The Toyoda Automatic Loom Works Company was founded in 1926 by Sakichi Toyoda. The company produced looms and other innovative products. A new segment of the business was formed in nineteen thirty three, placed in the control of the founder's son, Kiichiro Toyoda, a business geared towards car and motoring production. The Toyota Motor Corp is now a vast empire of epic promotions, employing over three hundred thousand people across the globe, and being the world's leading car maker. The Toyota group has over five hundred subsidiary companies, and has its headquarters in Japan.
The slight tweaking of the company name from "Toyoda" to "Toyota" was one due to a handful of factors, it is believed. The new name was clearer, a separation from the family and also Japanese translation (meaning "fertile rice fields"), and also took eight brush strokes in Japanese, a number which illustrates luck in the Japanese culture.
Kiichiro Toyoda has travelled to the United States to research automobile production in the latter year of the nineteen twenties, looking specifically into the manufacture of gasoline powered engine units shortly afterwards. The new subsidiary of his farther company would manufacture cars for the Japanese and overseas markets, a plan much welcomed by the Japanese government for creating wealth. With the earliest models produced by the company much resembling that of Dodge and Chevrolet models, the first Toyota car was the A1, produced in nineteen thirty five.