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McIntyre Automobile
Defunct American motor vehicle manufacturer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The W. H. Kiblinger Company and the W. H. McIntyre Company produced Brass Era automobiles in Auburn, Indiana from 1907 to 1915.[1]
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History
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Kiblinger
The W. H. Kiblinger Company formed in 1887, manufactured buggies. After W. H. Kiblinger's death in 1894, William H. McIntyre co-purchased the company and began experimenting with automobiles as early as 1897.[2] In 1907 Kiblinger began selling high-wheelers with tiller steering and two-cylinder air-cooled engines as the Kiblinger. Prices started at $250 (equivalent to $8,437 in 2024), which the company claimed was the "lowest price successful automobile on the road'[3][1]
The company grew to occupy a total of five buildings around Auburn, Indiana and employed 400 men.[2] After producing a few hundred Kiblingers, the company building the Success high-wheeler sued Kiblinger for patent infringement. William H. McIntyre resolved the lawsuit by buying out the Kiblinger partners and forming the W. H. McIntyre Company in December, 1908.[1]
- 1907 Kiblinger Model H Advertisement
McIntyre
W. H. McIntyre Company manufactured both buggies and high-wheelers. A line of two and four-cylinder high-wheelers on a non-patent infringing design, were offered. The McIntyre high-wheeler line of runabouts, tourers and trucks increased until ten different models were available.[1] By 1911, McIntyre introduced a line of standard vehicles by taking over the 4-cylinder 40-hp America produced by the Motor Car Company (New York City), which was marketed as the McIntyre Special. The six-cylinder 40-hp McIntyre Limited was added for 1913, but McIntyre was viewed as a high-wheeler manufacturer and these cars did not sell well.[3][1]
- 1908 full-line McIntyre advertisement
- 1910 McIntyre 20-hp advertisement
- 1911 McIntyre Special advertisement
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IMP Cyclecar
In 1913 McIntyre introduced the IMP Cyclecar with a 15 horsepower V-twin engine designed by William Stout . McIntyre IMP's sold for $375, (equivalent to $11,931 in 2024) and the sales literature stated that they cost "just a 'penny a mile' to run!"[1] Although IMP's sold well, over fifty companies had been formed during the "cyclecar craze" and by 1914 sales were ending.[3][1]
In 1914 McIntyre made a model 4-25 light car based on the IMP but production of all McIntyres soon ended.[1]
- 1913 IMP Cyclecar Advertisement
- 1914 IMP Cyclecar in London
- 1915 McIntyre Model 25 advertisement
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Tudhope-McIntyre
James B. Tudhope of the Tudhope Carriage Companyin Orillia, Ontario formed the Tudhope-McIntyre Company to build high-wheelers in 1908. Automobile parts were supplied from the W.H. McIntyre Company and the bodies were made by Tudehope's carriage company.Tudhope-McIntyres were priced at $550 CAD and production reached 514 vehicles before a fire in August 1909 destroyed the carriage factory. Rebuilding from the fire, Tudhope decided to discontinue high-wheeler production and instead acquired a license to build the Everitt 30.[3]
- 1908 Tudhope-McIntyre at the Canadian Automotive Museum
- 1909 Tudehope factory fire, Orillia, Ontario
Model Overview, 1907–1915
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Fate
With slowing sales, by January 1915 the W. H. McIntyre Company was in receivership. The DeKalb Manufacturing Company purchased the assets and assembled some cars for another two years.[2]
External links
- W. H. McIntyre Co - Eckhart Public Library
- 1908 Tudehope-McIntyre at the Canadian Automotive Museum
- McIntyre vehicles at ConceptCarz
- 1910 McIntyre Model B-1 - Bonhams
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Category:McIntyre vehicles.
References
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