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Kaiser Car Ad: Deluxe Club Coupe Featuring 1951 Models

$ 10.56

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Date of Creation: 1950's
  • Color: Color
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Type of Advertising: Newspaper
  • Original/Reproduction: Origianal
  • Condition: Some light tanning/wear, a few have small archival repairs otherwise: Excellent! Bright Colors!Please check scans. This was cut from the original Newspaper!
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Date of Origin: 1951
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Model: Club Coupe

    Description

    This is a
    Kaiser- Frazer Automobile Ad
    .
    Hard to Find Early Pages!
    Great Artwork!
    This
    was cut from the original newspaper Sunday Magazines from
    1920's -1950's.
    Size
    : 11 x 15 inches (Tabloid Full Page or Half Full Page).
    Paper
    : Some light tanning/wear, otherwise: Excellent! Bright Colors!
    Pulled from loose sections!
    (Please Check Scans)
    Free Postage USA
    !
    .00
    Total
    International
    postage on any size order
    Flat Rate
    .
    I combine postage on multiple pages
    . Check out my other auctions for more great vintage Comicstrips and Paper Dolls.
    Thanks for Looking!
    *Fantastic Pages for Display and Framing!
    Kaiser Motors
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Kaiser Motors
    Industry
    Automobiles
    Fate
    Merged with
    Willys-Overland Motors
    and re-named it
    Willys Motors
    ; renamed it again as
    Kaiser Jeep
    Corporation
    Predecessor
    Kaiser-Frazer
    Corporation
    Successor
    Kaiser Jeep
    Founded
    1945
    Founder
    Henry J. Kaiser
    Defunct
    1953
    Headquarters
    Willow Run
    ,
    United States
    Key people
    Henry J. Kaiser, Edgar Kaiser
    Production output
    1945–1953
    Owner
    Henry J. Kaiser
    1953 Kaiser Manhattan
    1952 Allstate
    1953 Kaiser Custom 6
    1954 Kaiser Darrin
    Kaiser Motors
    (formerly
    Kaiser-Frazer
    ) Corporation made
    automobiles
    at
    Willow Run
    ,
    Michigan
    ,
    United States
    , from 1945 to 1953. In 1953, Kaiser merged with
    Willys-Overland
    to form Willys Motors Incorporated, moving its production operations to the Willys plant at
    Toledo, Ohio
    . The company changed its name to
    Kaiser Jeep
    Corporation in 1963.
    Contents
    [
    hide
    ]
    1
    History
    2
    Vehicles
    3
    Notes
    4
    References
    5
    External links
    History
    [
    edit
    ]
    The Kaiser-Frazer Corporation came into being during early August, 1945, as a joint venture between the Henry J. Kaiser Company and
    Graham-Paige
    Motors Corporation. Henry J. Kaiser, a California-based industrialist and Joseph W. Frazer, CEO of Graham-Paige, both wanted to get into the automobile business and pooled their resources and talents to do so.
    [1]
    Less than a year after Kaiser-Frazer's formation, the first Kaiser and Frazer branded automobiles were coming off a production line at the Willow Run, Michigan, headquarters for both Kaiser-Frazer and
    Graham-Paige
    . By the end of 1946, over 11,000 cars (total Kaiser and Frazer) went out to dealers and distributors; many of them sold to retail owners.
    [2]
    During the summer of 1948, the 300,000th car came off the production line.
    [3]
    In 1950, Kaiser-Frazer began production of a compact car, the Henry J
    [4]
    and ended production of the Frazer automobile;
    [5]
    both makes were 1951 model year automobiles. In 1952 and 1953 Kaiser-Frazer provided Sears Roebuck & Co. with Allstate-branded automobiles that Sears sold through selected Sears Auto Centers; these cars, extensively based on the Henry J Kaiser-Frazer dealers were selling did appear in the Sears "wish books", but the car could not be purchased by mail order.
    [6]
    At the 1953 New York Auto Show, Kaiser-Frazer announced it would produce a fiberglass bodied sports car, called the
    Kaiser-Darrin-Frazer 161
    (the car had a 161 cubic inch six-cylinder engine and was designed by stylist Howard Darrin, who also did the 1947–48 Kaiser & Frazer as well as the 1951 Kaiser automobiles).
    [7]
    This vehicle went into production during January, 1954, and was sold as the
    Kaiser-Darrin
    .
    [8]
    Production of the Allstate ended during 1953, the last Henry J automobiles were built in late 1953 as 1954 model year cars, the sports car was in production only during the 1954 model year and the last Kaisers were produced in America during the 1955 model year.
    [9]
    Close to 760,000 cars were produced, all makes and models between May 1946 and September 1955.
    [10]
    In 1948, Joseph Frazer resigned as president of Kaiser-Frazer but stayed in the position as a "lame duck" until April 1949 when Henry J. Kaiser's oldest son, Edgar, took Frazer's place as K-F's president
    [11]
    The Frazer marque was discontinued after the 1951 models.
    [12]
    Joseph Frazer remained as a sales consultant and vice-chairman of the Kaiser-Frazer board until 1953. At the 1953 annual stockholders' meeting, Kaiser-Frazer Corporation's name was changed by stockholder vote to Kaiser Motors Corporation.
    [13]
    Shortly before meeting, Kaiser-Frazer's Kaiser Manufacturing Corporation division worked out a deal to purchase certain assets (and assume certain liabilities) of the Willys-Overland Corporation, makers of Willys cars and
    Jeep
    vehicles.
    [14]
