodcock continues tradition of UAW support of Civil Rights. In the center is the Rev. Ralph Abernathy from the Southern Christian Leadership Council. The UAW executive board elected Leonard Woodcock the UAW president in May of 1970. Woodcock was able to orchestrate a series of union successes during his tenure, which ended in 1977. To the left of Woodcock, Rev. Lowry and to the right is Coretta Scott King. Malcolm Denise and Leonard Woodcock at the 1973 Negotiations. Pictured from left to right are: Ford President Lee Iacocca, Chairman Henry Ford II and Vice Chairman Phillip Caldwell. Lee Iacocca had been company president since 1970, but by 1977 had become number three in the new three-person office of the Chief Executive. Mr. Caldwell would become Chairman of the Board in 1980, and serve until his retirement in 1985. 61 The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1973. Seated from left to right: Robert Battle III, UAW Vice President and Director of the Ford Department Ken Bannon, UAW President Leonard Woodcock, Walter Dorash. Standing in front from left to right: Jim Sullivan, Louis “Connie” Tiseo. Standing in back from left to right: Don Corn, John Szluk, Steve Boyle, John Popovich, Vern Dollens, Ray Shubert, Wayne Medders, Nelson Samp, E.J. Moran, Pete Pavlich. Auto worker, 1976. Auto workers on strike, 1976. Ken Bannon, UAW Vice President and Director of the Ford Department, with strikers at a fire barrel, 1976. 62 The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1976. The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1979. In center, seated, is UAW Vice President Ken Bannon, director of the UAW Ford Department. Seated from left: Dan Forchione, Mike Rinaldi, Bannon, Ron Halstead, Secretary, Robert Bender. Standing, from left: Steve Boyle, Robert Battle, John Popovich, Len Vizzaccero, Robert Schoeneman, Stan Jones, Bill Johnson, Albert “Don” Watters, William “Bill” Brown, Jr., Joe Desmond, Vernon Dollens, Nicholas Vallese. Standing, from left to right: Bill Corey, Phil Douglas, Don Davis, Jessie Gregory, James Nagy, Jr., Ron Halstead, Albert “Don” Watters, Red Little, Don Burgess, Bob Morris, Bob Tiseo, Norm Fultz, Byron Cooper, Ernest Lofton, Frank James. Knealing: Tom Dowdy. Sitting from left to right: UAW Vice President and Ford Department Director Ken Bannon, UAW President Douglas A. Fraser, Dan Forchione, Mike Rinaldi. UAW President Douglas A. Fraser and Ford Motor Company Lead Negotiator Sidney McKenna, opening the 1979 Negotiations. Until 1979, UAW membership rolls were at an all-time high of 1.6 million, but, during the energy crisis of the Seventies, cheaper foreign imports with better gas mileage gained one quarter of the American market. The UAW lost six-hundredthousand members in the years after 1979. The years were dark ones for the union and tested the mettle of its leadership and the spirit of its members. The very survival and future of the UAW was at stake. UAW Local 36/ Wixom Assembly, 1980 UAW Local 36/Wixom Assembly, 1980 UAW Local 900/Wayne Assembly, 1978 Northville Plant, 1981 The Fight for Survival – and Beyond For the last twenty years, the UAW and Ford Motor Company worked together to build quality and obtain a secure future. UAW-Ford production worker, 1984. The Evolution of Modern Collective Bargaining Assembly Plants, 1980s 66 In the Eighties, faced with global competition, the American workforce undertook serious efforts to encourage consumers to buy American-made products. THE RELATIONSHIP between the UAW and Ford Motor Company went through radical changes during the last twenty-five years of the 20th Century, a period when the world in general and the United States in particular experienced radical changes. RADICAL CHANGE Technology made leaps and bounds in manufacturing, computers, and communications. Companies grew multinational. Cultures diversified. The urgent issues of those decades ranged from civil rights to labor rights, from a crisis of energy to a crisis of the environment, from the war on drugs to the war in the Gulf. Those years were transformative for the UAW and Ford, as they were for organizations in every industry. In the early Eighties, global competition took the wind out of the sails of the American automotive industry. The economy was in a slump. Car and truck sales plummeted. Plants were closed. Nearly half of the UAW’s Ford membership was laid off. 67 Stephen P. Yokich: at left in 1978 as Director of UAW Region 1 and below in 1974 as an International Representative. As Regional Director Stephen P. Yokich in 1979 , formed the Region 1 Youth Council. 1974. