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Gottlieb Wilhelm Daimler was the son of a baker named Johannes Däumler (Daimler) and his wife Frederika, from the town of Schorndorf near Stuttgart, Württemberg. By the age of 13 (1847), he had completed six years of primary studies in Lateinschule and became interested in engineering.
Concept cars and submodels are not listed unless they are themselves notable. ... Shamrock the First (1904) 1905. Adams ... (North America) (1990-1996) Ford Explorer ...
The Daimler Motorized Carriage was the first car produced by German engineers Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach, who founded Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft (DMG). The first car was sold in 1892. The first car was sold in 1892.
Today, this is known as "the first Marcus car" but would be better described as a cart. His second car, built and run in 1875 according to some sources, was the first gasoline-driven car and is housed at the Vienna Technical Museum. [30] [31] However, the latest research shows that it was not built until 1888/89. [32]
Automobile dealer Walter Beck remembered the first car he saw in Fort Worth as a 1900 Oldsmobile driven by the well-known vaudeville artist Lew Dockstader. Nonetheless, both made enough of an ...
In Europe, Carl Benz and Gottlieb Daimler produced the first gasoline automobiles in 1885–1886. [7] [8] [9] The Duryea brothers made their first American automobile in 1893, and three years later started mass-producing cars at Duryea Motor Wagon Company; [9] Henry Ford started mass-producing cars in 1899 at the Detroit Automobile Company. [10 ...
During the 1890s he was hailed in France, then the world centre for car production, as the "King of Designers". From the late 19th century Wilhelm Maybach, together with Gottlieb Daimler, developed light, high-speed internal combustion engines suitable for land, water, and air use.
The first Daimler car, a singularly inelegant model, appeared in 1892, [4] followed in 1895 by a two-cylinder vis á vis and, in 1897, DMG's first front-engined model, a Phönix-engined four-seat open tourer. [5] In 1900, Gottlieb Daimler died.