Gibson Corp.

In the early 1950s, Gibson presented four different tractor models. The first three tractors they produced were steered with a lever. Their final model, the Super D, introduced the steering wheel design. Gibson tractors were marketed for only a few years.

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history

Gibson Corporation was founded in 1946 by Wilber Gibson. Wilber’s father, Harry Gibson had formed the original company at Seattle, Washington, and Gibson Corp was a branch of that. The Seattle branch had been experimenting with tractors, but mostly produced specially built rail cars. The move to Longmont Colorado was, in part, to escape the pressure to unionize, since Longmont was a small, agricultural community with very little industry at the time. Under government contract, in the late 1940s and early 1950s, they produced forklifts for the Navy. There are conflicting stories about the company’s end, though it was most likely due to a combination of factors. Competition, as well as the pressure to meet quotas of forklifts at the expense of producing tractors, were probably the main factors in the company as it was originally known. The company was sold to Helene Curtis Industries, Chicago, Illinois in 1952.

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Models

Model

Configuration

Years

# Produced

D

1947-1949

E

1948-1948

EF

1948-1948

EW

Tricycle

1948-1948

EWF

1948-1948

Super D

1948-1956

Super D2

1948-1956

H

1949-1953

I

1949-1953

HFA-STD

Standard-Tread

1952-1953

IFA-STD

Standard-Tread

1952-1953

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