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Yokich, Walter P. Reuther, Steven P. Yokich upon his being elected a UAW Local 155 representative, 1967. It was a tough time financially for Ford, but it was a critical time for the continued existence of the UAW. Caught off guard by foreign competition, Ford was marshalling its forces to fight back and survive as a company. Suffering deeply as a result of these efforts, the UAW had far less forces to marshal on its own behalf. The world had seemingly changed overnight. Feeling the impacts of cheaper imports, new technologies, and a national recession, the UAW, like Ford, had to redefine its mission. DEFYING THE ODDS In 1979, the UAW and Ford had negotiated a letter on Employee Involvement. That letter was the foundation for the innovations in labor-management relations during the next twenty years. The UAW negotiated gains in the areas of 68 health and safety, quality, job and income security, education and training, outsourcing, and family and community support. The light that flickered in the dark days of the Eighties burned brightly in the Nineties. The national bargaining committees of those years defied the odds and accomplished unprecedented gains. The membership of the UAW came together to spur organizing efforts, shore up support, and plan for the future. In 1983, UAW President Owen Bieber appointed UAW Vice President Stephen P. Yokich as Director of the Ford Department. It was an extraordinary period of the UAW’s history. As Director of the UAW’s Organizing Department, Yokich made organizing a priority, and he was the lead Ford negotiator for the collective-bargaining teams. His negotiating skills were by that time well respected, and his ties to the UAW were lifelong. MODERN BARGAINING From 1983 to 1989, as director of the UAW National Ford Department, Yokich was part of a team that set new standards for bargaining. The new position of the UAW was based on an understanding that the union could develop UAW President Douglas Fraser shakes hands with Ford President Donald Petersen, 1982 Negotiations. To Mr. Fraser’s right are UAW Vice President and Director of the National Ford Department Don Ephlin and his assistant Dan Forchione. Douglas Fraser and Peter J. Pestillo, 1982 Negotiations. The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1982. Top row, left to right: Sheldon Friedman, Howard Young, Frank James, UAW President Douglas A. Fraser, Vice President and Director UAW Ford Department Donald F. Ephlin, Dan Forchione. Second row: Tom Dowdy, Mike Rinaldi, Ernest Lofton, Stan Jones, John Hunter, Phil Douglas. Third Row: Bill Corey, Robert Bruce, James Nagy, Jr., Tom Bennett, Robert Douglas. Fourth Row: Harold Boone, Norm Fultz, Kenneth “Wayne” Bean, Dan Vergari. Donald Petersen at Local 892/Saline Plastics, 1982. Stephen Yokich bargaining for the first time as director of the Ford Department, 1984. Peter J. Pestillo, 1984. 70 programs to improve the economic and social conditions of the workforce while also addressing employer concerns about productivity and efficiency. The UAW made it clear that it understood the connections between quality, consumer satisfaction, and job security. And, on the company side, from the early Eighties through 1999, Peter J. Pestillo played a key role in the negotiations, in building and maintaining the relationship with the UAW. Joining Ford Motor Company as a Vice President Labor Relations in 1980 and promoted to Vice President Employee Relations in 1985, Pestillo earned the respect of his union counterparts with a keen understanding of collective bargaining, the nature and history of unions, and the necessity for the union and company to work together to build quality products and satisfy customers. To survive and excel in the global marketplace, the union and the company had to work together, and Pestillo, for his part, worked hard to help build a labormanagement relationship of mutual respect. Among the innovations in the 1982 Agreement were profit-sharing, several jobsecurity protections, the Education, Development and Training Program (EDTP), and the mutual growth forums. The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1984. Standing from left to right:James Nagy, Jr., Walter Richburg, Dan Vergari, Kenneth “Wayne” Bean, Larry Webb, Larry Lewis, Dave Curson, William Schaffner, Bob Pokerwinski, Bill Corey, Stan Jones, Frank Vesprini. Seated from left to right: Bob King, UAW Vice-President and Director of the UAW Ford Department Stephen P. Yokich, UAW President Owen Bieber, Phil Douglas. 