Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Peugeot 104 was the first car assembled at what had, till that time, been Peugeot's transmission factory French Production of the Peugeot 208 is shared between Mulhouse and Poissy. Peugeot models no longer have the Mulhouse plant to themselves. The Citroën C4 has been built at Mulhouse since 2004. The Stellantis Mulhouse Plant is a major ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
In New Jersey, the Department of Environmental Protection's (NJDEP) Site Remediation Program oversees the Superfund program. As of 16 August 2024, there are 115 Superfund sites listed on the National Priorities List (NPL). Thirty-six additional sites have been cleaned up and deleted from the list.
Motor vehicle manufacturers based in New Jersey — companies currently or formerly having their primary base of operations in the state. New Jersey portal;
The plant was created by Peugeot in 1912, initially as a truck factory, but by the 1930s it had become the company's principal car manufacturing plant, and the main production site for all principal Peugeot models from then until 1972, when the company established a second major French car assembly plant in Mulhouse.
John A. Roebling in 1866 or 1867. John A. Roebling, the designer of the Brooklyn Bridge, founded his steel wire manufacturing company on the site in 1849.The location, on the western side of the Chambersburg, now a neighborhood of Trenton, was chosen for its location alongside the Delaware and Raritan Canal, since buried underneath Route 129.
[2] [3] The plant is in Hamilton Township, New Jersey. It was built in 1924-25 and manufactured sanitary ware. Later it was purchased by American Standard in 1929 and production continued until 2002. The site lies adjacent to the Hamilton Train Station on the Northeast Corridor Line.
In October the Malmerspach plant laid off employees, and a strike broke out, [1] with 400 police holding back the workers from ransacking the Mulhouse plant. After a stand-off, on March 7, 1977, textile-union activists staged a sit-in strike at Schlumpf offices, and broke into the Mulhouse "factory" to find the astounding collection of cars. [2]