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1977 Brochure for AM General on eBay

• CATEGORIES: Advertising & Brochures, Features This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

This brochure provides a good overview about how a division of Kaiser Industries began with in civilian government business with the successful post office bid (FJ-3s) in 1960. By 1971, the unit had produced a wide range of government vehicles. That year, American Motors incorporated the business unit into the wholly owned subsidiary AM General Corporation.

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1977-am-general-history01 1977-am-general-history0 1977-am-general-history1 1977-am-general-history2 1977-am-general-history3

1977-am-general-history4 1977-am-general-history5 1977-am-general-history6 1977-am-general-history7 1977-am-general-history8 1977-am-general-history9 1977-am-general-history10

“Here I have an
Excellent Condition
32-Page Brochure / Book / Pamphlet
AM GENERAL: A STORY OF CAPABILITY

This measures about 8 ½ x 11 inches and is a very cool historical walk through AM General beginning with its roots with Overland, walking the reader through all the steps including the WWII Jeep MB all the way to the 1977 AM General Corporation.

Vehicles mentioned in this publication include:
• OVERLAND RUNABOUT
• WHIPPET
• WORLD WAR II ‘JEEP’
• M38A1C RIFLE CARRIER
• M170 FRONT LINE AMBULANCE
• M274 ½-TON TRUCK “Mechanical Mule”
• FJ-3A FLEETVAN
• M151 SERIES TRUCK
• M39 SERIES TRUCK
• M44 SERIES TRUCK
• M676 CARGO TRUCK
• M715 CARGO TRUCK
• TRANSBUS
• TRANSIT BUS
• ELECTRIC VEHICLE
• Transbus Mock-Up – Prototype of the Transbus
• M151A2
• M44A2
• M809
• DJ-5 DISPATCHER
• FJ-8 DELIVERY VAN
• FJ9 DELIVERY VAN
• Piggy-back Drivable Unit

 

2 Comments on “1977 Brochure for AM General on eBay

  1. Mike

    AM General’s foray into the transit bus building business was not a successful venture, buses were poorly designed. prone to breakdowns, and despised by most bus drivers of that era. After a while, the poor reputation caught up with them, and most transit agencies continued to purchase new equipment from other manufacturers. This may be the only notable failure of AM General.

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