1984 AGREEMENT In the 1984 negotiations, the UAW won specific contract language that ensured a UAW role in quality issues, a role that evolved in 1993 to include the ability of workers to stop the line for quality reasons. Joint programs supporting worker participation were expanded to emphasize health and safety, employee assistance, labor-management studies, childcare referral, and local training funds. The Employee Assistance Program was established, and job security was enhanced. UAW Vice President Stephen Yokich and Ford Motor Company’s lead negotiator Peter J. Pestillo at the opening of Collective Bargaining, 1984. 71 Ernest Lofton and Owen Bieber participate in demonstration against South Africa in Washington, D.C., 1984. UAW Vice President Yokich supports strikers at UAW Local 882/Atlanta Assembly Plant, August 1, 1986. UAW Local 425/Lorain Assembly Plant, 1986. UAW Local 919/Norfolk Assembly Plant. 72 The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1987. Standing from left to right: Joseph Peters, Jr., Kenneth “Wayne” Bean, Jerry Melillo, Ron Gettelfinger, Walter Richburg, Wilis Lee Israel, James Patton, Larry Miller, William Don Hammonds, Frank Miccolis, James Vellucci, Joseph D’Amico. Sitting from left to right: Bob King, Vice President and Director of the UAW Ford Department Stephen P. Yokich, UAW President Owen Bieber, Alex Garcia. Donald Petersen and Stephen P. Yokich, 1987 Negotiations. 1987 AGREEMENT In the 1987 negotiations with Ford, Yokich led bargaining that resulted in improved protections for job security and increased opportunities for worker involvement. Among the many new advances were the new Guaranteed Employment Numbers (GEN) program, which established guaranteed employment numbers for each unit and location, and the “Best-in-Class” Quality program. The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1990. Standing from left to right: Joseph Reilly, Mike Baxter, Archie Kinney, Jasper Catanzaro, Leslie Burnett, Jim Settles, Steve Wyatt, Al Suemnick, Dennis Bryant, Thomas Boritzki, Vern Newland, Garry Mason, Charles Castle. Seated from left to right: William Don Hammonds, Gerald Bantom, Vice President and Ford Department Director Ernest Lofton, UAW President Owen Bieber, Richard Shoemaker, Robert David, Jerry Melillo, Bill Stevenson. 1990 AGREEMENT The 1990 Agreement successfully integrated Employee Involvement principles into a variety of new areas, including preventive maintenance, ergonomics, project management, and team arrangements. All joint programs enjoyed expanded funding. UAW Vice President Ernest Lofton had a key leadership role during the negotiations. In September of 1990, the U.S Department of Labor presented an award to the UAW-Ford National Education, Development and Training Center for its excellence. 73 Ford Motor Company President Harold “Red” Poling visits with (from left to right) John Morris, James Fluker, Donna Poet and Dan Brooks, 1991. 1993 AGREEEMENT In the 1993 Agreement, the UAW and the Company affirmed their commitment to jointly sponsored programs. Expanded Employee Involvement training initiatives included enhanced professional training for Employee Resource Coordinators (ERCs). The Technical Skills Program was created to train workers in the skills they need to perform in high-tech workplaces. And an Elder Care Consultation and Referral Program. 74 The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1993. Standing from left to right: Bill Stevenson, Vern Newland, Archie Kinney, Ben Storemski, Will Burden, Tom Boritzki, Nerlean Young, Doug Lewis, Gerry Stowell, Joseph D’Amico, Phil Rose, Paul Quick, Johnny Vawters. Seated from left to right: Joseph Reilly, Gerald Bantom, John Nolan, Vice President and Director UAW Ford Department Ernest Lofton, UAW President Owen Bieber, Jim McNeil, Richard Shoemaker, Tom Torres, Frank Howe. Harold “Red” Poling and Owen Bieber, 1993. Ford Motor Company headquaters, Dearborn, Michigan, 1993. From left to right, William Clay Ford, Stan Seneker, Harold “Red” Poling and Donald Peterson. Ford Motor Company Chairman of the Board Alex Trotman at UAW Local 600/Dearborn Assembly Plant in October 1994. 1993 Ford Ranger ad. 76 Fifteenth anniversary of the UAW-Ford Employee Involvement Program, 1994. From left to right: Al Hendricks, Jack Hall, Doug Fraser, Peter J. Pestillo, Ernest Lofton, Don Ephlin, Ernie Savoie and Irving Bluestone. The first Apprenticeship group at the UAW-Ford Huron Technical Training Center, 1994. William Clay Ford, Jr., William Clay Ford, Sr., Ernest Lofton, Jim McNeil and Al Wilson at Dearborn Assembly Plant, 1994. 77 Yokich delivers his Presidential speech after being elected at the 31st Constitutional Convention, 1995. 