词条 | Studebaker |
释义 |
| name = Studebaker Corporation | logo = | logo_caption = Badge used in the 1950s and 1960s | foundation = {{Start date|1852|02}} | defunct = {{End date|1967|11}} | fate = Merged with Wagner Electric and Worthington Corporation | successor = Studebaker-Worthington | location = South Bend, Indiana, U.S. | industry = Manufacturing | founders = Studebaker brothers | products = Automobiles (originally wagons, carriages and harnesses) | num_employees = | former_name = Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company }} Studebaker ({{IPAc-en|US|ˈ|s|t|uː|d|ə|b|eɪ|k|ər}} {{respell|STEW|də-bay-kər}}) was an American automobile manufacturer based in South Bend, Indiana. Founded in 1852 and incorporated in 1868[1] as the Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company, the firm was originally a producer of wagons for farmers, miners, and the military. Studebaker entered the automotive business in 1902 with electric vehicles and in 1904 with gasoline vehicles, all sold under the name "Studebaker Automobile Company". Until 1911, its automotive division operated in partnership with the Garford Company of Elyria, Ohio, and after 1909 with the E-M-F Company. The first gasoline automobiles to be fully manufactured by Studebaker were marketed in August 1912.[2]{{rp|p231}} Over the next 50 years, the company established a reputation for good quality and reliability.[3] After years of financial problems, the company merged in 1954 with luxury carmaker Packard to form the Studebaker-Packard Corporation. However, Studebaker's financial problems were worse than the Packard executives had thought. The Packard marque was phased out, and the company returned to the Studebaker Corporation name in 1962. The South Bend plant ceased production on December 20, 1963, and the last Studebaker automobile rolled off the Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, assembly line on March 17, 1966. HistoryGerman forebearsThe ancestors of the Studebaker family first arrived in the United States at the port of Philadelphia on September 1, 1736, on the ship Harle,[4] from Rotterdam, Holland. They included Peter Studebaker and his wife Anna Margetha Studebaker, Clement Studebaker (Peter's brother) and his wife, Anna Catherina Studebaker and Heinrich Studebaker (Peter's cousin). Albert Russel Erskine's History of the Studebaker Corporation, recorded that a Peter Studebaker and his father (also named Peter) were taxed in 1798-9 as wagon-makers.[5]{{rp|p11}} John Studebaker, father of the five brothers who began Studebaker Corporation, was the son of Peter Studebaker, Jr.[5]{{rp|11–13}} 18th-century colonial family businessIn 1740, Peter Studebaker built his home on a property known as “Bakers Lookout”. On Bakers Lookout, Peter, master of the German Cutler Guild, built the first Studebaker home, and the first Studebaker wagon factory, where he began forging and tempering steel and seasoning wood. Peter Studebaker also built a wagon road, Broadfording Wagon Road, to run through the property, and a bridge over the creek in 1747. In this factory, Peter manufactured many products, including some he made in Solingen, Germany, and naturally, wagons. Bakers Lookout, the 100-acre land patent near Hagerstown, Maryland, was the first of many land patents to be acquired by Peter Studebaker, who purchased about 1500 acres in what is now Maryland. The home still stands {{As of|2018|lc=y}} and is proof of the advanced skills of Peter Studebaker.[5][6] Although Peter Studebaker’s life in the colonies was short, less than 18 years, the family business flourished through his descendants[7] and apprentices who expanded the Studebaker family's vast land holdings and wagon-making business. Peter’s trade secrets were passed from father to son, generation to generation. The Studebaker family business plan, purchasing, again and again, vast amounts of land, on which they built industrious farms with mills and wagon-making facilities and wagon-selling facilities, each identical to the Bakers Lookout situation, industrious farms, lots of acres, on which one finds the necessary resources, lumber, iron ore, oil shale, and land selected with stream, spring, or river to hydropower factories, mills, and equipment.[8] Peter's technology resulted in famous wagon designs, including the Conestoga wagon and prairie schooner. Peter’s trade was the stepping-stone that expanded the industrial revolution and the transportation industry. Thomas E. Bonsall wrote:[9] "Much more than the story of a family business; it is also, in microcosm, the story of the industrial development of America."{{citation needed|date=October 2017}} Peter Studebaker died in the mid-1750s. The five brothersThe five sons were, in order of birth: Henry (1826–1895), Clement (1831–1901), John Mohler (1833–1917), Peter Everst (1836–1897) and Jacob Franklin (1844–1887). The boys had five sisters.[10] Photographs of the brothers and their parents are reproduced in the 1918 company history, which was written by Erskine after he became president, in memory of John M.,[11]{{rp|p.5}} whose portrait appears on the front cover. South Bend operationClement and Henry Studebaker, Jr., became blacksmiths and foundrymen in South Bend, Indiana, in February 1852.[2]{{rp|p229}}[12] They first made metal parts for freight wagons and later expanded into the manufacture of complete wagons. At this time, John M. was making wheelbarrows in Placerville, California. The site of his business is California Historic Landmark #142.[13] The first major expansion in Henry and Clem's South Bend business came from their being in the right place to meet the needs of the California Gold Rush that began in 1849. From his wheelbarrow enterprise at Placerville, John M. had amassed $8,000. In April 1858, he quit and moved out to apply this to financing the vehicle manufacturing of H & C Studebaker, which was already booming because of an order to build wagons for the US Army. In 1857, they had also built their first carriage—"Fancy, hand-worked iron trim, the kind of courting buggy any boy and girl would be proud to be seen in".