Caldwell Leaves as Chairman of Ford Motor Co.
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Philip Caldwell, who presided over Ford Motor Co. through record losses and its subsequent historic turnaround, retired Friday as chairman of the nation’s No. 2 auto maker.
It was under Caldwell’s tenure that Ford suffered a record loss of $1.5 billion in 1980 and losses of $1 billion in 1981 and $657 million in 1982. But the company rebounded in 1983 with a $1.87-billion profit, making that the biggest year-to-year turnaround in U.S. corporate history.
Caldwell spent his last day on the job Thursday talking to workers at Ford’s Rawsonville, Mich., engine parts plant--site of a pioneering labor agreement. In a speech, he praised the auto maker’s 115,000 blue-collar employees.
“You have done great things and I want you to know how much I appreciate what you have done,” Caldwell told 3,100 cheering workers.
He called Rawsonville “a symbol for all of us around the world.”
“Above all, I think we discovered how to work with each other. That doesn’t seem like a secret that was very hard to discover, but it’s amazing how long it took us to come to it.” Caldwell said.
The 65-year-old Caldwell, the first person outside the Ford family to run the company, is being succeeded by Ford President Donald Petersen. Caldwell will remain a director of the Dearborn, Mich.-based company. Harold A. Poling, executive vice president for Ford’s North American operations, will succeed Petersen as president.