Ford family | |
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Current region | Michigan, U.S. |
Founded |
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Founder | William Ford |
Connected families | Firestone |
Estate(s) | Fair Lane Edsel and Eleanor Ford House |
The Ford family is an American family from the U.S. state of Michigan. They are best known for their control of the Ford Motor Company automobile manufacturer which was originally founded by Henry Ford in the early twentieth century. Henry's grandson William Clay Ford Sr. and his family have controlled the Detroit Lions franchise of the National Football League since late 1963. The Ford family are also members of the Episcopal Church.[1]
Although the Ford family's ownership stake in the automaker had declined to less than 50% of the company's equity as of 2010[update], the family retained operational control through a special class of stock that was established early in the company's history and retained when the company made its initial public offering in 1956.[2][3][4][5] The family owns all of the company's Class B shares, which are collectively entitled to elect 40% of the company's board of directors, with the remaining 60% elected by the holders of the company's publicly traded common stock.
The names of fashionable families who were already Episcopalian, like the Morgans, or those, like the Fricks, who now became so, goes on interminably: Aldrich, Astor, Biddle, Booth, Brown, Du Pont, Firestone, Ford, Gardner, Mellon, Morgan, Procter, the Vanderbilt, Whitney. Episcopalians branches of the Baptist Rockefellers and Jewish Guggenheims even appeared on these family trees.