[14]{{rp|p.24}} That was when John M. bought out Henry's share of the business. Henry was deeply religious and had qualms about building military equipment. The Studebakers were Dunkard Brethren, conservative German Baptists,[15] a religion that viewed war as evil. Longstreet's official company history simply says, "Henry was tired of the business. He wanted to farm. The risks of expanding were not for him".[14]{{rp|p.26}} Expansion continued from manufacture of wagons for westward migration, as well as for farming and general transportation. During the height of westward migration and wagon train pioneering, half of the wagons used were Studebakers. They made about a quarter of them, and manufactured the metal fittings for other builders in Missouri for another quarter-century. The fourth brother, Peter E, was running a successful general store in Goshen, Indiana, which was expanded in 1860 to include a wagon distribution outlet.[14]{{rp|p.28}} A major leap forward came from supplying wagons for the Union Army in the Civil War (1861–65). By 1868, annual sales had reached $350,000.[2]{{rp|p229}} That year, the three older brothers formed the Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company—Clem (president), Peter (secretary), and John M. (treasurer).[14]{{rp|p.38}} By this time, the factory had a spur line to the Lake Shore railroad and, with the Union Pacific Railroad finished, most wagons were now dispatched by rail and steamship. World's largest vehicle houseIn 1875, the youngest brother, 30-year-old Jacob, was brought into the company to take charge of the carriage factory, making sulkies and five-glass landaus. Following a great fire in 1874, which destroyed two-thirds of the entire works, they had rebuilt in solid brick, covering {{convert|20|acre|m2}} and were now "The largest vehicle house in the world".[14]{{rp|p.43}} Customers could choose from Studebaker sulkies, broughams, clarences, phaetons, runabouts, victorias, and tandems. For $20,000, a four-in-hand for up to a dozen passengers, with red wheels, gold-plated lamps, and yellow trim, could be had. In the 1880s, roads started to be surfaced with tar, gravel, and wooden blocks. In 1884, when times were hard, Jacob opened a carriage sales and service operation in a fine new Studebaker Building on Michigan Avenue, Chicago. The two granite columns at the main entrance, {{convert|3|ft|8|in|m}} in diameter and {{convert|12|ft|10|in|m}} high, were said to be the largest polished monolithic shafts in the country.[16] Three years later, Jacob died, the first death among the brothers. In 1889, incoming President Harrison ordered a full set of Studebaker carriages and harnesses for the White House.[17] As the 20th century approached, the South Bend plant "covered nearly {{convert|100|acre|km2}} with 20 big boilers, 16 dynamos, 16 large stationary engines, 1000 pulleys, 600 wood- and iron-working machines, {{convert|7|mi|km}} of belting, dozens of steam pumps, and 500 arc and incandescent lamps making white light over all".[14]{{rp|p.54}} The worldwide economic depression of 1893 caused a dramatic pause in sales and the plant closed down for five weeks, but industrial relations were good and the organized workforce declared faith in their employer. The impressive wagons pulled by the Budweiser Clydesdales are Studebaker wagons modified to carry beer, originally manufactured circa 1900.[18] Family association continuesThe five brothers died between 1887 and 1917 (John Mohler was the last to die).[19] Their sons and sons-in-law remained active in the management, most notably lawyer Fred Fish after his marriage to John M's daughter Grace in 1891.[20] "Col. George M Studebaker, Clement Studebaker Jr, J M Studebaker Jr, and [Fred Sr's son] Frederick Studebaker Fish served apprenticeships in different departments and rose to important official positions, with membership on the board."[11]{{rp|p41}} Erskine adds sons-in-law Nelson J Riley, Charles A Carlisle, H D Johnson, and William R Innis. Studebaker automobiles 1897–1911In the beginningIn 1895, John M. Studebaker's son-in-law Fred Fish urged for development of 'a practical horseless carriage'. When, on Peter Studebaker's death, Fish became chairman of the executive committee in 1897, the firm had an engineer working on a motor vehicle.[14]{{rp|p.66}} At first, Studebaker opted for electric (battery-powered) over gasoline propulsion. While manufacturing its own Studebaker Electric vehicles from 1902 to 1911, the company entered into body-manufacturing and distribution agreements with two makers of gasoline-powered vehicles, Garford of Elyria, Ohio, and the Everitt-Metzger-Flanders (E-M-F) Company of Detroit and Walkerville, Ontario. Studebaker began making gasoline-engined cars in partnership with Garford in 1904.[21] GarfordUnder the agreement with Studebaker, Garford would receive completed chassis and drivetrains from Ohio and then mate them with Studebaker-built bodies, which were sold under the Studebaker-Garford brand name at premium prices. Eventually, vehicles with Garford-built engines began to carry the Studebaker name. Garford also built cars under its own name, and by 1907, attempted to increase production at the expense of Studebaker. Once the Studebakers discovered this, John Mohler Studebaker enforced a primacy clause, forcing Garford back on to the scheduled production quotas. The decision to drop the Garford name was made and the final product rolled off the assembly line by 1911, leaving Garford alone until it was acquired by John North Willys in 1913. E-M-FStudebaker's agreement with the E-M-F Company, made in September 1908,[11]{{rp|p47}} was a different relationship, one John Studebaker had hoped would give Studebaker a quality product without the entanglements found in the Garford relationship, but this was not to be. Under the terms of the agreement, E-M-F would manufacture vehicles and Studebaker would distribute them exclusively through its wagon dealers. The E-M-F gasoline-powered cars proved disastrously unreliable, causing wags to say that E-M-F stood for Every Morning Fix-it, Easy Mark's Favorite, and the like.