Gerstenslager Company During World War Two
Wooster, OH
1860-1890 as Wehe Company
1890-1904 as Weimer-Gerstenslager
1904-1907 as Gerstenslager Bros. Co. also in Marshallville, Ohio
1904-1907 as Gerstenslager Bros. Co.
1907-1997 as Gerstenslager Co.
1997-present as Gerstenslager Division of Worthington Industries, Wooster,
Ohio
2000-present also in Clyde, Ohio
This page updated on 10-29-2024.
Gerstenslager’s history
began in 1860 when a 19 year-old German immigrant named William T. Wehe
established a wagon works in Marshallville (formerly Bristol), Baughman
Township, Ohio. Wehe was active in community affairs serving as
treasurer of Marshallville during the 1870s. By 1880 the Wehe Company
was one of Baughman Township’s largest employers.
In 1882 a young
blacksmith of German descent named George Gerstenslager (b.1863) went to
work for the Wehe Company. His younger brother Barney (b. 1868) became
associated with the firm and George eventually became its manager.
Sometime around 1890 William T. Wehe retired, and the two Gerstenslager
brothers purchased his share in the business which became known as
Weimer & Gerstenslager. In 1904 the Weimer’s retired and sold their
share in the firm to the Gerstenslagers who reorganized it as
Gerstenslager Bros., manufacturers of Buggies, Phaetons, and Surreys, etc.
The brothers knew that in order to expand the firm, they needed more
skilled hands than the small community of Marshallville could supply.
So, in 1907 they relocated to Wooster, Ohio, a much larger city located
15 miles southeast of Marshallville. The brothers reorganized as The Gerstenslager Company, 572 E. Liberty St., Wooster, Ohio. They continued
to manufacture the same high-quality vehicles that they had built in
Marshallville, only on a much grander scale.
By 1929 it had become
apparent to Gerstenslager management that their small Liberty Street
factory was ill-suited to manufacture truck bodies in the quantities
needed to fulfill incoming orders, so they relocated the business to a
larger facility with room for expansion at 1425 E. Bowman St. The start
of the Depression was not the best time to expand a business, but
Gerstenslager’s high quality truck bodies remained in demand, and they
were able to survive the Depression. Early on, the firm’s body
designers had favored cab-forward and cab-over-engine (COE) chassis.
A circa 1938 Gerstenslager catalog was filled with pictures of
attractive aerodynamic vans. By the late 1930s, the US Post
Office’s existing fleet of Model A Parcel Post delivery trucks was on their last
legs and in 1940 the Government began a replacement program which
included new ¾-ton Ford trucks with bodies supplied by Gerstenslager and
Proctor-Keefe.
Gerstenslager catalogs
dating from the early 1950s pictures mainly large furniture delivery
trucks and moving vans, built on a wide variety of chassis, most of
which were of the cab-over engine variety. A large number of large White
Series 3000 COE-based vans were depicted and a special White-Gerstenslager
catalog was distributed to the nation’s White dealers. Although most of
Gerstenslager Civil Defense trucks were less elaborate, they built large
numbers throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
The years from 1950 to
1954 brought five new versions of the Oscar Meyer Company’s Wienermobile,
one of which is in the permanent collection of the Henry Ford Museum and
Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan. Built upon a Dodge chassis,
the hotdog on wheels featured a high-fidelity public address/sound
system and “bunroof.”
How cool is this? The Gerstenslager-built
1952 Wienermobile is still on display at the Henry Ford Museum in
Dearborn, MI. Note that the entry door is on the passenger side of
the vehicle. Author's photo added 10-29-2024.
Author's photo added 10-29-2024.
Author's photo added 10-29-2024.
Author's photo added 10-29-2024.
The Wienermobile tradition lives on!
Shown here is the current Oscar Mayer Wienermobile as photographed by
the author on 8-29-2024 at the National Museum of the United States Air
Force in Riverside, OH. The Wienermobiles are operated by college
interns. This intern included a stop by the museum to view the
aircraft on display. This was in the parking lot when I arrived,
but it had departed after I came out of the museum. I was not the
only one taking photos while it was in the museum parking lot.
Note that the entry door is still on the passenger side of the vehicle.
Author's photo added 10-29-2024.
Gerstenslager’s claim
to fame is the construction of bookmobiles. Government mail trucks,
custom fire and rescue vans, and anything where the customer does not
require mass production. The first mail truck order came in 1940.