    The purchase was made by Kaiser-Frazer's wholly owned subsidiary company, Kaiser Manufacturing Corporation. After completing the acquisition, Kaiser Manufacturing Corporation changed its name to Willys Motors, Incorporated.
    [15]
    During late 1953 and 1954, Kaiser Motors operations at Willow Run Michigan were closed down or moved to the Willys facility in Toledo, Ohio.
    [16]
    While sales were initially strong because of a car-starved public, the company did not have the resources to survive long-term competition with GM, Ford, and Chrysler. The original Kaiser-Frazer design was distinctive and fresh but the company was unable to maintain the price point it needed for long-term success. Kaiser-Frazer was able to work out deals with General Motors not only to get the GM Hydra-Matic automatic transmissions but had a signed deal for detuned Rocket 88 engines from Oldsmobile with deliveries starting in the 1952 model year. The deal was contingent on Olds being able to expand its Lansing, MI engine production facility; that expansion was cancelled due to factory expansion restrictions put in place by the government due to military needs during the Korean War.
    [17]
    K-F had their own V-8 engine development program that ran through 1949 but, as the lead engineers on the team stated to the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) they found their work was leading down a "blind alley" and would not work as a production motor.
    [18]
    Frazer cars ended up suffering as a luxury and upper medium price make due to changing market conditions, as Hudson and Studebaker found out during the 1950s when similar situations befell them. The Henry J, while a well-meaning idea, but was hamstrung by various government requirements stemming from a re-capitalization loan the government made to the company in the fall of 1949.
    [19]
    Kaiser-Frazer labor agreements resulted in the company paying the highest wages of any American automaker and getting a productivity rate of only 60–65% in return.
    [20]
    Kaiser tried to get around its deficiencies with schemes like elaborate designer interiors with fancy dashboards and upholstery. A line of "Traveler" sedans with the trunk connected to the interior of the car were an improvised attempt at a station wagon.
    At the end of 1955, the management team of the Henry J. Kaiser Company used Kaiser Motors Corporation to create a new holding company encompassing the various Kaiser industrial activities. Kaiser Motors' name was changed to Kaiser Industries Corporation, and functioned as a holding company for various Kaiser business holdings including Willys Motors Incorporated.
    [21]
    U.S. production of Kaiser and Willys passenger cars ceased during the 1955 model year, but production of Willys Jeeps in Toledo, Ohio, continued. Kaiser continued automobile production in
    Argentina
    under the
    Industrias Kaiser Argentina
    (IKA) company established in Santa Isabel,
    Córdoba
    and
    Willys
    passenger cars moved to
    Brazil
    under the Willys-Overland do Brasil company, using the dies formerly employed in the U.S. well into the 1960s.
    The company changed its name to
    Kaiser Jeep
    in 1963. By 1969, Kaiser Industries decided to leave the auto business, which was sold to American Motors
    American Motors Corporation
    (AMC) in 1970. As part of the transaction, Kaiser acquired a 22% interest in AMC, which it later divested. Included in the sale was the
    General Products Division
    , which Kaiser had purchased from
    Studebaker
    in 1964 as it prepared to leave the auto business itself. AMC renamed the division
    AM General
    , which still operates today, and is best known as the manufacturer of the
    Humvee
    , and civilian
    Hummer H1
    .
    Vehicles
    [
    edit
    ]
    Kaiser
    , includes Deluxe, Carolina, Traveler,
    Dragon
    and Manhattan sedans.
    Frazer
    includes Standard, Deluxe, and Manhattan sedans, as well as the Vagabond hatchback.
    Henry J
    , a small economy car including the Corsair and Vagabond.
    Darrin
    , the first production fiberglass sports car in the USA, beating the Corvette to market by one month. Featured a unique "
    pocket door
    " design that made the doors slide into the fender of the car. Only 435 were made for the 1954 model year.
    Willys
    , including "Aero-Willys" and all sub-trim levels that include the Aero-Lark, Aero Ace, etc.
    Jeep
    , including
    Willys MB
    (military Jeep), pick-up trucks,
    CJ-5 Jeep
    (civilian Jeep), and the
    Wagoneer
    , and
    Jeepster
    marques of all steel wagons.
    Allstate
    , designed to sell through and by
    Sears-Roebuck
    department stores in the southern United States, a slightly restyled Henry J. The cars were equipped with Allstate products (tires, battery, etc.). The modest styling changes distinguishing the Allstate from the Henry J were executed by
    Alex Tremulis
    , the co-designer of the
    1948 Tucker Sedan
    .
    *
    Please note
    : collecting and selling comics has been my hobby for over 30 years. Due to the hours of my job
    I can usually only mail packages out on Saturdays
    . I send out
    Priority Mail which takes 2-3 days
    to arrive
    in
    the USA and
    Air Mail International which takes 5 -10 days
    depending on where you live in the world.
    I do not "sell" postage or packaging and charge less than the actual cost of mailing. I package items securely and wrap well.
    Most pages come in an Archival Sleeve with Acid Free Backing Board
    at no extra charge
    . If you are dissatisfied with an item. Let me know and I will do my best to make it right.
    [51]