Henry Ford
| Henry Ford | |
|---|---|
| Henry Ford in Mario's Time Machine Deluxe | |
| Species | Human |
| Appears in | Mario's Time Machine (1993) |
- “Hello, Mario. I’m Henry Ford, business executive. I make these automobiles. Isn’t this a beauty? It’s going to change our lives forever! Everybody will soon own one. You want to buy it?”
- —Henry Ford, Mario's Time Machine (PC)
Henry Ford (July 30, 1863 – April 7, 1947) was an American industrialist, business magnate, founder of the Ford Motor Company, and chief developer of the assembly line technique of mass production. He created innovations in the automobile industry by promoting and developing the assembly line, and, under his leadership, the company made the first automobiles that could be easily afforded by the average person. He also corresponded with George Washington Carver through various letters, and the two occasionally met each other, with Carver even traveling to Dearborn, Michigan to meet Ford despite his old age, and likewise with Ford traveling to Tuskegee. In Mario's Time Machine , he meets Mario after the latter travels back in time to Tuskegee in 1915.
History[edit ]
Super Mario World television series[edit ]
In the Super Mario World television series, when Mario shows Princess Toadstool his and Luigi's car factory, he brags that the Cave People will have wheels before she can say "Henry Ford".
Mario's Time Machine[edit ]
According to Mario's Time Machine, Henry Ford was in Tuskegee circa 1915 (even though Carver and Ford only corresponded with each other since 1934[1] ) when he meets Mario. Mario is first directed to meet Ford by Booker T. Washington, who also asks Mario to return a Tire to Ford that he had been testing with his lab (despite Washington and Ford having never met in real life). Mario later introduces himself to Ford, and he responds by introducing himself as well. He also mentions his career in automobiles and asks Mario if he wants to buy the one nearby. Mario says that he does not have any money on him now, but Ford tells him that ideas can be money. He then mentions how George Washington Carver's ideas involving peanuts are worth a considerable amount of money (despite Carver not turning a profit himself on his creations[2] ), especially considering how Carver has found over 300 uses for them. Mario asks what kind of uses he has found, and Ford names peanut ice cream as one of his creations before giving Mario some Ice Cream to try. Mario mentions the Crank Handle in his possession, asking if it belongs to him, but Ford says that, while he does not recognize it, he asks Mario how much he wants for it. However, he immediately tells Mario to forget that, as he needs to run but his car happens to have a flat tire. Mario then gives him the Tire, and Ford thanks him while also commenting that it is made from the goldenrod that Carver was testing. Mario says that he does not know much about Carver, and Ford details his past, including how he was born a slave but was freed by Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. He then studied hard to obtain his position, but he only makes 1500ドル a month. Mario asks how come Carver is not rich despite his numerous inventions, and Ford mentions that Carver donates a lot to the people around him, and he is not particularly interested in business. He also says that he plans on funding Carver and his efforts, especially since Carver is fostering cooperation "between all people, all races and all levels business" (it is worth mentioning that Ford published pamphlets that specifically blame the Jewish people for many of the world's atrocities).
References[edit ]
- ^ "History.com Staff". (2009) George Washington Carver begins experimental project with Henry Ford. History.com (Wayback Archive). Retrieved September 7, 2017.
- ^ McMurry, Linda O. "Dawning of the New South." George Washington Carver, Scientist and Symbol, Oxford University Press, 1982, p. 196.