78 UAW President Stephen P. Yokich at the 31st UAW Constitutional Convention, 1995. The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1996. Standing from left to right: Frank Musick, Joel Goddard, Clayton Meadors, Frank Savalle, Johnny Martin, Dave Weston, John W. Smith, Jeff Washington, Nick Parente, Joseph Reilly, Scott Adams, Tom Boritzki, Johnny Martin, Nearlean Young, Johnny Vawters, Jimmy Carroll. Seated from left to right: Bill Stevenson, Frank Howe, Gerald Bantom, Vice President and Director of the UAW Ford Department Ernest Lofton, UAW President Stephen P. Yokich, Paul Massaron, James McNeil. Gerald Bantom and Stephen Yokich, 1996 Negotiations. From left to right: Gerald Bantom, Ernest Lofton, and Stephen Yokich at the opening of the 1996 Negotiations. 80 THE 1996 AGREEMENT In the 1996 negotiations with Ford Motor Company, UAW President Stephen Yokich and UAW Vice President Ernest Lofton led the bargaining for the Union. The 1996 Agreement mandated wage and benefit increases, secured job and income security programs, and expanded programs that benefited members, retirees, and their families. Also won was the first company-paid tuition assistance for post-secondary education of dependents of UAW members, as well as tuition assistance for retirees. Ron Gettelfinger and his wife, Judy, receive congratulations for Ron’s election to UAW Vice President at the 1998 UAW Constitutional Convention. Ron Gettelfinger accepts nomination to the position of UAW Vice President, 1998. Stephen Yokich and Ron Gettelfinger, 1998. Alex Trotman and Ron Gettelfinger visit with workers on the plant floor of UAW Local 600/Dearborn Engine & Fuel Tank Plant, 1998. THE 1999 AGREEMENT On June 14, 1999, UAW President Stephen P. Yokich, who had been re-elected in 1998, and Vice President Ron Gettelfinger led the UAW Ford barganing team. On November 1, 1999, the new, four-year labor agreement, which strengthened existing programs and created new programs unique in the industry, was signed. “This agreement provides a solid framework to continue our constructive relationship with Ford in the years ahead,” Yokich said at the time. Job-security protections under the Guaranteed Employment Numbers program advanced a step farther than they had ever gone before by preserving not only individuals but the numbers of jobs in the facilities. If a worker leaves as a result of outsourcing or attrition, and the pool of laid-off workers has been exhausted, then the company must hire a new worker to fill that position within ninety days. “I am confident,” added Gettelfinger, “that this contract will provide UAW active and 82 retired workers and their families with unprecedented job and economic security.” The UAW provides people with the opportunities to participate in decisions that directly affect their working lives: health and safety, job security, product quality, benefits. Today, the UAW is expanding its mission to include labor-management solutions for the support of working families and the communities they live in. Over the last twenty years, the UAW has reenergized the labor movement, developed new strategies to address the challenges of the global economy, and expanded the UAW’s organizing activities. “Workers realize that unions offer the best way for us to win a seat at the bargaining table,” Yokich has said. “And the UAW is not just a collective-bargaining agent. The UAW is part of a social movement in this country. The fact is, in the 21st Century, unions have more to do than ever.” Ford Negotiating Team, 1999. From left to right: Peter J. Pestillo, Jacques Nasser, William Ford, Jr. Ron Gettelfinger and Stephen Yokich at the negotiations at the 1999 Collective Bargaining with Ford Motor Company. Pictured with Ron Gettelfinger are Charles Hoskins and Bill Stevenson, who helped give leadership to the team which made significant contributions to the 1999 Agreement. UAW Ford Joint Programs Billboard, 2001. 83 UAW Local 400/ Romeo Engine Plant UAW Local 228/ Sterling Heights Plant UAW Local 897/ Buffalo Stamping Plant 2000 Ford Taurus UAW Local 400/ Chesterfield Trim 2000 Ford F-150 UAW Local 387/ Woodhaven Stamping Plant UAW Local 862/ Kentucky Truck Plant UAW Local 174/ Vulcan Forge UAW Local 182/Livonia UAW Local 182/ Livonia Plant UAW Local 600/ Dearborn Assembly Plant UAW Local 325/St. Louis Assembly UAW Local 245/Research & Engineering Center UAW Local 36/ Wixom Assembly Plant UAW Local 600/ Dearborn Assembly Plant UAW Local 898/ Rawsonville Plant UAW Local 898/ Rawsonville Plant Bargaining for Families, 1999. The UAW National Negotiating Team at Ford, 1999. Holding the banner from left to right: Tony White, Carl Dowell. In the back row from left to right: Dave Curson, Johnny Martin, Rory Gamble, Tom Zmrazek, Frank Walker, Jerry Sullivan, Joe Riley, Bill Rushlaw, Paul Massaron. Front row: Bill Stevenson, Jerry Kline, Jeff Washington, John Talik, Bob Hasty, Bill Norfleet, Joel Goddard. Sitting from left to right: Vice President and Director of the UAW Ford Department Ron Gettelfinger, UAW President Stephen P. Yokich. Behind Joe Riley is Frank Musick. 