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July 1951 Profit With Willys Brochure

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

I 2012 I purchased this July 1951 brochure, an 11-page “Your Opportunity to Profit with Willys” (from number FB 1 4CM-751 GG). At that point, I hadn’t bought many brochures before winning it on eBay. Unlike 99% of Willys-Overland brochures, this one was unique, because it targeted potential Willys Dealership owners.

The reason I bought it, and the reason I never published it (only now remembering that I hadn’t), was that it was the foundational piece for my idea for a jeep museum. It was the backbone, the narrative that I wanted to course through the entire experience. It was the type of business case study (example study), that I had read many times while getting my MBA, but rather it being on paper, it was an experience.

The overriding question centered on the brochure. If it was 1951 and you had the means and opportunity to invest in a Willys-Overland franchise, should you?

A ROUGH MUSEUM OUTLINE:

Folks would begin the museum in a room with a 1950s feel. A presentation would begin with the look and feel of a 1950s commercial, except this would be trying to sell folks on the WO franchise. The video would end encouraging folks to take.a walk through history to better get to know Willys-Overland’s roots, starting with a Pre-WWII display, with 1920s and 1930s music, showing and explaining the history. It would be intimate, quiet, peaceful.

The next room would be the drums of war, the approach of WWII, the early development of Recon car options, ending with the Bantam/Ford/Willys options, with Willys winning the bid, just in time for the US to enter WWII.

Folks. would enter to the sounds of war. Maps would show jeeps being lease-lent all over the world, Britain, Africa, Indonesia, Australia, etc. The room underscores the the wide uses for the jeep (and GPA and other oddities).

As the war was being waged, visitors would encounter a more pastoral room, a relief from the war, showing WO experiments with jeeps and farming. It would also demonstrate Willys attempts to advertise the jeep, linking the willys and jeep brand, whenever they could, until the FTC case and the Ford lawsuit caused WO to shift their branding ideas.

The next room would be the introduction of the CJ-2A, the ads, the multiple implements, the implement companies. The next room would show the competitive landscape, with Willys adding other vehicles, and how the big three were responding (and how consumers were responding). Also highlighted would be WO’s continuing shift in brand marketing, the shift away from Jeep as the overriding brand to Willys as the over riding brand.

Subsequently, visitors would be taken into a unique room, showcasing the newly introduced Hurricane engine, but this would be a bigger-than-life walkthrough engine in plexiglass, so folks could look below at a crankshaft turning, a camshaft above, pistons to one side, etc. It would be a truly unique experience.

At this point in the museum, visitors would face reach the time period of the brochure. It’s the point in all business cases: What’s the decision, to invest or not to invest.

At this point visitors transition to the troubles at W-O and the decision to sell out to Henry Kaiser. The finally room showcase the Kaiser years, as the company took control of Willys assets and focused back on the unique 4WD capabilities of the jeep lineup, while also embracing “JEEP” as the brand.

The museum ends at 1963, when Kaiser shifts to more modern vehicles, such as the Wagoneer and Gladiator, and how those vehicles pushed sales to new heights, as well as a push away from jeeps as pure utility vehicles and more as a fun, family, or sporty vehicle.

Anyway, that was the plan, but time and resources never quite materialized.

Ann and I visited a lot of museums on the way to developing ideas in hopes of creating an experience that would bring in folks from outside of the jeep world, because based on my early research into auto museums, if it doesn’t cater to non-jeep folks, it likely won’t generate the income necessary to sustain itself.

1951-07-willys-dealer-brochure-fb-1-4cm-751-gg3-lores
1951-07-willys-dealer-brochure-fb-1-4cm-751-gg4-lores 1951-07-willys-dealer-brochure-fb-1-4cm-751-gg5-lores 1951-07-willys-dealer-brochure-fb-1-4cm-751-gg6-lores Continue reading

 
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eWillys Not Going Offline; Has Changed Owners; Stay Tuned!

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

UPDATE II: If you want to email me directly, feel free to use d@deilers.com (not d@ewillys.com, which hasn’t worked for a few years).

UPDATES: I greatly appreciate all the kind words. I see there are some questions, so let me answer them…

  1. I am not shutting the site down due to financial issues. We are in fine shape. The site has never made much money, but it has made enough to pay for the basics costs, plus the purchase of brochures, a few toys, etc.
  2. Someone has reached out about taking over the site. If I can make that happen, then maybe the site goes forward in some form. If I can’t find someone, I plan on condensing the most important info into static HTML pages (similar to the CJ-3B page) that can be more easily be saved and republished for posterity.
  3. I don’t have any specific plans for the future, except reducing my time demands, so I can focus on finishing the Tour Jeep, traveling a little more without having to do updates on the road, and tackling more property tasks. 
  4. As I have described to a couple folks, if you remember the scene when Forest Gump stops running in the middle of Monument Valley, realizing he’s done, that’s the way I feel. I feel like I’m just done. 

I hope that additional info helps!!

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I have decided to shut down eWillys. At this time, I don’t plan to do any more updates.

Thanks to everyone who were able to use it, read it, all those who commented, and the many domestic and international friends Ann and I have made over the past 17 years.

The site will remain up until the end of the 2024 year. I hope to figure out a way to republish some of the unique information the site has on it in a different, less expensive manor.

Best wishes all. It’s been a good run.

ewillys_logo_20x30_poster

 
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Nuts and Bolts and Stuff

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

After successive waves of cleaning, I’ve organized my nuts, bolts, washers, and oddities into similar sizes, thread counts, types, sizes, kinds, etc. This Harbor Freight organizer is hardly perfect, but it should be much easier to locate things (I hope). I fully expect the rear tab on plastic containers that holds them to a thin vertical plate to eventually break. But, until then, this keep me a little more organized.

2024-10-31-nuts-bolts1 2024-10-31-nuts-bolts2

 
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A Jeep Wagoneer + a Ferrari = Jerrari • Top Speed: 140mph

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

UPDATE: This is a very old post (which likely needs updating), but Mauri added a nice addition to it, a video of Jay Leno driving this rig.

 

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Originally posted April 28, 2011: The National Automobile Museum (the Harrah Collection) in Reno, Nevada, opened in 1989.  Most of the collection is based on Bill Harrah’s (gaming pioneer and avid collector) automobile collection.  Following Bill’s death in 1978, the Holiday Corporation bought Harrah’s Hotels/Casinos and more, including the collection.  Then Holiday announced they were going to sell the cars.  This ticked off Nevadans, so the governor stepped in and helped negotiate a donation of the cars by Holiday to a special non profit organization established for the purposes of a museum.

The museum was named among the top ten museums by Car Collector magazine, has been ranked as one of the best 16 car museums in the world by Autoweek, and has been selected the best Museum in Northern Nevada in Nevada Magazines’ Annual Readers Poll.

The collection appears to have only two jeeps.  One is a slightly modded CJ-5; the other is a Wagoneer that was outfitted with a Ferrari engine and called a Jerrari.

Here is the Jerrari as photographed by RenoDesertFox from Flickr.  Note the color of the first image is the correct color and the remaining images have had the colors tweaked by the photographer, but still show a good deal of detail.

1. Front view of the Jerrari (link to original)

2. Color has been tweaked. (link to original)

3. The Ferarri engine. (link to original)

4. Click on the image to more easily read the history. (link to original)

1. Here is the one image I have, again via RenoDesertFox, of the 1972 CJ-5 on display. (link to original)