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  1. The American Bantam Car Company was an American automobile manufacturing company incorporated in the state of Pennsylvania. American Bantam is credited with inventing the original World War II 1 ⁄ 4 ‑ton jeep in 1940.

  2. American Bantam Company, conocida también como American Bantam o simplemente Bantam, fue un fabricante estadounidense especializado en la industria automotriz. Fue instituida como tal en el año 1937 por el empresario Roy Evans, quien fundó la compañía sobre la base de la extinta American Austin Car Company, filial estadounidense de la ...

  3. American Bantam Car Co. was founded in 1935 by Roy Evans, a former salesman for Austin, who purchased the American Austin assets out of bankruptcy. American Bantam® car’s were built on the same 75 inch wheelbase chassis but with a new 19 hp (14 kW) engine and a new body with more modern styling designed by Alexis de Sakhnoffsky.

  4. American Bantam Company, conocida también como American Bantam o simplemente Bantam, fue un fabricante estadounidense especializado en la industria automotriz. Fue instituida como tal en el año 1937 por el empresario Roy Evans, quien fundó la compañía sobre la base de la extinta American Austin Car Company, filial estadounidense de la ...

  5. How American Bantam Cars work. By: the Auto Editors of Consumer Guide. The 1938 American Bantam Panel Delivery car was one of only about 2,000 cars produced by American Bantam for that model year. Small cars such as American Bantam never made it big in prewar America, but that didn't stop people from pushing them.

  6. 20 de dic. de 2019 · Several American car manufacturers raced to design a vehicle that would fulfill the war department’s request. A small group of engineers at the American Bantam Car Company, located in Butler, Pennsylvania, created a prototype that was produced in just over a month and a half.

  7. This page updated 12-30-2022. The American Bantam Car Company was originally formed in 1929 as American Austin Car Company. In 1936 it was reorganized as the American Bantam Car Company after filing for bankruptcy. The company introduced a line of small British-designed Austins in 1930.