Captain John Baptiste Ford was an American industrialist and founder of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, now known as Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company Industries, based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.
Background
Born in a log cabin in Danville, Kentucky, he never remembered his father, Jonathan Ford, who in 1813 joined the Kentucky Volunteer Homespun regiment to fight the British forces at New Orleans in the War of 1812 and never returned. His mother, Margaret, the daughter of Jean Baptiste, an immigrant from France who had fought in the American Revolutionary War, apprenticed young John at the age of 12 to a Danville saddlemaker.
Career
He ran away from the saddlemaker at age 14 and found his freedom in Greenville, Indiana, where he remained for the next 30 years. The couple opened a small dry goods store, then a saddlery shop and a flour mill. His success, and his vision of the importance of the Ohio River in opening up the vast country west of the Mississippi River, drove Ford to build a boatworks at New Albany, Indiana.
Its success earned him the appellation of "Captain" Ford.
Next he entered the iron business. The American Civil War provided him the next business windfall as he supplied the Union forces.
Ford"s son Emory graduated in June 1864 from Duff"s Mercantile College upriver in Pittsburgh. Emory marveled at the many glass works in the city, and soon his father opened a glass firm back in New Albany.
They expanded, eventually, into plate glass operations, something that had been largely a European endeavor.
lieutenant later became Libbey Owens Ford Glass Company. John Ford died at his home in Tarentum, Pennsylvania in 1903. He is buried in Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburgh.
The town of Ford City, Pennsylvania, is named in his honor.