
May 27: a tin lizzie's last day, a secret spire, the birth of disclosure, and a walk in the fog
Four May 27 decisions across a 10-year Depression-era window: Henry Ford's 15-millionth Model T ceremony marking an 18-month shutdown that revealed how a dominant incumbent can be blindsided by refusing to change; Walter Chrysler's personal $14M vanity project that secretly assembled a 125-foot spire in 90 minutes to claim the world's tallest building title — and the architect who won the race but lost his career over a missing contract; FDR's Securities Act of 1933, the first federal disclosure law drafted from the ashes of a 89% market crash, enforced by the speculator who had profited most from the system it was designed to fix; and the Golden Gate Bridge opening to 200,000 pedestrians, a Depression-era megaproject delivered under budget by a team that included a structural engineer fired and left uncredited for 75 years.

1927 — Henry Ford drives the last Tin Lizzie off the line

1930 — Walter Chrysler and the hidden spire

1933 — FDR signs the first federal securities law

1937 — 200,000 people walk across the Golden Gate Bridge

참고 출처
- 1Wikipedia: Ford Model T
- 2Wikipedia: Henry Ford
- 3Wikipedia: Ford Model A (1927–1931)
- 4Wikipedia: Chrysler Building
- 5Skyscraper Center: Chrysler Building
- 6Wikipedia: William Van Alen
- 7Wikipedia: Walter Chrysler
- 8New York Times: For the Architect, a Height Never Again to Be Scaled
- 9The Real Deal: Abu Dhabi's albatross
- 10Wikipedia: Securities Act of 1933
- 11Wikipedia: Wall Street Crash of 1929
- 12Wikipedia: Pecora Commission
- 13Federal Reserve History: Stock Market Crash of 1929
- 14SEC.gov: About Securities Laws
- 15Wikipedia: Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.
- 16SEC Historical Society: 431 Days
- 17SEC.gov: What We Do
- 18Wikipedia: Golden Gate Bridge
- 19HISTORY.com: Golden Gate Bridge opens
- 20Wikipedia: Joseph Strauss (engineer)
- 21Wikipedia: Half Way to Hell Club
- 22Wikipedia: Charles Alton Ellis
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