[2]{{rp|p231}} Compounding the problems was the infighting between E-M-F's principal partners, Everitt, Flanders, and Metzger. Eventually in mid-1909, Everitt and Metzger left to start a new enterprise.[22]{{rp|p88}} Flanders also quit and joined them in 1912, but the Metzger Motor Car Co could not be saved from failure by renaming it the Flanders Motor Company. Studebaker's president, Fred Fish, had purchased one-third of the E-M-F stock in 1908 and followed up by acquiring all the remainder from J. P. Morgan in 1910 and buying E-M-F's manufacturing plants at Walkerville, Ontario, Canada, and across the river in Detroit.[23] The former Ford Piquette Avenue Plant, located across Brush Street from the old E-M-F plant in the Milwaukee Junction area of Detroit, was purchased from Ford in January 1911 to become Studebaker Plant 10, used for assembly work until 1933.[24] E-M-F was bought out by Studebaker, which formed Studebaker Canada. This was followed by rebadging E-M-F's products: the E-M-F as the Studebaker 30, the Flanders as the Studebaker 20[25] Sales of these rebadged models continued through the end of 1912.[25] Studebaker manufactured cars in Windsor, Ontario, from 1912 to 1936. Studebaker marque established in 1911In 1910, it was decided to refinance and incorporate as the Studebaker Corporation, which was concluded on February 14, 1911 under New Jersey laws.[11]{{rp|p.63}} The company discontinued making electric vehicles that same year.[14]{{rp|p.71}} The financing was handled by Lehman Brothers and Goldman Sachs who provided board representatives including Henry Goldman whose contribution was especially esteemed.[11]{{rp|p.76}} After taking over E-M-F's facilities, Studebaker sought to remedy the customer dissatisfaction by paying mechanics to visit each disgruntled owner and replace defective parts in their vehicles, at a total cost of US$1 million. The worst problem was rear-axle failure. Hendry comments that the frenzied testing resulted in Studebaker's aim to design 'for life'—and the consequent emergence of "a series of really rugged cars... the famous Big and Special Sixes".[2]{{rp|p231}} From that time, Studebaker's own marque was put on all new automobiles produced at the former E-M-F facilities as an assurance that the vehicles were well built. Engineering advances from WWIThe corporation benefited from enormous orders cabled by the British government at the outbreak of World War I. They included 3,000 transport wagons, 20,000 sets of artillery harness, 60,000 artillery saddles, and ambulances, as well as hundreds of cars purchased through the London office. Similar orders were received from the governments of France and Russia.[11]{{rp|p.79}} The 1913 six-cylinder models were the first cars to employ the important advancement of monobloc engine casting which became associated with a production-economy drive in the years of the war. At that time, a 28-year-old university graduate engineer, Fred M. Zeder, was appointed chief engineer. He was the first of a trio of brilliant technicians, with Owen R. Skelton and Carl Breer, who launched the successful 1918 models, and were known as "The Three Musketeers".[2]{{rp|p234}} They left in 1920 to form a consultancy, later to become the nucleus of Chrysler Engineering. The replacement chief engineer was Guy P. Henry, who introduced molybdenum steel,[2]{{rp|p236}} an improved clutch design,[26] and presided over the six-cylinders-only policy favored by new president Albert Russel Erskine, who replaced Fred Fish in July 1915.[2]{{rp|p234}} End of horse-drawn eraJohn M. Studebaker had always viewed the automobile as complementary to the horse-drawn wagon, pointing out that the expense of maintaining a car might be beyond the resources of a small farmer. In 1918, when Erskine's history of the firm was published, the annual capacity of the seven Studebaker plants was 100,000 automobiles, 75,000 horse-drawn vehicles, and about $10,000,000 worth of automobile and vehicle spare parts and harness.[11]{{rp|p.85}} In the preceding seven years, 466,962 horse-drawn vehicles had been sold, as against 277,035 automobiles,[11]{{rp|p.87}} but the trend was all too clear. The regular manufacture of horse-drawn vehicles ended when Erskine ordered removal of the last wagon gear in 1919.[14]{{rp|p.90}} To its range of cars, Studebaker would now add a truck line to replace the horse-drawn wagons. Buses, fire engines, and even small rail locomotive-kits[27] were produced using the same powerful six-cylinder engines. First auto proving groundIn 1925, the corporation's most successful distributor and dealer Paul G. Hoffman came to South Bend as vice president in charge of sales. In 1926, Studebaker became the first automobile manufacturer in the United States to open a controlled outdoor proving ground on which, in 1937, would be planted 5,000 pine trees in a pattern that spelled "STUDEBAKER" when viewed from the air.[28] Also in 1926, the last of the Detroit plant was moved to South Bend under the control of Harold S Vance, vice president in charge of production and engineering. That year, a new small car, the Erskine Six was launched in Paris, resulting in 26,000 sales abroad and many more in America.