88 Working to Improve the Quality of Life for our Families and Our Communities Above: The signing of the 1999 Collective Bargaining Agreement between the UAW and Ford Motor Company. At the table, from left to right: UAW President Stephen P. Yokich, Ford President and CEO Jacques Nasser, Ford Chairman William Ford, Jr., and Visteon CEO Peter J. Pestillo. At the bottom right is Ron Gettelfinger, UAW Vice President and Director of the National Ford Department. Right: UAW Vice President and Director of the National Ford Department Ron Gettelfinger and Ford Chairman William Ford, Jr. The Future Mike Rawson, a member of UAW Local 900, was the first to receive a new computer given out under the Model E Program. Ford Product Analyst Toary Taylor, second from right, also received a new computer. Left to right: Ford Chairman William Ford, Jr., Mike Rawson, UAW President Stephen P. Yokich, Toary Taylor, Ford President and CEO Jacques Nasser. TODAY’S WORLD is very different from the world in which Walter Reuther galvanized the UAW and Henry Ford mass-produced the Model T. Yet, one imperative remains the same for everyone at the UAW and Ford Motor Company. Everyone wants to make the world a better place for future generations. Everyone wants to make a difference. 90 In the latter part of the 20th Century, the emphasis of the UAW was to secure the standard of living of the workforce. In the 21st Century, the greater emphasis of the UAW and UAW-Ford will be to secure quality of life beyond the job by supporting families and engaging with communities. The UAW and Ford Motor Company are continuing their commitments to producing the best products and providing the best services in the world, and they are doing so with respect for the workforce, the environment, and the communities in which these processes are taking place. The union and the company expect to make a contribution in the 21st Century that is the equivalent of the Industrial Revolution . The first priority must always be health and safety. The UAW and Ford have devoted extensive education, training, and technological resources to preserving and “With a goal of zero fatalities and serious injuries,” reads new language in the 1999 Collective Bargaining Agreement, “the leadership of the UAW and Ford will continue jointly to sponsor activities to support a relentless daily focus on safety that protects employees, prevents accidents and injuries, and provides a safe workplace.” Customers demand excellence in quality, and the “Best-in-Class” Quality Program was developed to ensure that employees understand what it takes to respond to that demand for quality and to satisfy their customers. Working together, the union and the company are working toward the same quality goals. Through training and education programs, workers are encouraged to monitor quality every day and are empowered to take action. Workers contribute their knowledge, their skill, and their judgment to the production of “Best-in-Class” automobiles, and the National Quality Committee fosters a spirit of teamwork, cooperation, and commitment to continuous quality improvement. 91 UAW Local 723/ Monroe UAW and company representatives from UAW Local 900/Wayne ISA, UAW Local 174/Vulcan Forge and Woodhaven Forge, UAW Local 36/Wixom Assembly and UAW 2280/Van Dyke plants. Participants in a Diversity brainstorming session. “With regard to diversity, the UAW and Ford Motor Company recognized and responded to the significance of equitable treatment of employees far before we ever put contractual language on a piece of paper.” Dennis Cirbes, Executive Director, Labor Affairs protecting the health and safety of the workforce. The imperative now is to promote and ensure compliance. “With a goal of zero fatalities and serious injuries,” reads new language in the 1999 Collective Bargaining Agreement, “the leadership of the UAW and Ford will continue jointly to sponsor activities to support a relentless daily focus on safety that protects employees, prevents accidents and injuries, and provides a safe workplace.” “Our most valuable asset is our people,” says Ford President and CEO Jacques Nasser. “Nothing is more important than their safety and well-being. Our coworkers and families rely on this commitment. There can be no compromise.” UAW-Ford has launched a national initiative, negotiated under the 1999 Collective Bargaining agreement, entitled: Family Service and Learning Centers (FSLC). Intended for UAW-represented Ford employees, salaried employees, families, and retirees, FSLC In the 1999 Agreement, the UAW and Ford agreed to establish a National Joint Diversity Committee (NJDC) and charged the committee with developing a training