Monthly Archives: April 2019

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1972 AM General FJ-BC Van Tucson, AZ **SOLD**

• CATEGORIES: Other 4x4s This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: **SOLD** Was $1500.

Nothing about this is jeep-like, but there are folks looking for these.

“1972 AM General FJ-BC 8C 1/2 ton route delivery truck-postal van with title
…mid-restoration
…moving and must sell”

1972-am-general-van-tucson-az

 
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1942 MB Fort Wayne, IN **SOLD**

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

UPDATE: **SOLD** Was $3000.

It’s a project.

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“1942 Willys MB with TITLE!!
Everything Sandblasted & mostly epoxy primed, has motor/trans & many other parts, some salvageable, some not. The serial numbers on the block and head match they have been verified of the same era. The trans appears to be from a GPW. Once the frame was blasted, it was amazing just how nice it turned out. The frame other than the front and rear bumpers, is next to 100%. Everything is very clean.

The body, is definitely 77 years old. It’s actually quite amazing how little rust it does have.. basically only where the wood runners go under the drivers & pass floor pan & some in the gas tank area. But, overall the panels are not very straight & would require major body work to be presentable. The real value with this jeep is matching block serial #’s, a very clean frame & title. They reproduce everything for these jeeps, all the steel is easily attainable. But, this one has a couple bullet holes. :)”

 

 
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1949 CJ-3A Somerset, KY **SOLD**

• CATEGORIES: CJ-3A This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: **SOLD** was $12,500.

Seems to have one one-spoked rim. I think the others are painted black.

“1949 Willy’s Jeep has top and is ready for the summer. 12,500 obo.”

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1950 CJ-3A Coachella Valley, CA **SOLD**

• CATEGORIES: CJ-3A This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: **SOLD** Was $3200.

(03/07/2019) Has some updates.

“Priced dropped to $3200 because 4wd isn’t working gear broke in the front axle transfer case is all good easy fix just don’t have time right now … 1950 Willys jeep with a Buick v6 swap runs great, nice seats, cage, small lift, perfect for the trails. Currently non oped but can be registered. Open to trades really looking for sas toyota will consider jeep cherokee (no grands) 4runner, harley, diesel truck don’t be scared to make me an offer”

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1947 CJ-2A Wichita, KS $15,400

• CATEGORIES: CJ-2A • TAGS: , This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: Still Available.

(07/29/2018) This MB close appears pretty solid. Has early Free-Lock hubs.

https://wichita.craigslist.org/cto/d/wichita-willys-cj2a-finished-to/6862851789.html

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“paint color: green
size: compact
title status: clean
transmission: manual
type: convertible
Up for sale is a 1947 Willys CJ2A serial #116959 that is finished as an MB style WWII Army military Jeep. The accessories that are shown in the photos are also included, which include fire extinguisher, shovel, helmet, 1945 trench shovel, replica grenade crate, three military bags, pistol belt and canteen, bridge plate (removable), jerry gas can, door safety straps, and soft canvas top.

This jeep is ready to be driven and can be enjoyed today. It is great in Parades, errands, and road trips. I use it currently for trips to the hardware store and Walmart. You get lots of looks and high fives. This is a Fun jeep! This is NOT a frame-off restoration. I take good sound jeeps, fix and upgrade where it needs it, and finish them to military.
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1946 CJ-2A East Bethel, MN **SOLD**

• CATEGORIES: CJ-2A This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: **SOLD** Was $2000.

Seems to have potential.

“1946 Willys CJ2A in need of restoration. It is solid. The jeep is from South Dakota and has seen very little if no salt. I was going to restore it, but its been in the corner of my garage for years and time to move it. I have some misc new parts that will go with it. I also pulled the engine a year ago and is currently on an engine stand that will go with it. Clean title in hand.”

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Just a Few Updates Today

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

I finished the final draft of the Willys-Overland WWII advertising post I’d mentioned earlier this week. That sucked up lots of time yesterday, so only a few posts today. I hope you enjoy it!

 
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How Willys-Overland Changed Its Identity: 1941-1946

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

NOTE: Though this is PART II of Maury and my research into the “J” logo, it mostly predates that article. This should be considered a working draft, as I’m sure we’ll learn new things and make editorial improvements to it. If you spot something in error, email me or comment below. 

willys-truck-car-logo-restoredWhen Maury Hurt and I were researching the short-lived “J” logo, we found ourselves looking back into Willys-Overland advertising during WWII. That, in turn, led to the development of the large Saturday Evening Post and Collier’s Magazine images showing all the ads Willys-Overland took out during the war so we could more easily compare how Willys-Overland marketing evolved. That work proved quite useful, showing us visually how the pre-war Willys-Overland company became, for all practical purposes, the post-war Willys ‘Jeep’ company.

