Have you ever wondered how one car didn’t just change roads—but changed the entire world?
Let’s go back to 1908.
Before the Ford Model T existed, cars were luxury toys. Only the rich could afford them. Roads were mostly filled with horses, dust, and long travel times.
Then came a man with a radical vision — Henry Ford.
He didn’t just want to build a car… he wanted to build a car everyone could afford.
And that’s exactly what the Model T became.
Nicknamed the “Tin Lizzie,” it was simple, tough, and easy to repair. But the real revolution wasn’t just the car—it was how it was built.
Ford introduced the moving assembly line in 1913.
Before this, building one car took over 12 hours.
After? Just about 90 minutes.
That one innovation crashed the price from around $850 to under $300—putting car ownership within reach of ordinary workers.
Suddenly, families could travel farther.
Farmers could reach markets faster.
Cities expanded. Suburbs were born.
By the time production ended in 1927, over 15 million Model Ts had been sold.
It didn’t just put America—and eventually the world—on wheels…
It built the blueprint for modern manufacturing.
And every time you see cars rolling endlessly on highways today,
you’re witnessing the legacy of the car that started it all.