, 1926 Fageol produced tractors, buses and trucks, at least three luxury cars, as well as engines for land vehicles and ships. The company went through several stages, names, and location changes that included
Fageol Motors Company, from 1915 to 1932 in Oakland, California;
Fageol Motor Sales Company, from 1916 to 1932 in Oakland, California;
Fageol Truck and Coach Company, from 1932 to 1938 in Oakland, California;
Fageol Motors Company of Ohio, from 1920 to 1922 in Cleveland, Ohio and 1922 to 1926 in Kent, Ohio.
Tractors The brothers had originally sold the Hamilton Walking Tractor, The solution provided by the brothers ended up being the Fageol Auto Train, also called the Trackless Train, powered with a
Ford motor, pulling two or three low to the ground 20 passenger open-sided cars. The financial backer chose to use a different spelling, for ease of pronunciation, so the company was registered as
The Fadgl Auto Train Inc. This led to the founding of the Fageol Motors Company of Oakland. The company reached an agreement with Rush Hamilton of
Geyserville, California to manufacture a tractor with spiked rear wheels.
Trucks In 1950, the company manufactured a unique truck, the TC CargoLiner – touted as "A Trailer Without A Tractor". In 1953 the Twin Coach Company was awarded a patent for what would become the standard in straight truck design. The inventor was Louis J Fageol. The company produced -ton, -ton, 3 1/2-4 ton, and 5-6 ton trucks.
Cars Since the founding of Fageol Motors Company, there had been a plan to build automobiles. Frank R. and William B. Fageol, with Louis H. Bill, built and marketed what was to be the most expensive luxury car of the time using the
Hall-Scott aircraft engine. Marketed as the "Fageol Four Passenger Touring Speedster", only three were known to have been produced before the government took over the engine manufacturing plant to build war planes, ending production. Other cars built by the company were: • Fageol 100 • Fageol Supersonic • PataRay, also known as Fageol Special
Buses Fageol produced buses until 1953, when the bus-manufacturing portion of the Fageol
Twin Coach Company was absorbed by
Flxible. • Twin Coach 44S co-manufactured with
JG Brill Company and
Twin Coach • Safety Coach • Cruising coach dubbed "America" • Canopy covered double-decker "Sight-Seeing" bus • Fageol Flyer • Parlor Car • Rear double-decker Parlor Car • Super Twin (introduced in 1938) was a 14-ton 58-passenger diesel-electric that was hinged in the middle. ==References==