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  1. Hahn Motors Inc. was an American fire apparatus manufacturer located in Hamburg, Pennsylvania. William G. Hahn (1878-1937), a German immigrant, formed the Hahn Wagon & Carriage Works in 1898, and moved to Hamburg in 1901. William's brother Adam joined the company in the early 1900s and it moved into the motorized truck business. Hahn built its first fire truck in 1915. A side note, Hahn is ...

  2. In 1920 the name was changed again to Hahn Motor Trucks. By the 1920s, Hahn was building some fire apparatus regularly along with commercial trucks. Hahn Motor Trucks was an early victim of the great Depression and went out of business in 1932. However, Bill Hahn promptly formed a new company, Hahn Motors, Inc., which resumed building ...

  3. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hahn vehicles. Hahn Fire Apparatus, also known as Hahn Motors, was a fire engines and apparatus and truck builder formerly located in Hamburg, within Berks County, Pennsylvania. [1] It was in operation from 1916 until its closure in 1989.

  4. Aug 1, 2023 · They did, though, and the business became Hahn Motor Truck Co. in 1920. Hahn, by this time, had some competitio­n in nearby Allentown, where another wagon-builder had seen the future and moved on to making trucks. Granted that Mack had actually gotten its start in Brooklyn, N.Y., when two of. the Mack brothers bought out a carriage shop in ...

  5. Paterson's Hahn Apparatus. Hahn Fire Apparatus, also known as Hahn Motors, was a custom and commercial fire apparatus and truck builder formerly located in Hamburg, PA. It was in operation from 1916 until its closure in 1989. In the 1970s Paterson purchased 6 Hahn 1250 GPM pumpers: In 1971 four were bought and assigned to Engine Company 1, 3, 5 ...

    • When did Hahn motor trucks go out of business?1
    • When did Hahn motor trucks go out of business?2
    • When did Hahn motor trucks go out of business?3
    • When did Hahn motor trucks go out of business?4
    • When did Hahn motor trucks go out of business?5
  6. After building one truck and one automobile in his wagon works in 1907, W.G. Hahn decided to build trucks as well as wagons. Truck production was minimal prior to 1913. Hahn built conventional chain drive trucks powered by the Continental 4-cylinder engine. The 1 ½ -ton chassis cost $2,400 in 1914.

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  8. Oct 30, 2022 · Trucks were much more popular. By 1913 he had changed the company’s name to Hahn Motor Truck & Wagon Company; dropping wagons from the lineup prompted another name change in 1920 to simply Hahn Motor Truck Company. By this time Hahn was making commercial trucks, busses, and fire engines. The company used its own or a Ford chassis and a ...

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