JONATHAN WOOD
With 16.5 million built between 1908 and 1927, the Model T Ford was, until overtaken in the 1970s by the Volkswagen Beetle, the most popular car in automotive history. Mass-produced in America and throughout the globe, such was the Model Ts market penetration and value-for-money that in 1921 Henry Fords deceptively robust Tin Lizzie accounted for every other car on the highways of the world. Illustrated with many rare contemporary photographs from the Ford archives, this album charts the models nineteen year evolution and seeks to explain how this quirky, ingenious motor car put the world on wheels.
Jonathan Wood is a founder member of the staff of Classic Cars magazine. A full-time writer since 1981, he is the author of some thirty-five books on motoring history and has penned the standard work on the Ford Cortina Mark 1. Wood has twice won the Guild of Motoring Writers Montagu Trophy and, as a member of the America-based Society of Automotive Historians, he is a two times recipient of its prestigious Cugnot Award.