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In 1907, the "McLaughlin Motor Car Company" was founded in Ontario by Samuel McLaughlin. [5] The first year saw the sale of 154 McLaughlin cars. [6]McLaughlin and William C. Durant, respectively the biggest carriage builders in Canada and the United States, contracted for Durant's Buick to supply McLaughlin with power trains for 15 years.
[5] [3] Despite its long history, the dealership was closed as part of a reorganization and consolidation of the car dealership industry in Canada. [6] By 1989, it was listed on Toronto's Inventory of Heritage Properties, and designated a Heritage Property by City Council in 1999 under the Ontario Heritage Act (part IV).
McLaughlin's fifth-wheel 1910s Democrat buckboard 1910 Model 41 touring car 1915 touring car 1923 Master Six Special touring car, manufactured by GM Canada. Robert McLaughlin began building carriages in 1867 beside the cutters and wagons in his blacksmith's shop in Enniskillen, a small village 20 kilometres (12 mi) northeast of Oshawa, Ontario.
This is a list of automobile assembly plants in Ontario, Canada. Ontario produces more vehicles than any other jurisdiction in North America, with six of the world's top manufacturers operating assembly plants in Windsor , Brampton , Oakville , Alliston , Woodstock , Cambridge , Ingersoll , and Oshawa .
CAMI Assembly (formerly CAMI (Canadian Automotive Manufacturing Inc.) Automotive) is an assembly plant wholly owned by General Motors Canada.The plant occupies 570 acres (230 ha) and has 1,700,000 square feet (157,900 m 2) of floor space of which 400,000 square feet (37,161 m 2) was added in 2016, [2] as part of a $560 million investment.
Canada is currently the thirteenth-largest auto-producing nation in the world, and seventh largest auto exporter by value, producing 1.4 million vehicles and exporting $32 billion worth of vehicles in 2020. [1] Canada's highest rankings ever were the second-largest producer in the world between 1918 and 1923 and third-largest after World War II.