-
Edwin A.
Rutenber (August 10, 1876–September 1962) was an
inventor and businessman. He
achieved distinction in the
design and
manufacture of the first...
- The
Rutenber Motor Company was
established as the
Rutenber Manufacturing Company in Chicago, Illinois,
United States, to
manufacture a four-cylinder engine...
- Borg & Beck for clutch,
Warner transmission,
Stromberg carburetor and
Rutenber engines. The
company was
never large; its peak
production was 1400 vehicles...
- five-p****enger
touring car with a four-cylinder engine. The
engines came from the
Rutenber Motor Company. In 1908, the
company added a
runabout and a limousine. About...
- Australia, by Australians, for Australia'. Most
models were ****ed with
Rutenber Straight-6
engines and
Grant Lees or
Muncie gearboxes; some, however, had...
-
company Rutenber that had been
based previously in
Chicago and that
renamed itself the
Western Motor Company when it
moved to Logansport.
Edwin Rutenber started...
- at the New York
Automobile Show in
January 1906. It was a four-cylinder
Rutenber engined car. In 1906
former Peerless engineer Louis P.
Mooers joined Moon...
- Swift, US. Steam:
American Waltham; electric: Riker; internal-combustion:
Rutenber, St. Louis; buggy:
Stearns Belgium. Voiturette:
Vivinus France. Electric:...
- 1941 at the
beginning of
World War II, to
Ralph and
Cleminette Rutenber. The
Rutenbers (1941–1972)
extended both the re****tion of the
school and the...
- of 8 to 10hp. In 1908 the
marque name was
changed to
Jewel and a 40hp
Rutenber 4-cylinder car was added. In 1909 the
company name was
changed to Jewel...