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  2. Category:Motor vehicle assembly plants in Missouri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Motor_vehicle...

    St. Louis Truck Assembly; T. Toyota Motor Manufacturing Missouri; W. Wentzville Assembly; Wonder Motor Car Company This page was last edited on 8 May 2013, at 17:48 ...

  3. St. Louis Truck Assembly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Louis_Truck_Assembly

    St. Louis Truck Assembly was a General Motors automobile factory that built GMC and Chevrolet trucks, GM "B" body passenger cars, and the 1954–1981 Corvette models in St. Louis. Opened in the 1920s as a Fisher body plant and Chevrolet chassis plant, it expanded facilities to manufacture trucks on a separate line.

  4. Cadillac Automobile Company Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadillac_Automobile...

    The Cadillac Automobile Company Building, at 3224 Locust St. in St. Louis, Missouri, was built in 1919. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. [1] It was designed by Detroit, Michigan architect William A. Balsh. It is a four-story tile and concrete-framed building with basement, with curtain wall construction.

  5. Gardner (automobile) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gardner_(automobile)

    Without a dollar in his pocket, Russell E. Gardner left his home state of Tennessee for St. Louis in 1879. [4] Three-and-a-half decades later he was a multi-millionaire. Gardner had made it big in St. Louis by manufacturing Banner buggies before the turn of the century, and unlike many wagon builders, was well aware of what the automobile age ...

  6. St. Louis Motor Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Louis_Motor_Company

    1901 St. Louis at National Museum of Transportation. St. Louis Motor Carriage Company was a manufacturer of automobiles at 1211–13 North Vandeventer Avenue in St. Louis, Missouri, founded by George Preston Dorris (later credited with developing and patenting the float-carburetor) and John L. French in 1898, with French taking charge of marketing and Dorris heading engineering and production.

  7. The late Lou Dobbs owned a home in West Palm Beach that was ...

    www.aol.com/lou-dobbs-owned-home-west-090841172.html

    According to The Post article, Dobbs fell in love with Palm Beach County after he visited in the early 1990s and bought the West Palm Beach home in 2005 to use for a "very long time."

  8. Take a peek at the late CNN, Fox anchor Lou Dobbs ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/peek-cnn-fox-anchor-lou-142919076.html

    The West Palm Beach home of late news anchor and political commentator Lou Dobbs is under contract for sale. It was put on the market for sale in April, 2024 for $3.1 million, and later reduced to ...

  9. 30 Dogs Wearing Goggles That Might Just Make Your Day, As ...

    www.aol.com/50-most-wholesome-images-dogs...

    Image credits: dogswithjobs There’s a popular saying that cats rule the Internet, and research has even found that the 2 million cat videos on YouTube have been watched more than 25 billion ...