Sunday, June 21, 2020

Clement Studebaker and his brother Henry co-founded the H & C Studebaker Company, precursor of the Studebaker Corporation, which built Pennsylvania-German Conestoga wagons and carriages during his lifetime


Apparently you needed a hell of a good beard to get on the board


Clement was born 12 March, 1831, in Pinetown, Pennsylvania. His early education was sporadic at best. By the age of 14, he was working in his father's blacksmith shop, where he shoed horses and occasionally built Conestoga-type wagons. When nearly 20, he moved in the autumn of 1850 to South Bend, Indiana. Saving money from working as a teacher and a blacksmith, he set up his own blacksmith business with his older brother Henry in 1852.

The company continued to prosper, largely due to contracts to supply wagons to the Army both in 1857 and during the Civil War. Being raised in the Dunker faith, Henry found it difficult to reconcile his pacifistic beliefs with providing supplies to soldiers. He eventually sold his share of the company to brother John Mohler.

Clement continued to build the business into a company that would boast it was the largest horse-drawn vehicle manufacturer in the world. In addition to wagons, buggies and carriages were produced by the company and considered to be among the finest built in the country. By 1870, there were four Studebaker brothers heading various departments of the company, with Clement as its president. The company produced no fewer than thirty types of horse-drawn vehicles and had annual sales of more than $3 million by the 1890s.

https://www.sil.si.edu/ondisplay/studebaker/biographies.htm
https://www.wmky.org/post/reader-s-notebook-clement-studebaker

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