- According to Garry Wills' biography of John Wayne, "John Wayne's America," John Ford kept Francis as part of his stock company partly so he could humiliate him by giving him small, meaningless roles and yelling at him on the set. The younger Ford could not handle feelings of indebtedness, which was one of the reasons he only worked with Harry Carey once in the quarter-century after Carey left Universal. Carey was given the role of the prison warden and Francis the role of a corporal of the guard in Ford's The Prisoner of Shark Island (1936).
- His transition from the Ford family home in Maine to have a career in Hollywood as an actor and director was what motivated his little brother John Ford to do the same, largely as an act of competition.
- When Francis was the head of the Universal Film Manufacturing Co.'s shorts and serials department, he assigned his kid brother John Ford, who was working odd jobs around the studio, to Harry Carey's unit. When Universal boss "Uncle" Carl Laemmle gave Carey his own unit, Carey took John along as his director.
- Was in nine Oscar Best Picture nominees: The Front Page (1931), The Informer (1935), A Star Is Born (1937), In Old Chicago (1938), Stagecoach (1939), The Grapes of Wrath (1940), The Ox-Bow Incident (1942), Wilson (1944) and The Quiet Man (1952).
- Father of Philip Ford and Francis Joseph Ford Jr a.k.a. "Bill".
- Although he and Grace Cunard made so many films together that many people assumed they were married to each other, they weren't.
- Profiled in "Serial Film Stars: A Biographical Dictionary, 1912-1956 (2 Volume Set)" by Buck Rainey (2005).
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