FRED COLDWELL’S “SELLING THE ALL-AMERICAN WONDER”:

fred-caldwell-selling-the-american-wonderAnyone who has read Fred Coldwell’s excellent book  “Selling The All-American Wonder” knows that studying the WWII ads that Willys-Overland published during the war isn’t ground breaking. However, Fred focused his book on the legal challenges Willys-Overland faced when trying to secure the rights to trademark the name JEEP so the company could sell jeeps to the post-war public.

As Fred explained in his book, Willys-Overland faced a huge hurdle to transform the generic word jeep into a Trademark. Prior to the introduction of the Bantam BRC in September of 1940, the term JEEP had been applied to a magical cartoon character in Popeye, to Army grunts, to a type of train, to another category of military vehicle(Dodge Command Car), the MM Tractor, and to a category of planes, as this 1939 Boy’s Life Magazine highlighted (the term would continue to be used for that category of planes in magazine articles and ads throughout WWII.)

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Partial look at the 1939 article from Boy’s Life Magazine about the Jeep plane.

By mid-November of 1940, which was after the Bantam BRC and Willys Quad were introduced, both vehicles were already being referred to as jeeps. However, this was prior to the introduction of the Ford Pygmy in late November (which wasn’t being called a FORD GP at that point, nor even by early 1941).

Because of these complexities, Willys-Overland pushed to advertise in major publications during WWII to reinforce to the public the idea that the Jeep was a Willys product. To that end, Fred’s book highlights the type of WWII advertisements used to achieve that trademark goal (and Fred’s full-size reproductions of the ads are excellent and a much cheaper way of finding the ads then by purchasing magazines). Willys-Overland eventually secured the trademark JEEP in 1950.

HOW OUR APPROACH DIFFERED FROM FRED’S WORK:

Our review of the material differed in that we were trying to document how Willys-Overland arrived at the final the logo and text choices the company made.

Let’s not forget the state of the company prior to the war. In 1937, Willys-Overland produced 63,000 vehicles, but a recession wiped out sales the following year and Willys sales declined to a terrible 17,000 cars and trucks. Things were so bad that by 1940 earnings were a negative -$800,000 (read more here). In other words, Willys-Overland, as a car and truck company, wasn’t succeeding. And, like Bantam, Willys-Overland hoped a military contract would rescue the company.

Though Bantam lost out, Willys-Overland’s securing of the military contract for ‘scout cars’ in 1941 led to a significant financial turn-around. That year earnings bounced back, totaling $800,000 in the black. Things were looking up for the company.

With the new military contract and cash, coupled with an exciting new vehicle (the jeep), Willys started advertising more aggressively. Fred Coldwell notes that the earliest major advertisement, published in the December 13, 1941, issue of the Saturday Evening Post was titled The Jeep in Civvies. This ad promoted both the new army jeep and its connection to the 1942 Americar, Willys-Overland’s new creation led by former Chrysler Executive Joe Frazer.

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Saturday Evening Post December 13, 1941, page 117.

Subsequent magazine ads from Willys-Overland in early 1942 also harnessed the Jeep in Civvies slogan, but added to the advertisements were illustrations of a Willys Americar and a Willys slat grille jeep; in-between the two illustrations was the WILLYS logo in bold and an image of the Go-Devil engine. Underneath the large WILLYS logo was the sub-line: MOTOR CARS [Engine Image] TRUCKS AND JEEPS.

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The ad, HELL BENT FOR VICTORY,  was published in the June 27, 1942, issue of the Saturday Evening Post. The WILLYS brand is prominent. JEEP is mentioned, but it’s after MOTOR CARS, an engine, TRUCKS.

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DJ-3A, Truck and One Other Taylor, TX

• CATEGORIES: DJ-3A, Willys Trucks This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: **SOLD**

These jeeps are posted at Jeeptruck.com. Only two pics were posted. The flat fender is a 1958 DJ-3A.

“1952 Truck Marine V8, adapter plate to original 4×4 $2500
1958 Jeep solid no driveline 2×4 $1200 TX title
1955 Jeep, 4×4 no driveline solid, 1946 Chassis $1200”

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1946 JeepRod Mansfield, TX **SOLD**

• CATEGORIES: CJ-2A, Jeep Rods This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: **SOLD** Was on eBay.

This is up for sale again on eBay. Regarding the “1953 Willys MB Jeep F-head” statement, the seller included that to attract hits rather than for accuracy (we had this discussion back in 2014).

For all you zombie haters, here’s a zombie hunting jeep.

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“Up for auction, fresh out of the hills of Crossville, Tennessee, the Zombie Hunter! I have been in the paint and body work field for over 28 years, I have restored several Willys Jeeps (CJ2A, MB’s, etc) but I decided this time around to do a custom Willys Rat Rod!

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