[14]{{rp|p.91}} By 1929, the sales list had been expanded to 50 models and business was so good that 90% of earnings were being paid out as dividends to shareholders in a highly competitive environment. However, the end of that year ushered in the Great Depression that resulted in many layoffs and massive national unemployment for several years. Facilities in the 1920sStudebaker's total plant area was {{convert|225|acre|km2}}, spread over three locations, with buildings occupying 7.5 million square feet of floor space. Annual production capacity was 180,000 cars, requiring 23,000 employees.[2]{{rp|p237}} The original South Bend vehicle plant continued to be used for small forgings, springs, and making some body parts. Separate buildings totaling over one million square feet were added in 1922–23 for the Light, Special, and Big Six models. At any one time, 5,200 bodies were in process. South Bend's Plant 2 made chassis for the Light Six and had a foundry of {{convert|575000|sqft|m2|abbr=on}}, producing 600 tons of castings daily.[2]{{rp|p236}} Plant 3 at Detroit made complete chassis for Special and Big Six models in over {{convert|750000|sqft|m2|abbr=on}} of floor space. Plant 5 was the service parts store and shipping facility, plus the executive offices of various technical departments.[2]{{rp|p236}} The Detroit facilities were moved to South Bend in 1926,[14]{{rp|p.91}} except that the Piquette Avenue Plant (Plant 10) was retained for assembly of the Erskine between 1927 and 1929 and the Rockne (1931-1933).[24] Plant 7 was at Walkerville, Ontario, Canada, where complete cars were assembled from components that had been shipped from South Bend and Detroit factories or locally made in Canada. Output was designated for the Canadian (left-hand drive) and British Empire (right-hand drive) trade. By locating it there, Studebaker could advertise the cars as "British-built" and qualify for reduced tariffs.[2]{{rp|p237}} This manufacturing facility had been acquired from E-M-F in 1910 (see above). By 1929, it had been the subject of $1.25 million investment and was providing employment that supported 500 families.[23] Impact of the 1930s depressionFew industrialists were prepared for the Wall Street Crash of October 1929. Though Studebaker's production and sales had been booming, the market collapsed and plans were laid for a new, small, low-cost car—the Rockne. However, times were too bad to sell even inexpensive cars. Within a year, the firm was cutting wages and laying off workers. Erskine maintained faith in the Rockne and rashly had the directors declare huge dividends in 1930 and 1931. He also acquired 95% of the White Motor Company's stock at an inflated price and in cash. By 1933, the banks were owed $6 million, though current assets exceeded that figure. On March 18, 1933, Studebaker entered receivership. Erskine was pushed out of the presidency in favor of more cost-conscious managers. Albert R. Erskine committed suicide on July 1, 1933, leaving successors Harold Vance and Paul Hoffman to deal with the problems.[14]{{rp|p.96–98}} By December 1933, the company was back in profit with $5.75 million working capital and 224 new Studebaker dealers.[14]{{rp|p.99}} With the substantial aid of Lehman Brothers, full refinancing and reorganization was achieved on March 9, 1935. A new car was put on the drawing boards under chief engineer Delmar "Barney" Roos—the Champion. Its final styling was designed by Virgil Exner and Raymond Loewy. The Champion doubled the company's previous-year sales when it was introduced in 1939.[14]{{rp|p.109}} In 1938, the company built a new factory in Vernon, California, which remained in production until 1956. At one time, the facility was producing 65 cars a day.[29] The factory manufactured the Champion, the Land Cruiser, and the Starlight. World War IIFrom the 1920s to the 1930s, the South Bend company had originated many style and engineering milestones, including the Light Four, Light Six, Special Six, Big Six models, the record-breaking Commander and President, followed by the 1939 Champion. During World War II, Studebaker produced the Studebaker US6 truck in great quantity and the unique M29 Weasel cargo and personnel carrier. Studebaker ranked 28th among United States corporations in the value of wartime production contracts.[30][31] After cessation of hostilities, Studebaker returned to building automobiles that appealed to average Americans. Post-WWII stylingStudebaker prepared well in advance for the anticipated postwar market and launched the slogan "First by far with a post-war car". This advertising premise was substantiated by Virgil Exner's designs,[32] notably the 1947 Studebaker Starlight coupé, which introduced innovative styling features that influenced later cars, including the flatback "trunk" instead of the tapered look of the time, and a wrap-around rear window. Exner's concepts were spread through a line of models like the 1950 Studebaker Champion Starlight coupe[33] The new trunk design prompted a running joke that one could not tell if the car was coming or going. Hamilton, Ontario plant{{see also|Studebaker Canada}}On August 18, 1948, surrounded by more than 400 employees and a battery of reporters, the first vehicle, a blue Champion four-door sedan, rolled off of the Studebaker assembly line in Hamilton, Ontario.[34] The company was located in the former Otis-Fenson military weapons factory off Burlington Street on Victoria Avenue North, which was built in 1941. Having previously operated its British Empire export assembly plant at Walkerville, Ontario, Studebaker settled on Hamilton as a postwar Canadian manufacturing site because of the city's centrality to the Canadian steel industry.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} Studebaker manufactured cars in Hamilton from 1948 to 1966.[25] After the South Bend plant shut, Hamilton was Studebaker's sole factory.