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Louis-Joseph Chevrolet was born on December 25, 1878, in La Chaux-de-Fonds, a center of watchmaking in northwestern Switzerland. [1] He was the second child of Joseph-Félicien Chevrolet, a watchmaker, and Marie-Anne Angéline Mahon. [2]
He won a 100-mile (160 km) match race against top racers Tommy Milton (driving a Chevrolet race car) [1] and Ralph Mulford. With the coming of winter in late 1920, racing moved to the West Coast . While competing in the last race of the season on the board track at the Beverly Hills Speedway , Chevrolet was killed when his Frontenac crashed on ...
On November 8, 1911, the Chevrolet Motor Car Company was incorporated. [6] It was founded by Swiss race car driver and automotive engineer Louis Chevrolet with his brother Arthur Chevrolet, William C. Durant and investment partners William Little (maker of the Little automobile), former Buick owner James H. Whiting, [7] Edwin R. Campbell (son-in-law of Durant) and in 1912 R. S. McLaughlin CEO ...
Frontenac Motor Corporation was a joint venture of Louis Chevrolet, Indy 500 winner Joseph Boyer Jr., Indianapolis car dealer William Small, and Zenith Carburetor president Victor Heftler. Per articles of Incorporation on file in the Michigan State Archives, it was founded in Detroit in December 1915.
Brother Gaston won that year's race in a Frontenac, but Gaston was killed in a California race a few months later. In 1928, Chevrolet filed with the US Patent Office for an 'Overhead Valve Engine'. Patent #1,744,526 was awarded on January 21, 1930. [1] In 1929, Arthur and Louis Chevrolet left the auto business altogether to form the Chevrolet ...
[10] [9] [13] Chevrolet had got through the race without taking a single tyre-change, [14] [15] and his Monroe-Frontenac was the first win by an American car at Indianapolis since 1912. On 25 November, Gaston Chevrolet and Eddie O'Donnell collided when racing at the last race of the championship, at the new Beverly Hills Speedway. Both drivers ...
The U.S. won 47 gold medals, the most of any country at the 1924 Games. One of them was awarded to mixed doubles tennis player Richard Norris Williams, who had survived the sinking of the Titanic ...
In Canada, on 30 September 1910, after obtaining a loan of $52,935.25 ($1,730,983 in 2023 dollars [7]) (cosigned by R S McLaughlin), went into partnership with Louis Chevrolet in 1911, starting the Chevrolet company. In 1914, a disagreement with Louis Chevrolet resulted in Durant buying out his partner. [9]