[bsa_pro_ad_space id=14]

Ford jeep
This 1942 Ford military ‘Jeep’ is being offered with an accompanying Bantam military trailer

FAC’s Jeep division may own the trademark, but the original general-purpose vehicle produced for the U.S. Army for World War II was a group effort by the American automobile manufacturers and their suppliers. 

Recognizing the need for what it considered a reconnaissance vehicle with 4-wheel-drive, the U.S. Army issued a request for prototypes for consideration. Bantam and Willys-Overland responded, but only Bantam, a Pennsylvania-based company as small as its name might indicate, was able to meet the deadline.

The Army tested Bantam’s vehicle, though soon realized that both Bantam and its engine were too small. So the Army turned to Willys and Ford to advance the project and to take it into production, rolling out more than 600,000 such general-purpose vehicles for the war effort, each producing what came to be known as the Jeep, although that brand wouldn’t be placed on vehicles until Willys began post-war production for civilian use.

1942 Ford GPW Army Jeep



[bsa_pro_ad_space id=15]