Also known as Marmon-Herrington Company, Inc.
The Marmon-Herrington Company, Inc., is an American manufacturer of axles and transfer cases for trucks and other vehicles. Earlier, the company built military vehicles and some tanks during World War II, and until the late 1950s or early 1960s was a manufacturer of trucks and trolley buses. Marmon-Herrington had a partnership with Ford Motor Company, producing trucks and other commercial vehicles, such as buses. The company may be best known for its all-wheel-drive conversions to other truck maker's units, especially to Ford truck models. Founded in 1931, Marmon-Herrington was based in Indian
via Wikidata · CC0
The Marmon-Herrington Company, Inc., is an American manufacturer of axles and transfer cases for trucks and other vehicles. Earlier, the company built military vehicles and some tanks during World War II, and until the late 1950s or early 1960s was a manufacturer of trucks and trolley buses. Marmon-Herrington had a partnership with Ford Motor Company, producing trucks and other commercial vehicles, such as buses. The company may be best known for its all-wheel-drive conversions to other truck maker's units, especially to Ford truck models. Founded in 1931, Marmon-Herrington was based in Indianapolis, Indiana, with a plant in Windsor, Ontario, and remained in Indianapolis until 1963. It is now based in Louisville, Kentucky.
==History== thumb|Marmon–Herrington all-wheel-drive converted Ford 1/2-ton truck. Delivered in small numbers to the U.S. and Belgian Armies, and some other countries, circa 1936 thumb|Two Marmon–Herrington CTLS (combat tank light series) U.S. tanks maneuvering in a mountain pass in [[Alaska in 1942]]
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).