On June 4, 1896, at 4 AM, Henry Ford had a problem: his first car wouldn't fit through the door.
After years of tinkering in a brick shed behind his Detroit home, Ford had finally completed his Quadricycle—a gasoline-powered vehicle that would prove the automobile could work. But he'd built it bigger than the doorway.
Solution? He grabbed an ax and knocked down the wall.
That moment captures everything about entrepreneurship: the vision to see what's possible, the work to build it, and the willingness to break through obstacles—literally.
At {BUSINESS_NAME}, we face our own walls every day in {CITY}. And when the door is too small, we make a bigger opening.
Drive forward.
#USA250 #SmallBusiness #{CITY}
After years of tinkering in a brick shed behind his Detroit home, Ford had finally completed his Quadricycle—a gasoline-powered vehicle that would prove the automobile could work. But he'd built it bigger than the doorway.
Solution? He grabbed an ax and knocked down the wall.
That moment captures everything about entrepreneurship: the vision to see what's possible, the work to build it, and the willingness to break through obstacles—literally.
At {BUSINESS_NAME}, we face our own walls every day in {CITY}. And when the door is too small, we make a bigger opening.
Drive forward.
#USA250 #SmallBusiness #{CITY}
Historical Event
Henry Ford's First Automobile, June 4, 1896
Story Angle
entrepreneur