[25] Industry price war brings on crisisStudebaker's strong postwar management team including president Paul G Hoffman and Roy Cole (vice president, engineering) had gone by 1949[2]{{rp|p252}} and was replaced by more cautious executives who failed to meet the competitive challenge brought on by Henry Ford II and his Whiz Kids. Massive discounting in a price war between Ford and General Motors, which began with Ford's massive increase in production in the spring of 1953—part of Ford's postwar expansion program aimed at restoring it to the position of the largest car maker which GM had held since 1931—could not be equalled by the independent carmakers, for whom the only hope was seen as a merger of Studebaker, Packard, Hudson, and Nash into a fourth giant combine after Chrysler. This had been unsuccessfully attempted by George W. Mason. In this scheme, Studebaker had the disadvantage that its South Bend location would make centralization difficult. Its labor costs were also the highest in the industry.[2]{{rp|p254}} Merger with PackardBallooning labor costs (the company had never had an official United Auto Workers [UAW] strike and Studebaker workers and retirees were among the highest paid in the industry), quality control issues, and the new-car sales war between Ford and General Motors in the early 1950s wrought havoc on Studebaker's balance sheet.[2]{{rp|p254-255}} Professional financial managers stressed short-term earnings rather than long-term vision. Momentum was sufficient to keep going for another 10 years, but stiff competition and price-cutting by the Big Three doomed the enterprise. From 1950, Studebaker declined rapidly, and by 1954, was losing money. It negotiated a strategic takeover by Packard, a smaller but less financially troubled car manufacturer. However, the cash position was worse than it had led Packard to believe, and by 1956, the company (renamed Studebaker-Packard Corporation and under the guidance of CEO James J. Nance) was nearly bankrupt, though it continued to make and market both Studebaker and Packard cars until 1958.[2]{{rp|p254}} The "Packard" element was retained until 1962, when the name reverted to "Studebaker Corporation". Contract with Curtiss-WrightA three-year management contract was made by Nance with aircraft maker Curtiss-Wright in 1956[35] with the aim of improving finances.[2] C-W's president, Roy T. Hurley, attempted to cure Studebaker's ruinously lax employment policies. Under C-W's guidance, Studebaker-Packard also sold the old Detroit Packard plant and returned the then-new Packard plant on Conner Avenue (where Packard production had moved in 1954, at the same time Packard took its body-making operations in house after its longtime body supplier, Briggs Manufacturing Company, was acquired by Chrysler in late 1953) to its lessor, Chrysler. The company became the American importer for Mercedes-Benz, Auto Union, and DKW automobiles and many Studebaker dealers sold those brands, as well. C-W gained the use of idle car plants and tax relief on their aircraft profits while Studebaker-Packard received further working capital to continue car production. Last automobiles producedThe automobiles that came after the diversification process began, including the redesigned compact Lark (1959) and the Avanti sports car (1962), were based on old chassis and engine designs. The Lark, in particular, was based on existing parts to the degree that it even used the central body section of the company's 1953–58 cars, but was a clever enough design to be popular in its first year, selling over 130,000 units and delivering a $28.6 million profit to the automaker. "S-P rose from 56,920 units in 1958 to 153,844 in 1959."[36] However, Lark sales began to drop precipitously after the Big Three manufacturers introduced their own compact models in 1960, and the situation became critical once the so-called "senior compacts" debuted for 1961. The Lark had provided a temporary reprieve, but nothing proved enough to stop the financial bleeding. A labor strike occurred at the South Bend plant[37] starting on January 1, 1962, and lasting 38 days.[38] The strike came to an end after an agreement was reached between company president Sherwood H. Egbert and Walter P. Reuther, president of the UAW.[39] Despite a sales uptick in 1962, continuing media reports that Studebaker was about to leave the auto business became a self-fulfilling prophecy as buyers shied away from the company's products for fear of being stuck with an "orphan". NBC reporter Chet Huntley made a television program called "Studebaker—Fight for Survival" which aired on May 18, 1962.[40] By 1963, all of the company's automobiles and trucks were selling poorly. Exit from auto business
After insufficient initial sales of the 1964 models and the ousting of president Sherwood Egbert, the company announced the closure of the South Bend plant on December 9, 1963, and produced its last car in South Bend on December 20. The shutdown of the plant, whose work force was nearly a quarter African-American, hit that community especially hard.[41] The engine foundry remained open to supply the Canadian plant until the end of the 1964 model year, after which it was also shuttered. The Avanti model name, tooling, and plant space were sold off to Leo Newman and Nate Altman, a longtime South Bend Studebaker-Packard dealership. They revived the car in 1965 under the brand name "Avanti II". (See main article Avanti (car).) They likewise purchased the rights and tooling for Studebaker's trucks, along with the company's vast stock of parts and accessories. Trucks ceased to be built after Studebaker fulfilled its remaining orders in early 1964. Some '1965' model Champ trucks were built in South America using completely knocked-down kits and parts.{{citation needed|date=April 2017}} These models used a different grille from all previous Champ models.
