Frederick Henderson

Frederick Arthur Fritz Henderson (born November 29, 1958) was President and Chief Executive Officer of General Motors.

Prior to his appointment as CEO on March 31, 2009, Henderson was the Vice President of General Motors and had been with the company since 1984. Frederick Henderson resigned as the CEO of General Motors on December 1, 2009.

Frederick Henderson
Born
Frederick Arthur Henderson

(1958-11-29) November 29, 1958 (age 65)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesFritz
Alma materUniversity of Michigan (BBA)
Harvard University (MBA)
Occupation(s)SVP, Sunoco, Inc., Chairman, CEO SunCoke Energy
PredecessorRick Wagoner
SuccessorEdward Whitacre, Jr.
SpouseKaren Lucht Henderson
ChildrenSarah, Emily

He replaced Rick Wagoner as CEO of GM when Wagoner stepped down after serving in that position for eight years, at the request of President Barack Obama in relation to the General Motors Chapter 11 reorganization. Henderson assumed the new position on March 31, 2009.

Early life and education

Henderson was born in Detroit, Michigan. He is a 1976 graduate of Lake Orion High School in Lake Orion, Michigan.

He holds a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business and a Master of Business Administration degree from Harvard Business School. During his time at Michigan, Henderson pitched for the University of Michigan Wolverines baseball team.

Career

Henderson joined General Motors in 1984. He held a number of positions with the company until 1992 when he became GMAC group vice president of finance in Detroit. From 1997 to 2000, he was GM vice president and managing director of GM do Brasil covering GM operations in Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay. He was successful in introducing small, inexpensive cars such as the Celta subcompact and the Meriva microvan, both produced in Brazil.

In June 2000, he was appointed group vice president and president of GM-LAAM (Latin America, Africa and Middle East) and in January 2002, he moved to Singapore as president of GM Asia Pacific where he was successful in expanding operations in Korea and China.

In 2004, Henderson was appointed chairman of GM Europe, based in Zurich, Switzerland, where he undertook substantial restructuring including significant reductions in jobs. After becoming vice chairman and chief financial officer in January 2006, in March 2009, he became GM president and chief operating officer.

On December 1, 2009, Henderson resigned from General Motors as CEO and was replaced by board Chairman Edward Whitacre, Jr., former head of AT&T Inc., who temporarily was CEO while a global search for a new permanent replacement is conducted. January 25, 2010 Ed Whitacre announces he will become the permanent CEO while keeping his current chairman of board of directors role. On February 19, 2010, GM announced that Henderson would serve as a consultant on their international operations, to be paid $59,090 per month ($709,080 per year).

On September 2, 2010, Sunoco, Inc. announced that Henderson would join the company as senior vice president, and that he will lead the company's SunCoke Energy unit as chairman and CEO when it is spun off in 2011.

On June 11, 2018, Adient plc announced that Henderson would replace former CEO R. Bruce McDonald as interim CEO, pending a search for a full-time replacement for McDonald.

Personal life

Henderson is married to Karen Henderson and has two daughters, Sarah and Emily Henderson.

References

Business positions
Preceded by President of General Motors
2009
Vacant
Chief Executive Officer of General Motors
2009
Succeeded by

Tags:

Frederick Henderson Early life and educationFrederick Henderson CareerFrederick Henderson Personal lifeFrederick HendersonChief Executive OfficerGeneral MotorsPresident (corporate title)

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Algebraic notation (chess)Sandra PankhurstGeorge VIRonald ReaganRusso-Ukrainian WarKendrick LamarMatthew McConaugheyGAZ SobolFC BarcelonaOlivia MunnDoctor WhoJosh O'ConnorHeera MandiBeyoncéNarendra ModiLuca GuadagninoJawaharlal NehruAustraliaMary & GeorgeOlivia RodrigoKeanu ReevesAnyone but YouTom HollandEddie Van HalenDiane LaneKim FieldsOG AnunobyDev PatelTobias HarrisFacebookJohn von NeumannT. J. McConnellWhatsAppThree-body problemJoJo SiwaState of Palestine2024 Indian general election in MaharashtraKingdom of the Planet of the ApesRobinne LeeMillennialsChallengers (film)Periodic tableChicago P.D. season 11List of Hindi films of 20242024 pro-Palestinian protests on university campusesKevin SpaceyBarbie (film)Dune (novel)Future NostalgiaOliver ReedInstagramHarvey KeitelRichard TandyKeir StarmerRoad House (1989 film)Brittney GrinerRichard GaddJodie ComerNeanderthalJennifer AnistonDevin HaneyRebel MoonThe Rolling StonesThe Zone of Interest (film)Joseph WollBenny BlancoSurvivor 46Ben HouchenReform UKMurder of Junko FurutaGeorge GallowayFlipkartDelicious in DungeonSarah Jones (screen actress)Sean CombsX-Men '97Jared BernsteinJohnny DeppMinor League Baseball🡆 More