Since then, upwards of 35,000 red, white, and blue trucks have exited the
plant.
In 1997 Gerstenslager
was purchased for about $113 million in stock by John H. McConnell’s
Worthington Industries, a leading diversified metal processing company
headquartered in Columbus, Ohio.
In 2000, Gerstenslager
constructed a 180,000 sq. ft. state-of-the-art stamping facility in
Clyde, Ohio that featured an all-hydraulic press line which allowed the
firm to grow its existing business and expand into new areas. Today, the
Clyde facility produces car, light-truck, SUV and minivan door panels,
side panels, fenders, and structural parts.
From its headquarters
in Wooster, Ohio, Gerstenslager employs over 1,000 people as of 2004,
and occupies over 800,000 square feet of manufacturing, warehouse, and
office space. It remains a leading independent supplier of current and
past model exterior body panels to the automotive industry, providing
services including stamping, blanking, assembly, painting, packaging,
warehousing, and distribution to customers such as General Motors, Ford,
Navistar, Chrysler, Freightliner, Mitsubishi, Honda, Nissan, and Isuzu.
Gerstenslager Company's World War Two Products:
The tables below show
that the Gerstenslager Company produced a minimum of 41,717 trailers for
the Army Quartermaster Corps and Ordnance Department during World War
Two. These were produced by the Wooster, OH plant. This
information is documented in Tables 2 and 3. This plant also
produced an unknown number of airdrome trailers worth $705,000 for the
USAAF. The Wooster plant also produced an unknown amount of
trailer parts, warehouse trailers, metal ammunition containers, and
cartridge storage cases. The total of all contracts for the
Wooster, OH plant was $24,195,000, and the company's Akron, OH plant
produced an unknown number of trailers for the Quartermaster Corps and USAAF. The total
value of these contracts was $1,790,000.
Table 1 - Gerstenslager Company's
Major World War Two Contracts - Akron, OH Plant
The information below
comes from the "Alphabetical Listing of Major War Supply
Contracts, June 1940 through September 1945." This was
published by the Civilian Production Administration,
Industrial Statistics Division, Requirements and Progress
Branch January 21, 1946. |
Product |
Contract Number |
Contract Amount |
Contract Awarded
|
Completion
Date |
Trailers -
Quartermaster Corps |
950-QM-4721 |
$565,000 |
1-1943 |
1-1944 |
Trailers -
Quartermaster Corps |
12036-QM-444 |
$284,000 |
9-1943 |
4-1944 |
Airdrome
Trailers - USAAF |
33038-AC-5054 |
$92,000 |
9-1944 |
12-1944 |
Warehouse
Trailers - Quartermaster Corps |
12036-QM-11124 |
$260,000 |
12-1944 |
8-1945 |
Utility
Trailers - USAAF |
33038-AC-8315 |
$201,000 |
3-1945 |
7-1945 |
Trailers -
USAAF |
33038-AC-11528 |
$388,000 |
6-1945 |
10-1945 |
Total |
|
$1,790,000 |
|
|
Table 2 - Gerstenslager Company's
Major World War Two Contracts - Wooster, OH Plant
The information below
comes from the "Alphabetical Listing of Major War Supply
Contracts, June 1940 through September 1945." This was
published by the Civilian Production Administration,
Industrial Statistics Division, Requirements and Progress
Branch January 21, 1946. |
Product |
Contract Number |
Contract Amount |
Contract Awarded
|
Completion
Date |
Trailers Semi
- Quartermaster Corps |
398-QM-13379 |
$56,000 |
5-1942 |
7-1942 |
Trailers -
USAAF |
535-AC-28996 |
$577,000 |
5-1942 |
10-1942 |
Trailers -
Army Ordnance |
303-ORD-2511 |
$6,023,000 |
7-1942 |
12-1943 |
Cargo
Trailers - Army Ordnance |
33019-ORD-5955 |
$6,632,000 |
6-1943 |
6-1944 |
Cargo
Trailers - Army Ordnance |
303-ORD-5965 |
$1,678,000 |
6-1943 |
12-1943 |
Cargo
Trailers - Army Ordnance |
303-ORD-5955 |
$1,588,000 |
8-1943 |
3-1944 |
Warehouse
Trailers - Quartermaster Corps |
49001-QM-64 |
$51,000 |
8-1943 |
10-1943 |
Trailer Parts
- Army Ordnance |
33019-ORD-173 |
$1,422,000 |
9-1943 |
12-1944 |
Trailer Parts
- Army Ordnance |
33019-ORD-955 |
$120,000 |
12-1943 |
9-1944 |
Metal Amm
Containers - Army Ordnance |
33019-ORD-1477 |
$1,682,000 |
2-1944 |
11-1944 |
Airdrome
Trailers - USAAF |
20017-AC-866 |
$128,000 |
3-1944 |
8-1944 |
Trailers -
Quartermaster Corps |
12036-QM-6143 |
$288,000 |
6-1944 |
12-1944 |
Cart Storage
Cases - Army Ordnance |
33019-ORD-3202 |
$1,950,000 |
12-1944 |
6-1945 |
Packing
Services - Army Ordnance |
33019-ORD-4199 |
$2,000,000 |
4-1945 |
6-1945 |
Total |
|
$24,195,000 |
|
|
Table 3 - Gerstenslager Company Trailers
Accepted by Detroit Ordnance, US Army
The information below comes from "Summary Report of
Acceptances, Tank-Automotive Material, 1940-1945."