Limited automotive production was consolidated at the company's last remaining production facility in Hamilton, Ontario, which had always been profitable and where Studebaker produced cars until March 1966 under the leadership of Gordon Grundy. It was projected that the Canadian operation could break even on production of about 20,000 cars a year, and Studebaker's announced goal was 30,000–40,000 1965 models.{{citation needed|date=April 2017}} While 1965 production was just shy of the 20,000 figure, the company's directors felt that the small profits were not enough to justify continued investment. Rejecting Grundy's request for funds to tool up for 1967 models, Studebaker left the automobile business on March 17, 1966, after an announcement on March 4.[42] A turquoise and white Cruiser sedan[34] was the last of fewer than 9000 1966 models manufactured (of which 2045 were built in the 1966 calendar year[43]). In reality, the move to Canada had been a tactic by which production could be slowly wound down and remaining dealer franchise obligations honored.{{citation needed|date=April 2017}} The 1965 and 1966 Studebaker cars used "McKinnon" engines sourced from General Motors Canada Limited, which were based on Chevrolet's 230-cubic-inch six-cylinder and 283-cubic-inch V8 engines when Studebaker-built engines were no longer available.{{citation needed|date=April 2017}} The closure adversely affected not only the plant's 700 employees, who had developed a sense of collegiality around group benefits such as employee parties and day trips, but the city of Hamilton as a whole; Studebaker had been Hamilton's 10th-largest employer.[34]
Gordon Grundy of Studebaker Canada was sent by Studebaker management to Japan to investigate potential links with Nissan and Toyota, to sell their vehicles badged as Studebakers. While Grundy was negotiating with Nissan, the Studebaker board found out about the Toyota Century and then the attorney representing the board, former United States Vice President Richard Nixon, asked Grundy to contact Toyota, as well. Unfortunately, Toyota was insulted at being Studebaker's second choice, and when word got out to Nissan, they ended negotiations, leaving Grundy empty-handed.[44]
Many of Studebaker's dealers either closed, took on other automakers' product lines, or converted to Mercedes-Benz dealerships following the closure of the Canadian plant. Studebaker's General Products Division, which built vehicles to fulfill defense contracts, was acquired by Kaiser Industries, which built military and postal vehicles in South Bend. In 1970, American Motors (AMC) purchased the division, which still exists today as AM General. The grove of 5,000 trees planted on the proving grounds in 1937, spelling out the Studebaker name, still stands and has proven to be a popular topic on such satellite photography sites as Google Earth.[45] The proving grounds were acquired by Bendix in 1966[12] and Bosch in 1996. After Bosch closed its South Bend operation in 2011,[46][47] a part of the proving ground was retained and, {{As of|2013|04|lc=y}}, has been restored to use under the name "New Carlisle Test Facility".[12][48] For many years a rumor persisted of a Studebaker graveyard. The rumor was later confirmed to be fact when the remains of many Studebaker prototype automobiles and a few trucks were discovered at a remote site within the confines of the former Studebaker proving grounds. A few of the prototypes were rescued and are in private collections. The only example of a never-produced wood-sided Champion station wagon has been restored and is on display at the Studebaker National Museum. Most of the prototypes were left to rot in direct contact with the ground and full exposure to the weather and falling trees. Attempts to remove some of these rusting bodies resulted in the bodies crumbling under their own weight as they were moved, so now they exist only in photographs. In May 1967, Studebaker and its diversified units were merged with Wagner Electric.[49] In November 1967, Studebaker was merged with the Worthington Corporation to form Studebaker-Worthington Inc., a Delaware corporation.[50] The Studebaker name disappeared from the American business scene in 1979, when McGraw-Edison acquired Studebaker-Worthington, except for the still existing Studebaker Leasing, based in Jericho, NY. McGraw-Edison was itself purchased in 1985 by Cooper Industries, which sold off its auto-parts divisions to Federal-Mogul some years later. As detailed above, some vehicles were assembled from left-over parts and identified as Studebakers by the purchasers of the Avanti brand and surplus material from Studebaker at South Bend. Diversified activitiesBy the early 1960s, Studebaker had begun to diversify away from automobiles. Numerous companies were purchased, bringing Studebaker into such diverse fields as the manufacture of tire studs and missile components. The company's 1963 annual report listed the following divisions:
Having built the Wright R-1820 under license during World War II, Studebaker also attempted to build what would perhaps have been the largest aircraft piston engine ever built. With 24 cylinders in an "H" configuration, a bore of {{convert|8|in|mm|0|abbr=on}} and stroke of {{convert|7.75|in|mm|0|abbr=on}}, displacement would have been {{convert|9349|in3|L}}, hence the H-9350 designation. It was not completed.[52] AdvertisementsProducts{{see also|List of Studebaker vehicles}}Studebaker automobile models
Studebaker trucks
Studebaker body styles
Affiliated automobile marques
See also
