Chevrolet: Jump To Navigationjump To Search
Chevrolet: Jump To Navigationjump To Search
Chevrolet: Jump To Navigationjump To Search
Chevrolet
June 2014
Formerly
Chevrolet Motor Company
Chevrolet Division of General
Motors Company
Type Private (1911–17)
Division (1917–present)
Industry Automotive
List
Products Automobiles
Commercial vehicles
Trucks
Website www.chevrolet.com
Contents
1History
2International operations
3Vehicle models
4Sport
5Marketing
6Watches
7Branding by other manufacturers
8See also
9Notes
10References
11External links
History
Chevrolet first used the "bowtie emblem" [8] logo in 1914 on the H series models (Royal
Mail and Baby Grand) and The L Series Model (Light Six). It may have been designed
from wallpaper Durant once saw in a French hotel room. [9] More recent research by
historian Ken Kaufmann presents a case that the logo is based on a logo of the
"Coalettes" coal company.[10][11] An example of this logo as it appeared in an
advertisement for Coalettes appeared in the Atlanta Constitution on November 12,
1911.[12] Others claim that the design was a stylized Swiss cross, in tribute to the
homeland of Chevrolet's parents.[13] Over time, Chevrolet would use several different
iterations of the bowtie logo at the same time, often using blue for passenger cars, gold
for trucks, and an outline (often in red) for cars that had performance packages.
Chevrolet eventually unified all vehicle models with the gold bowtie in 2004, for both
brand cohesion as well as to differentiate itself from Ford (with its blue oval logo)
and Toyota (who has often used red for its imaging), its two primary domestic rivals. [14]
1929 Chevrolet Firebrigade, Porto
Louis Chevrolet had differences with Durant over design and in 1914 sold Durant his
share in the company. By 1916, Chevrolet was profitable enough with successful sales
of the cheaper Series 490 to allow Durant to repurchase a controlling interest in General
Motors. After the deal was completed in 1917, Durant became president of General
Motors, and Chevrolet was merged into GM as a separate division. In 1919, Chevrolet's
factories were located at Flint, Michigan; branch assembly locations were sited
in Tarrytown, N.Y., Norwood, Ohio, St. Louis, Missouri, Oakland, California, Ft. Worth,
Texas, and Oshawa, Ontario General Motors of Canada Limited. McLaughlin's were
given GM Corporation stock for the proprietorship of their Company article September
23, 1933 Financial Post page 9.[15] In the 1918 model year, Chevrolet introduced
the Series D, a V8-powered model in four-passenger roadster and five-
passenger tourer models. Sales were poor and it was dropped in 1919.