Oldest living Ford retiree: $5 a day in 1938

At 99, he's believed to be the oldest living Ford retiree in Minnesota.

December 16, 2011 at 11:33AM

By Curt Brown

The plant closing has prompted plenty of lamenting the loss of high-paying jobs. Marx Danelius remembers an era before $28-dollar-an-hour gigs on the assembly line with great benefits.

"When I started in 1938, we earned $5 a day and then they bumped it up to $6 a day," Danelius said this week at his Minneapolis home.

At 99, he's believed to be the oldest living Ford retiree in Minnesota. He recalls the boss pointing to men 6-foot and taller and 180 pounds and sending them to work in the body shop.

"He said he wanted big guys who would work hard and it was hard work, indeed," said Danelius, who spent 51 years at the plant, most in quality control. He spent a stint making armored vehicles during World War II.

about the writer

about the writer

Terry Sauer

Assistant Managing Editor/Digital

Terry Sauer is the assistant managing editor for digital platforms at the Star Tribune.

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