Hebmüller
1950 Hebmüller cabriolet | |
Private company | |
Industry | Automotive |
Fate | Bankruptcy in 1952 |
Founded | 1889, Wuppertal, Germany |
Founder | Joseph Hebmüller |
Defunct | 1952 |
Number of locations | One |
Products | Volkswagen Type 14A, Opel Kapitan & Admiral, and many other manufacturers like Ford and Mercedes |
The coachbuilding company Hebmüller Sons (Karosseriewerke Joseph Hebmüller Söhne) was founded in 1889 by Joseph Hebmüller, it was established in the town of Wuppertal in Germany.[1]
At start it constructed horsedrawn carriages but after the death of the founder Joseph in 1919, his sons started building bodies for automobiles.[1] After World War II, the company received an order from the British Army to build 15 Humber based cabriolets.[2]
The company's best known model is perhaps the two seater convertible based on Volkswagen Type 1 platform - known as Volkswagen Type 14A. It was widely reported that Volkswagen ordered 2,000 vehicles, and the production started in June 1949.[3] Hebmüller completed only 696 of these two seater cabriolets, however, before the Hebmüller business was wound up: the last batch of Hebmüller "Beetle" conversions was produced by Karmann of Osnabrück,[4] (who by this time were already producing a four-seater Type 1 cabriolet to their own design).
Hebmüller also built a number of four-door cabriolets on the Type 1 platform (Type 18A), with doors that were canvas.[5]
By the end of the 1940s, Hebmüller's economic situation was deteriorating. The company also suffered from a massive fire at its Wülfrath factory on 23 July 1949, which could not be extinguished because of water shortage.[4] Almost the entire factory was destroyed.[3] The company never recovered from the destruction, although the factory itself was rapidly rebuilt, and in 1949 alone more than 350 more cars were produced.[3] By 1952 the company had run out of cash and credit: Hebmüller met its end in bankruptcy in May 1952.[3]
Ford Motor Company subsequently purchased the former Hebmüller factory.[1]
In Popular Culture
- The cover of Volume 13 of the Dragon Ball Z manga (Volume 29 of the original Japanese[6]) features Gohan and Piccolo driving a Volkswagen Type 14A.[7]
References
- 1 2 3 "The VW Hebmüller story". Jan-Anders Lindqvist. web.telia.com. Retrieved 16 December 2009.
- ↑ "Hebmuller". geocities.com. Archived from the original on 2009-10-26. Retrieved 2008-02-28.
- 1 2 3 4 "Hebmüller: Vom Beginn an war das Cabriolet Teil der Volkswagengeschichte.Selbst in den frühesten Testserien gab es schon Cabriolets. Hier einige Beispiele.". Carsten's Classic Volkswagen pages, Plettenberg. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
- 1 2 Reinhard Lintelmann (2010). VW Käfer und New Beetle. Komet Verlag GmbH, Cologne. p. 68. ISBN 978-3-89836-831-5.
- ↑ Hot VWs, 7/84, p.38.
- ↑ http://dragonballbook.fr/guidemanga/dbtankoubonedition/vol29.html
- ↑ http://www.vizmanga.com/reader/371-dragon-ball-z-13
External links
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