Features Research Archives

To Top

Harold Spieth’s Smooth Driving Booklet on eBay

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

Harold Spieth was President and Chairman of the Board of Willys-Overland Motors when he wrote this booklet. It includes an illustration with a small Willys Wagon.

View all the information on eBay

“Condition: Excellent
Factory Original: Yes
# of pages: 1
Other info: Measures 5″ x 7″…………………SCARCE!
FREE SHIPPING with 3 or more Brochure purchases-”

1948-smooth-driving-manual-harold-speith-1

1948-smooth-driving-manual-harold-speith-2

1948-smooth-driving-manual-harold-speith-3

1948-smooth-driving-manual-harold-speith-4

1948-smooth-driving-manual-harold-speith-5

 
To Top

Jeeps Pulling Airstream Trailers

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

Thanks to Blaine for spotting some of these jeep-pulling-airstream trailer images. That led me to search for some more. I think my favorite might just be the post from Kaiser Willys, as a wagon owner named Richard Carr pulled his airstream down to Baja, Mexico, for a six month vacation in 2010 and was still there as of 2015. I guess he found his spot in the world!

richard-carr-wagon-1

These were some of Blaine’s finds:

blaine-airstream-wagon blaine-airstream-wagon4 blaine-airstream-wagon3 blaine-airstream-wagon2

blaine-airstream-wagon5

This one is from the CJ-2A page via Photobucket:

WILLYS-AIRSTREAM-cj2a-cj2apage

Continue reading

 
To Top

1942 200-Mile Jeep Trip to Dakar

• CATEGORIES: Features, Old News Articles This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

Joseph Morton’s description of his jeep trip from Bathhurst, Gambia, to Dakar, French West Africa, was published in the Evening Star, December 26, 1942. Fun fact: I got to know a Gambian ambassador to the US and was invited to Gambia to help work on a school’s computer system back in 2002, but other priorities kept me from going.

Bathhurst is now known as Banjul, Gambia’s capital city. French West Africa is now Senegal. This map *might* be close to the route taken:

map-dakar-banjul

Now for the article:

1942-12-26-evening-star-road-dakar-jeep-trip-article

 
To Top

Jeep Truck Cargo-Personnel Carrier Brochures on eBay

• CATEGORIES: Advertising & Brochures, Features, Fire/Police/Industry Vehicles • TAGS: This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE II: It appears there were two models of the Cargo-Personnel Carrier. One brochure shows that the Willys-Overland Export Company was the only entity offering this no-door Cargo-Personnel Carrier internationally (no mention of “Willys Motors” on the end of the last page of the brochure, but the bottom brochure’s last page shows both names).  Here are the brochures’ cover pages side by side:

2-cargo-personnel-carrier-brochures

Both are currently listed on eBay. Here’s the first:

View all the information on eBay

year-willys-cargo-personnel-carrier-brochure1 year-willys-cargo-personnel-carrier-brochure2 year-willys-cargo-personnel-carrier-brochure3

 

UPDATE:  This is a complete Willys Cargo-Personnel Carrier brochure. 

View all the information on eBay

 
To Top

Free M-151 Hardtop Port St. John, FL **SOLD**

• CATEGORIES: Features, M-151 • TAGS: This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: **SOLD** Was FREE.

I’m no expert on these, but I think the correct hardtop should provide gas inlet access on the driver’s side? See this pic for an example: http://www.warwheels.net/M151muttHARDTOPLEONG.html . But, hey, it’s free!

“This ad is for a hardtop for an M151 army jeep. It is on the jeep and it will need to be removed. Call and arrange a time to take this away.”

free-m151-hardtop-orlando-fl

free-m151-hardtop-orlando-fl2

 
To Top

Video of Ford GPs Leaving the Factory in March of 1941

• CATEGORIES: Bantam-FordGP-WillysMA-EarlyJPs, Features, videos This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: The bottom clip seems to have been a small part of this nearly eight-minute clip of the Ford GPs being rolled off the line for the QMC. Some of this video we’ve seen and some we haven’t. This was the first batch of 400 Ford GPs, delivered March 19, 1941 (which was part of the first contract of 1500 Ford GPs).

==================================================

Originally posted September 7, 2018: 

The video only lasts 23 seconds, but it’s the only one I’ve seen of Ford GPs leaving the factory:

 
To Top

1939 Boy’s Life Article Using the Term “Jeep”

• CATEGORIES: Features, Magazine • TAGS: This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

A May 1939 article shown below from Boy’s Life adds to the evidence that the use of the term Jeep existed prior to the introduction of the Bantam BRC in September of 1940.

By November 1940, the term “jeep” was being applied to the Bantam jeep (and/or the Willys Quad, delivered in mid-November), according to court records, months before the delivery of the Ford “GP” model in March of 1941 ((the Ford Pygmy was delivered to Holabird near the end of November of 1940).

To me this opens up a question. Was the P=80″ wheel base a chance coincidence? Or was Ford cognizant that the new 4×4 vehicles were being called jeeps, so they purposefully took advantage of that to use the “P” to spell the onomatopoeia-initialism “gp” or “geepee” or “geep” as part of the delivery contract? I suppose Ford had a designation that O=70″ wheel base and Q=90″? If so, I’ve not personally seen those designations documented.

Now, modern articles call the Pygmy the “Pygmy GP-1” (or similar), giving it credit for being the first Ford GP. But, I have yet to see any documentation that Ford or anyone else was calling the Pygmy a “GP”.

In fact, two articles from 1940 indicate the new Ford recon car is called only a Pygmy and that more pygmies will be delivered in the future. See the middle and right column articles on this page (http://www.memorialmuseum.org/displaysmilitary-jeeps/item/ford-pygmy) (note that the 1969 article on the left hand side of the page does designate the vehicle GP-1, but again, that’s a much later article).

My guess is that the GP designation was more strategic than the innocent explanation of G=”Government” and P=80″ suggests. I’d welcome evidence showing the Pygmy was labeled a FORD GP from any kind of article or document from the late 1940s. (maybe this issue has been hashed out previously and I’m late to the party???)

In the meantime, here’s the Boy’s Life article (you can read it online).

1939-05-boys-life-jeep-special

 
To Top

GI Joe Commercial

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

This vintage GI Joe commercial includes a real jeep and jeep driver who attests to GI Joe’s accuracy.

 
To Top

California Highway And Public Works Jeeps

• CATEGORIES: Features, Old Images This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

The May/June 1960 issue of the California Highway and Public Works department periodical included an article of a survey of the Sierra Highway that included a CJ-5 and a wagon.

http://libraryarchives.metro.net/DPGTL/Californiahighways/chpw_1960_mayjun.pdf

1960-may-june-california-highway-survey-jeep-wagon1

Continue reading

 
To Top

Organized Jeep Garage

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

Carl shared this photo of a jeep garage that he said was making the rounds on Linked-In. I have too many tools and not enough organization (or wall space) to do this. And, I can’t let Ann see this or she’ll start organizing my tools on walls!!

jeep-garage