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1953 international fageol moving van

Fageol moving van from 1953

Fageol Motors was a U.S. manufacturer of buses and other motor vehicles.

History[]

The company was founded in 1916 to manufacture motor trucks, farm tractors and automobiles in Oakland, California.[1]

In 1921, it became the first company to build a bus from the ground up. This new bus was called the "Safety Bus". The goal was to build a bus that was not prone to overturning when cornering. It had a wide track, and was lower to the ground to ensure the passengers' safety and ease of entry and exit. Following shortly after the success of the Safety Bus was the larger 22-seat "Safety Coach".[2] The factory was located in Oakland, California, but did not survive the Great Depression of the early 1930s. It went into receivership, and the bank assumed control and re-organized under the name Fageol Truck and Coach. In 1938, Mr. Peterman bought the factory and its contents ending the Fageol Motors companies. Shortly, the first Peterbilt was produced.

The South Australian Railways (SAR) operated a number of Fageol buses and trucks. In 1932 that system introduced into service the first of four railcars converted from their road buses. These vehicles initially operated on the SAR 3ft 6in gauge Port Lincoln Division, however some were transferred to the South East Division branch line to Kingston, South Australia, prior to the line's conversion to broad gauge. The last railcar was condemned in 1961.[3]

The Fageol brothers left the company in 1927 to form a the Twin Coach Company, manufacturing buses in Kent, Ohio.

Products[]

Fageol Trucks

Fageol Safety Coach

Fageol Tractors

Fageol Tractor Models
Model Year(s) of Production Horsepower Engine Type Misc Notes Photo
Fageol 6-12 1918-25
Fageol 6-15 Overland 1918-19
Fageol 9-12 Lycoming 1920-27
Fageol 10-15 Lycoming


See also[]

  • Flxible
  • Twin Coach, another company founded by the Fageol brothers
  • book "Fun at Work, Hudson Style (Tales from the Hudson Motor Company)" by Harry F. Kraus

References[]

  1. Vintage Tractors. Fageol
  2. Eckermann, Eric; Peter L. Albrecht (2001). World History of the Automobile. SAE International, 129. ISBN 076800800X. 
  3. Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, October, 1986 pp219-238

External links[]

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