The Prince Motor Company had two origins.
Tachikawa Aircraft Company • December 1946 - The electric car division of the
Tachikawa Aircraft Company became independent and was activated as the
Fuchu Plant of the
Kosoku Kikan Kogyo Co., Ltd.. • June 30, 1947 - The Fuchu Plant of the Kosoku Kikan Kogyo Co., Ltd. became the
Tokyo Electric Car Company. (Official foundation date of the
Prince Motor Company.) • February 1949 -
Shojiro Ishibashi invested in the Tokyo Electric Car Company and became the chairman. • November 30, 1949 - The Tokyo Electric Car Company changed its name to
Tama Electric Car Company. • November 1951 - The Tama Electric Car Company changed its name to
Tama Motor Company. • November 1952 - The Tama Motor Company changed its name to
Prince Motor Company. • April 10, 1954 - The Prince Motor Company merged with its engine supplier
Fuji Precision Industries. The new company was named
Fuji Precision Industries and the name Prince Motor Company disappeared in the meantime.
Nakajima Aircraft Company • August 16, 1945 - The
Nakajima Aircraft Company changed its name to
Fuji Sangyo Co., Ltd.. • November 6, 1945 - The
GHQ defined Fuji Sangyo as the
Zaibatsu and decided to disband them. • May 1950 - Fuji Sangyo Co., Ltd. was disbanded. • July 1950 - Fuji Sangyo Co., Ltd. was divided into twelve companies. Of them, the Tokyo Plant (located in
Suginami, Tokyo) and the
Hamamatsu Plant became
Fuji Precision Industries. • April 1951 -
Shojiro Ishibashi became the chairman of Fuji Precision Industries. • April 10, 1954 - Fuji Precision Industries merged with its customer
Prince Motor Company. The new company was named
Fuji Precision Industries and the name Prince Motor Company disappeared in the meantime.
After Merger of Fuji/Prince Until Merger with Nissan • February 1961 - Fuji Precision Industries changed its name to
Prince Motor Company. (The name "Prince Motor Company" revived.) • 1962 - Prince became the first Japanese car company to field a works team in a European rally, the Liège-Sofia-Liège. Neither of the two Skylines entered finished the rally, which had an 82 percent attrition rate. • May 1965 - Prince Motor Company announced the merger with
Nissan Motor Company. • August 1966 - Merged into
Nissan Motor Company. ==List of vehicles==