[Edit] Mario's Time Machine (PC) / Mario's Time Machine (SNES) / Mario's Time Machine (NES)
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| Super Mario characters | Bowser • Bowser's mother b • Donkey Kong Jr. c • Iggy Koopa • Larry Koopa • Lemmy Koopa • Ludwig von Koopa • Luigi a • Mario • Roy Koopa d • Yoshi d | |
| Historical persons used as characters | Abraham Lincoln a • Albert Einstein c • Andrew Iverson a • Anne Hathaway • Aristotle • Benjamin Franklin • Booker T. Washington a • Catherine Dickens a • Charles Dickens a • Charles-Gaspard de la Rive a • Cleopatra • Constanze Mozart a • David Grenewetzki a • Deborah Read a • Don Lloyd a • Duke of Alençon • Edmund Halley • Ferdinand Magellan • Francis Drake • Frederick Douglass a • Galileo Galilei a • George Washington Carver a • Henry Ford a • Ho Ti a • Isaac Newton • Jeff Griffeath a • Joan of Arc • Johann Gutenberg • Joseph Haydn a • Juan Sebastian Del Cano • Julius Caesar • Kublai Khan • Leonardo da Vinci • Louis Pasteur a • Ludwig van Beethoven • Mahatma Gandhi • Marco Polo • Mary Todd Lincoln a • Michael Faraday a • Michelangelo Buonarroti • Minamoto no Yoritomo c • Pierre Paul Emile Roux a • Plato • Queen Elizabeth I • Raphael Sanzio • Richard Burbage • Royal Society • Sarah Barnard a • Thomas Edison • Thomas Jefferson • Ts'ai Lun a • William Shakespeare • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart a | |
| Enemies | Bird c • Bodyslam Koopa c • Bullet Bill a • Koopa • Mine • Pteranodon a • Shark a • UFO c • Walking Turnip c | |
| Locations | Academy • Alexandria • Athens • Berlin Wall c • Bowser's castle • Bowser's Museum • Calcutta • Cambridge University • Cambuluc • Cretaceous Period • Eat at Joe's a • Egypt c • Florence • Germany c • Gettysburg c • Gobi Desert • Independence Hall • Japan c • Kitty Hawk c • London • Luoyang a • Mainz • Menlo Park • Moon c • Novato a • Orleans • Padua a • Paradise • Paris a • Philadelphia • Stratford-upon-Avon • Swan Inn • Trinidad • Tuskegee a • Vienna • Washington, D.C. a • White House a | |
| Items and objects | Almanac a • Apple • Art File a • Astrolabe • Backscratcher • Ball a • Bamboo a • Beret • Book a • Book of Marco Polo • Bosun's Pipe • Bow a • Bowser Statue • Bread • Bucket of Plaster • Buckle a • Bug Fix a • Bug Report a • Bunny a • Calculus Book • Cat • Chisel • Chocolate a • Cloth a • Compass a • Conversations on Chemistry a • Crank Handle a • Crown • Cup of Tea • Declaration of Independence • Dictionary a • Dinosaur Egg c • Drawing of Air Screw • Drawing of Ideal Man • Drumstick • F=MA • Fan • Feather • Filament • Firecracker a • Fireworks • Flag (India) • Flag (United States of America) c • Flask a • Floppy Disk a • Flute a • Football • Globe • Grape • Handkerchief • Hand Mirror • Horse's Bit • Hourglass Block c • Ice Cream a • Incense • Inkwell a • Information box c • Key (Mainz) • Key (Philadelphia) a • Knife • Ladder • Laurel Wreath • Law Book • Lemonade a • Lens • Light Bulb c • Magnet a • Measuring Stick • Metal Type • Metronome • Milk a • Mona's Mirror • Mona Lisa • Money a • Monocle • Mushroom • Music • Newspaper • Notebook • Onion • Paint • Paintbrush • Painting a • Pamphlet • Paper Money • Pearl Necklace • Penny a • Physics Equation c • Poetry Book a • Postcard • Principia • Print Block • Propeller c • Quill Pen (1602) c • Quill Pen (Orleans) • Rat Trap • Republic • Rice a • Scarf a • Scissors • Script a • Scroll a • Shield • Skull • Sledgehammer c • Spectacles (Philadelphia) • Spectacles (Washington, D.C.) a • Sphinx c • Staff • Stamp a • Starman c • Steering Wheel c • Stovepipe Hat c • Sword c • Tea Bag • Telegram • Telescope (Padua) a • Telescope (Trinidad) • Throne c • Ticket a • Timulator • Tire a • Torch c • Toy a • Turkey a • Turtle Cannon c • Watch a • Warp Pipe c • Whirlpool • Wooden Snake | |
| Other | Gallery • Mario's Time Machine Deluxe • Multimedia • Staff | |
a Exclusive to the DOS/PC releases b Exclusive to the Deluxe release c Exclusive to the NES release d Not in the SNES release | ||