initiative to increase awareness and promote constructive dialogue regarding diversity. In a Letter of Understanding, the Union and the Company recognized the value of diversity. “Although the concept of diversity highlights our differences as individuals, the true value of workplace diversity is that such differences can create a whole that is more than the sum of its components—a group of individuals whose collective strengths are derived from understanding, appreciating and capitalizing on their particular personal attributes.” To train employees in the latest workplace technologies, the Technical Skills Program, negotiated in the 1993 Agreement, includes funding for skilled-trades technical training, production-employee training, business-systems technical training, new processes training, and enhanced apprentice training. Workers can learn about everything from computers to lasers, from robotics to hydraulics. TSP initiatives enable workers to keep pace with the rapidly evolving world of technology. “The next several years will present some formidable challenges. We need engaged employees, equipped with the knowledge, skills, and tools to effectively navigate our new realities.” David Murphy, Vice President, Human Resources, Ford Motor Company recognizes the importance of social as well as economic issues for working families and their communities. Delivering training, childcare, community outreach, and more, the FSLC program represents a dedication to creating innovative support networks that address a wide variety of work and family issues. “This unique effort steps beyond traditional benefits and paycheck issues to provide cutting-edge opportunities for personal growth and development,” says UAW President Stephen P. Yokich. “The Family Service and Learning Centers are a direct response to what our members and retirees tell us they need, and the Centers are our best effort to support them every step of the way.” “Enlightened corporations are beginning to understand that social issues are business issues,” says Ford Chairman William Ford, Jr. “They realize they can no longer separate themselves from what is going on around them. Ultimately, businesses can only be as successful as the communities, and the world, in which they exist.” In the new century, the opportunities for progress abound: from diversity to the Internet, from childcare to quality, from alternative fuels to teamwork. Everyone is being encouraged to participate. No one is to be left behind. The UAW and Ford Motor Company are working together to improve the quality of products and to satisfy the preferences of customers. The mission is to work hard for families and for communities. Now more than ever. Today’s world is very different from the world in which Walter Reuther galvanized the UAW and Henry Ford mass-produced the Model T. And our children’s world will be very different from today’s world. Some day, our children will look back, and they will see a world in which the UAW and Ford Motor Company came together to do their very best for their workforce, their environment, and their communities. They will say that the UAW and Ford made the world a better place. They will say that the UAW and Ford made a difference. 93 The first meeting of the Local Family Council of Dearborn, Michigan, was held at UAW Local 245/ Research and Engineering. The Local Family Councils serve as a very important link between the national Family Service and Learning Center (FSLC) program and the local communities in which the FLSC program will be put to work. All locations have different needs. So the Councils maintain close contact with their communities and ensure that FSLC services are relevant and responsive to area needs. UAW Vice President and Director of the National Ford Department Ron Gettelfinger and Ford President and CEO Jacques Nasser proudly endorse the effort to support families and communities. UAW Local 1111/Indianapolis UAW Local 862/Kentucky Plant “The Family Service and Learning Centers are a direct response to what our members and retirees tell us they need.” UAW President Stephen P. Yokich “Social issues are business issues. Businesses can only be as successful as the communities in which they exist.” Ford Motor Company Chairman William Ford, Jr. On April 27, 2001, UAW Local 249/Kansas City Assembly held a groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of their Family Service and Learning Center. The FSLC initiative encompasses a variety of services under three general categories: Family Education and Services, Community Service Education and Outreach, and Childhood Education Services. In Family Education and Services, examples of programs and services that may be offered are: