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  2. List of former automotive manufacturing plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_former_automotive...

    Hamtramck, Michigan with parts overlapping into Detroit, Michigan: Dodge cars 1910 [8] 1980-01-04 [9] First plant organized by the United Automobile Workers Union. Home of the League of Revolutionary Black Workers in the 1960s. Demolished 1981.

  3. List of truck manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_truck_manufacturers

    Sterling Trucks (United States) Stewart & Stevenson (United States) Studebaker (United States) Scot (Canada) [citation needed] Tesla Motors (United States) Traffic (United States) UD Trucks (different models for U.S. market) Volvo Trucks (different models for U.S. market) Vicinity Motor Corp. (Canada) Walter (United States) White (United States)

  4. Brockway Motor Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brockway_Motor_Company

    1924 Brockway 2.5-ton truck on display at the Iowa 80 Trucking Museum, Walcott, Iowa. They began with Continental engines but switched to Wisconsin in 1925. They bought the Indiana Truck Corporation in 1928 but were forced to sell it to White Motor Company in the early years of the Great Depression. A new range, the V1200 was offered from 1934 ...

  5. Ford Romeo Engine Plant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Romeo_Engine_Plant

    The plant operates on two lines, the first is a high volume line, and the second line is a niche line. The high volume line is more than 4,000 feet in length; it produces 140 engines an hour. The high volume line builds the 4.6 liter 2-valve and 3-valve V-8 engines and the 4.6 liter 2-valve flex fuel V-8 engines.

  6. List of American truck manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_American_truck...

    AEERSA (ambulances, rescue vehicles, fire trucks, 2000–present) Ace (1918–1927; also Busses) Alden Sampson; Alexis Fire Equipment Company (fire trucks, 1947–present) Alkane; Allianz; AM General; American (1911–1913) American Austin (1929–1934) American Bantam (1935–1941) American Coleman; American LaFrance (fire trucks) American ...

  7. REO Motor Car Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REO_Motor_Car_Company

    The REO Motor Car Company was a company based in Lansing, Michigan, which produced automobiles and trucks from 1905 to 1975. At one point, the company also manufactured buses on its truck platforms. Ransom E. Olds was an entrepreneur who founded multiple companies in the automobile industry. In 1897 Olds founded Oldsmobile. In 1905 Olds left ...

  8. Federal Motor Truck Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Motor_Truck_Company

    The Federal Motor Truck Company was an American truck manufacturer headquartered in Detroit, Michigan. The company was founded in 1910 as Bailey Motor Truck Company by Martin L. Pulcher , who would later found the Oakland Motor Car Company , which launched the Pontiac GM companion brand in 1926.

  9. Republic Motor Truck Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_Motor_Truck_Company

    June 1922 Republic truck from 1923. The Republic Motor Truck Company was a manufacturer of commercial trucks circa 1913 - 1929, in Alma, Michigan. By 1918, it was recognized as the largest exclusive truck manufacturer in the world, and the maker of one out of every nine trucks on the roads in the United States. [1]