Notes1. ^{{cite web| title = German heritage biography: Studebaker Brothers| url= http://www.germanheritage.com/biographies/mtoz/studebaker.html| accessdate = February 6, 2007}} 2. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 {{cite book|title=Studebaker: One can do a lot of remembering in South Bend|last=Hendry|first=Maurice M|publisher= Automobile Quarterly|location=New Albany, Indiana|pages=228–275|id=Vol X, 3rd Q, 1972}} 3. ^E.g., see motoring review An ideal car{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} in The Brisbane Courier, April 25, 1928 4. ^Partial passenger list as shown in the original manuscripts now in the Pennsylvania State Library at Harrisburg 5. ^{{cite web| title = Bakers Lookout: Peter Studebaker's 1740 Colonial Home| url= http://www.bakerslookout.com/| accessdate = January 3, 2018}} 6. ^In 1747, Peter Studebaker built "one of Washington County's earliest thoroughfares, Broadfording [Wagon] Road [which] was already in existence in 1747" and "carried heavy traffic to Bakers Lookout's wagon and forging services that were instrumental to expand the West." {{cite web| title = Bakers Lookout: Peter Studebaker's 1740 Colonial Home - Exhibit I| url= http://www.bakerslookout.com/exhibitisurveys.html| accessdate = March 10, 2018}} 7. ^{{cite web| title = Bakers Lookout: Peter Studebaker's 1740 Colonial Home - Exhibit M| url= http://www.bakerslookout.com/exhibitmpeterline.html| accessdate = January 3, 2018}} 8. ^{{cite web| title = Bakers Lookout: Peter Studebaker's 1740 Colonial Home - Exhibit C:Selected pages from Eugene S. Wierbach "The David Studebaker Story"| url= http://www.bakerslookout.com/exhibitcweirbach.html| accessdate = January 3, 2018}} 9. ^{{cite book|title=More Than They Promised: The Studebaker Story |first=Thomas E |last=Bonsall |publisher=Stanford University Press |year=2000 |accessdate= }} 10. ^Genealogy at Conway's of Ireland—John Clement Studebaker 11. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 {{cite book|title=History of the Studebaker corporation |first=Albert Russel |last=Erskine |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iO9HAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage |year=1918 |accessdate=February 7, 2016}} 12. ^1 2 Brochure: South Bend's Titans of Industry {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522112242/http://www.stjosephcountyindiana.com/departments/SJCHP/Events/studebaker_bendix_brochure_final_2012.pdf |date=May 22, 2013 }} (2012) at St Joseph County Indiana. Accessed April 12, 2013 13. ^Register {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604041941/http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/testing/html/mss0204a.html |date=June 4, 2011 }} California Historic Landmark Project Collection 1936–1940 14. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 {{cite book|title=A Century on Wheels: The Story of Studebaker|last=Longstreet|first=Stephen|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|location=New York|page=121|id=1st edn., 1952}} 15. ^{{cite journal|last=Guttman|first=Jon|title=Studebaker Wagon|journal=Military History|publisher=WHG|issue=July 2013|page=23}} 16. ^See building No.3 on illustration Looking West from Michigan Boulevard 17. ^[https://www.studebakermuseum.org/p/whats-happening/exhibits/the-presidential-carriage-collection/ The Presidential Carriage Collection] at Studebaker National Museum. Accessed February 7, 2016 18. ^{{cite web| title = Clydesdales| url= http://www.seaworld.org/animal-info/info-books/clydesdale/ab-clydesdale-teams.htm| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20090509002419/http://www.seaworld.org/animal-info/info-books/clydesdale/ab-clydesdale-teams.htm| archivedate= May 9, 2009| accessdate = February 2, 2013}} 19. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.automotivehalloffame.org/inductee/john-studebaker/703/ |title=John Mohler Studebaker |publisher=Automotive Hall of Fame |accessdate=March 4, 2016 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304050333/http://www.automotivehalloffame.org/inductee/john-studebaker/703/ |archivedate=March 4, 2016 }} 20. ^"Ex-State Senator Frederick S. Fish will leave Newark to become the general counsel of the Studebaker Brothers' Manufacturing Company at South Bend, Ind." [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1891/03/26/103300335.pdf NYT City & Suburban News], March 26, 1891 (PDF) 21. ^Clymer, Floyd. Treasury of Early American Automobiles, 1877–1925 (New York: Bonanza Books, 1950), p.178. 22. ^{{cite book|title=The E-M-F Company|last=Yanik|first=Anthony J.|publisher=SAE, 2001|isbn=0-7680-0716-X |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D8ba9eB6DK0C&printsec=frontcover }} 23. ^1 {{cite news |url=http://www.lib.uwo.ca/programs/companyinformationcanada/stude.html |title=Studebaker Factory Supports 500 Families Living in Border Area |newspaper=Financial Post |date=October 31, 1929 |publisher=Western Libraries (Ontario) |accessdate=June 9, 2011 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725041710/http://www.lib.uwo.ca/programs/companyinformationcanada/stude.html |archivedate=July 25, 2011 }} 24. ^1 National Historic Landmark Nomination - Ford Piquette Avenue Plant, pp. 22-23 25. ^1 2 3 4 Windsor Public Library online (retrieved June 13, 2017) 26. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=jOIDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA594&dq=Popular+Science+1930+plane+%22Popular+Mechanics%22&hl=en&ei=b6NpTru2LJO6tgeKoODMBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CC4Q6AEwATgK#v=onepage&q=Popular%20Science%201930%20plane%20%22Popular%20Mechanics%22&f=true "Latest Auto Improvements Give More Comfort" Popular Mechanics, October 1930] 27. ^Petrol Motor Vehicles on Railways Bunbury Herald,Western Australia, May 3, 1919, at Trove 28. ^{{cite web|last=Strohl|first=Daniel|title=Studebaker’s tree sign to be restored for 75th anniversary|url=http://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/2013/07/31/studebaker-tree-sign-to-be-restored-for-its-75th-anniversary/|work=Hemmings Daily|publisher=Hemmings Motor News|accessdate=July 31, 2013}} 29. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20150113043815/http://www.lifeaccordingtoerick.com/2014/09/who-knew-8-las-booming-auto-industry.html Studebaker Vernon factory] 30. ^Peck, Merton J. & Scherer, Frederic M. The Weapons Acquisition Process: An Economic Analysis (1962) Harvard Business School p.619 31. ^Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 81, 215-8, 312, Random House, New York, NY, 2012. {{ISBN|978-1-4000-6964-4}}. 32. ^Virgil M. Exner’s Striking Studebaker Starlight Coupe Design. The Old Motor, September 26, 2016. Accessed November 19, 2016 33. ^Studebaker Champion Starlight coupe in America on the Move history website 34. ^1 2 {{cite press release| title =The Hamilton Memory Project; STUDEBAKER| publisher =The Hamilton Spectator–Souvenir Edition |page =MP45| date = June 10, 2006}} 35. ^Dallas Morning News, August 9, 1956, Part 3, Page 5. 36. ^The Washington Post, Times Herald, January 6, 1960, Page 21. 37. ^{{cite journal|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,872908,00.html |title=The President & the Picket |journal=Time |date=January 26, 1962 |accessdate=June 9, 2011}} 38. ^Studebaker-Packard Corporation Annual Report, 1961, Page 4. 39. ^Aberdeen Daily News, February 8, 1962, Page 7. 40. ^Plain Dealer, May 18, 1962, Page 25 41. ^{{Cite journal|url = |title = Negroes Lose 1,500 Posts in South Bend|last = |first = |date = December 21, 1963|journal = Pittsburgh Courier|doi = |pmid = |access-date = }} 42. ^{{cite news|last=Johnson |first=Dale |title= The last days of Studebaker |via=Hemmings.com |publisher=The Toronto Star |date=March 4, 2006 |url=http://clubs.hemmings.com/clubsites/hpsdc/LastDays.htm |accessdate=February 6, 2007 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070315113223/http://clubs.hemmings.com/clubsites/hpsdc/LastDays.htm |archivedate=March 15, 2007 }} 43. ^{{cite journal | ref = AR69 | title = Die Personenwagen-Weltproduktion 1968/La production mondiale de voitures en 1968 | trans-title = The world's car production 1968 | last = Gloor | first = Roger | journal = Automobil Revue - Katalognummer 1969/Revue Automobile - Numéro catalogue 1969 | editor1-last = Braunschweig | editor1-first = Robert |display-editors=etal | language = German, French | publisher = Hallwag AG | page = 526 | location = Berne, Switzerland | volume = 64 | date = March 13, 1969 }} 44. ^{{cite web|last1=Arlt|first1=Glenn|title=The Link Between Studebaker and Nissan – Revealed!|url=http://datsunforum.com/1571-2/|accessdate=December 26, 2016}} 45. ^{{cite web|url=http://googlesightseeing.com/2005/10/26/arboreal-typography/ |title=Arboreal typography |first=Alex |last=Turnbull| publisher=Google Sightseeing |date=October 26, 2005 |accessdate=June 9, 2011}} 46. ^Bosch Complete Plant Closure (Auction) {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120107043257/http://brittonmg.assetnation.com/index.cfm/general/AuctionDetail/AuctionID/2626 |date=January 7, 2012 }} at Britton Management Group, November 2011 47. ^Ferreira, Colleen Bosch plant to close in South Bend at wsbt.com news, November 16, 2010 {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723235759/http://www.wsbt.com/news/wsbt-bosch-to-close-in-south-bend-111610,0,302476.story |date=July 23, 2011 }} 48. ^[https://archive.is/20130505154555/http://www.bosch.us/content/language1/html/7666.htm History of the New Carlisle Test Facility] at Bosch US website 49. ^[https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1350&dat=19670510&id=98gwAAAAIBAJ&sjid=cwEEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7162,3651594 Wagner Electric, Studebaker Vote To Merger Firms] Toledo Blade May 10, 1967, p 70. At Google News, accessed March 24, 2013 50. ^[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=0aUtAAAAIBAJ&sjid=vJ8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=5664,3602324 Studebaker, Worthington Vote Merger Despite Antitrust] Montreal Gazette November 16, 1967, p 14. At Google News, accessed March 24, 2013 51. ^White company history at fundinguniverse.com 52. ^The U.S. Air Force project designation MX-232 was allocated to the proposed 5000-hp engine, according to researchers George Cully & Andreas Parsch. See explanation and link from Designations Of U.S. Air Force Projects (2005) References
Further reading
External links{{Commons category|Studebaker vehicles}}
17 : Studebaker|Car manufacturers of the United States|Truck manufacturers|Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of the United States|Motor vehicle manufacturers based in Indiana|Companies based in St. Joseph County, Indiana|Defunct companies based in Indiana|Former components of the Dow Jones Industrial Average|History of Hamilton, Ontario|South Bend, Indiana|1852 establishments in Indiana|1967 disestablishments in the United States|Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1852|Vehicle manufacturing companies disestablished in 1967|Defunct brands|American companies established in 1852|Car brands |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。