intergenerational programs, personal growth and development, family technology literacy, job and career assistance, support groups, before- and after-school programs, summer and holiday camps for children, retiree programs, family wellness, and health screenings. Under Community Service Education and Outreach, the FSLCs will match workers, retirees, and their families with communityservice opportunities through a Volunteer Support Network that will promote and publicize volunteer opportunities. The FSLCs will link with community organizations to support both local and national charitable and volunteer programs. The FSLC childcare effort includes Community Childcare Networks of highquality childcare providers. The Networks will work to enhance the quality and accessibility of childcare in Ford, Visteon, and ZF Batavia communities. Thirteen dedicated childcare centers serving areas with hourly and salaried populations of 5,000 or more will be opened by 2003. The FSLC dedicated childcare centers will serve up to 250 children and will operate up to 24 hours a day, as needed. “These Centers and these programs will deepen our commitment to make our communities better places to live.” UAW Vice President Ron Gettelfinger “Through significant involvement with our people, this program offers a powerful growth strategy for our company and our communities alike.” Ford Motor Company President & CEO Jacques Nasser 97 The UAW and Ford Motor Company Support Our Children, Our Families, and Our Communities. The Future Starts Today. 98 Rouge Complex, 1952. Revitalization of the Rouge The UAW and Ford are working together to lead the way in environmental responsibility and good corporate citizenship. Ford’s North American plants recycle more than 234 million pounds of solid waste annually. In 2000, Ford announced a $2 billion revitalization plan for the Rouge manufacturing complex. The Company assembled environmental, development, and manufacturing specialists, including world-renowned sustainability architect William McDonough. Ford also announced plans to improve SUV fuel efficiency by 25% by 2005. “Whether it’s the environmental renovation of the Rouge or our fuel-economy commitment, we are committed to being a leader in the global climatechange issue,” said Ford Chairman William Ford, Jr. Artist’s rendition of the future Rouge Complex. 99 Ron Gettelfinger, Peter J. Pestillo, Jacques Nasser and Stephen P. Yokich at the UAW-Ford Joint Programs Conferences, 2001. 2002 Ford Thunderbird Billboard for the 2002 Ford Explorer. 100 UAW Ford National Programs The UAW-Ford National Programs Center in Detroit, Michigan, is committed to supporting the needs of workers, retirees, their families, and their communities for generations to come. From the administration of scholarships to the development of national support for local initiatives, the National Programs Center pursues its mandate tirelessly: to improve our lives in our workplaces, in our homes, and in our neighborhoods. The UAW-Ford National Programs Center maintains a website at www.uawford.com. The website provides Center history, information on the national programs, scholarship information, answers to Frequently Asked Questions, and recent issues of Sharing Our Pride, the Center’s magazine. The site also provides information on current events and activities related to the National Programs. This entire book plus additional historic images about the UAW and Ford will be online at www.uawford.com 101 UAW Local 400/ Chesterfield Trim UAW Local 900/ Wayne Assembly UAW Local 36/ Wixom Assembly UAW Local 400/ Romeo Engine UAW Local 588/ Chicago Stamping UAW Local 898/ Rawsonville Plant UAW Local 879/ Twin Cities Assembly UAW Local 879/ Twin Cities Assembly UAW Local 1219/ Lima Engine UAW Local 882/ Atlanta Assembly UAW Local 36/ Wixom Assembly Photo Credits Front Cover – Roger Robinson (Top); William Jordan (Bottom); Ford PhotoMedia (Top Background); William Jordan (Bottom Background) Title Page – UAW Photo Library (Background Photo) Page 2 – Russ Marshall (Top Left & Bottom); David Barringer (Top Right); Roger Robinson (Center) Page 3 – See cover credits Page 4 – UAW Public Relations & Publication Department Page 5 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 6 – UAW Public Relations & Publication Department Page 7 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 8 – Visteon Corporation Page 9 – Roger Robinson Page 10-13 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 14 – Ford PhotoMedia (Top & Center); UAW Photo Library (Bottom Left & Bottom Center); Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. (Bottom Right) Page 15-16 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 17 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. (Top, Middle Right & Bottom); UAW Photo Library (Middle Left) Page 18 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 19-20 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. Page 21 – UAW Photo Library Page 22 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. Page 23 – Museum of Modern Art, New York (Top); Ford PhotoMedia (Bottom) Page 24 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. Page 25 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. (Top); UAW Photo Library (Middle & Bottom) Page 26-27 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 28 – UAW Photo Library Page 29 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 30 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. Page 31 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 32-35 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. Page 36-38 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 39 – Ford PhotoMedia (Top); J. Walter Thompson for Ford Motor Company (Center Left & Center Right); Ford PhotoMedia (Bottom Left) Page 40-42 – UAW Photo Library 104 Page 43 – Ford PhotoMedia; J. Walter Thompson for Ford Motor Company (Center Left) Page 44-45 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 46 – Ford PhotoMedia (Top); UAW Ford NPC (Center); Ford PhotoMedia (Bottom) Page 47 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 48 – J. Walter Thompson for Ford Motor Company (Top); Ford PhotoMedia (Bottom) Page 49 – UAW Photo Library (Top); Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. (Bottom) Page 50 – J. Walter Thompson for Ford Motor Company (Top); Ford PhotoMedia (Bottom) Page 51 – UAW Photo Library Page 52 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. (Top & Center); UAW Public Relations & Publication Department (Bottom) Page 53 – Ford PhotoMedia (Top); J. Walter Thompson for Ford Motor Company (Bottom) Page 54 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. (Top & Center); Ford Motor Company (Bottom) Page 55 – UAW Photo Library Page 56 – Ford PhotoMedia (Top); UAW Photo Library (Bottom) Page 57 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U.; UAW Photo Library (Center Left & Center Right) Page 58 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 59 – UAW Photo Library Page 60 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 61 – Junebug Clark (Top Left & Center Left); UAW Photo Library (Top Right & Center Right); Ford PhotoMedia (Bottom) Page 62 – Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. (Top); Junebug Clark (Center Left & Bottom); Earl Dotter www.earldotter.com (Center Right) Page 63 – Junebug Clark Page 64 – Earl Dotter www.earldotter.com; Russ Marshall (Bottom Left) Page 65 – Russ Marshall Page 66 – Russ Marshall Page 67 – Junebug Clark Page 68 – Stephen P. Yokich Collection Page 69 – Junebug Clark (Top); Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State U. (Bottom Left); Ford PhotoMedia (Center Right & Bottom) Page 70-71 – Junebug Clark Page 72 – UAW Solidarity (Top); Stephen P. Yokich Collection (Center & Bottom) Page 73 – Junebug Clark (Top); UAW Photo Library (Bottom) Page 74 – UAW Ford NPC (Top); UAW Photo Library (Bottom) Page 75 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 76 – Roger Robinson; J. Walter Thompson for Ford Motor Company (Bottom) Page 77-79 – Roger Robinson Page 80 – UAW Solidarity Page 81 – Roger Robinson Page 82 – Roger Robinson Page 83 – William Jordan (Top); UAW Ford NPC (Center & Bottom) Page 84 – David Barringer; Roger Robinson (Center Left); Ford PhotoMedia (Bottom Left) Page 85 – Roger Robinson; Ford PhotoMedia (Top Right) Page 86 – Roger Robinson; David Barringer (Center Right) Page 87 – Roger Robinson Page 88 – William Jordan Page 89-90 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 91 – David Barringer Page 92 – David Barringer; Ford PhotoMedia (Center) Page 93 – David Barringer (Top); Ford PhotoMedia (Center) Page 94 – Roger Robinson Page 95 – Ford PhotoMedia (Top); David Barringer (Bottom) Page 96 – David Barringer Page 97 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 98 – David Barringer Page 99 – Ford PhotoMedia Page 100 – UAW Ford NPC (Top); Ford PhotoMedia (Center); Roger Robinson (Bottom) Page 101 – Roger Robinson (Top); UAW Ford NPC (Bottom) Page 102 – Roger Robinson; Ford PhotoMedia (Bottom Left); Stephen P. Yokich Collection (Bottom Center) Page 103 – Roger Robinson; UAW Photo Library (Bottom Right) Back Cover – UAW Photo Library (Top); Ford PhotoMedia (Center); Roger Robinson (Bottom) UAW-FORD SIXTY YEARS OF PROGRESS — 1941 TO 2001 International Union, UAW Solidarity House Detroit, Michigan Ford Motor Company World Headquarters Dearborn, Michigan UAW-Ford National Programs Center Detroit, Michigan