Published by Army Services Forces, Office, Chief of
Ordnance-Detroit, Production Division, Requirements and
Progress Branch
January 21, 1946. |
Type |
Contract Number |
1940 |
1941 |
1942 |
1943 |
1944 |
1945 |
Total |
Semi-Trailer,
6-ton, Shoe Repair, 2W |
13379 |
|
|
11 |
19 |
|
|
30 |
Semi-Trailer,
6-ton, Shoe Repair, 2W |
13816 |
|
|
|
100 |
|
|
100 |
Total -
Semi-Trailer, 6-ton, Shoe Repair, 2W |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
130 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Semi-Trailer,
6-ton, 2W, Van |
13816 |
|
|
|
119 |
|
|
119 |
Trailer,
3/4-ton, 2W, Cargo |
6989 |
556 |
|
|
|
|
|
556 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Cargo |
303-2511 |
|
|
|
29,500 |
|
|
29,500 |
Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Cargo |
303-5965 |
|
|
|
4,524 |
1,476 |
|
6,000 |
Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Cargo |
303-5955 |
|
|
|
|
4,912 |
|
4,912 |
Total -Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Cargo |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
40,412 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Chassis (Portable Fire) |
303-2511 |
|
|
|
500 |
|
|
500 |
Grand Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
41,717 |
Table 4 - Gerstenslager
Company Contract Information |
Contract Number |
Type |
Registration Numbers |
Date Awarded |
Delivery Dates |
Number in Contract |
Contract Amount |
Cost Per Trailer |
398-QM-13379 |
Semi-Trailer,
6-ton, Shoe Repair, 2W |
|
5-1942 |
1942-1943 |
30 |
$56,000 |
$1,867 |
303-ORD-2511 |
Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Cargo |
0325742-0355741 |
7-1942 |
1943 |
29,500 |
$6,023,000 |
$200 |
Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Chassis (Portable Fire) |
7-1942 |
1943 |
500 |
303-ORD-5965 |
Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Cargo |
0560718-0566717 |
6-1943 |
1943-1944 |
6,000 |
$1,678,000 |
$280 |
303-ORD-5955 |
Trailer,
1-ton, 2W, Cargo |
0575500-0580411 |
8-1943 |
1944 |
4,912 |
$1,588,000 |
$323 |
As with much of the documentation that can be
found from World War Two, not all of the contracts from Table 2 match up
with the information in Table 3. However,
I have been able to put together those entries which match as shown in
Table 4 above, which provides some limited cost per trailer information.
It should be noted that the contract costs may
include tooling and spare parts, so the actual cost per trailer may be
lower than shown above. However, without further information, this
is the best estimate that can be made.
This Gerstenslager-built one-ton, two wheel
trailer was found at the 2019 D-Day Conneaut, OH reenactment event.
The photos remained stored on my hard drive until I was searching for
something else from that event. With the re-discovery of the
trailer photos, I began working on this page and investigating the
company on September 9, 2024. Author's photo.
The data plate indicates this trailer is
serial number 35075 and was delivered on January 7, 1944. Author's
photo.
Author's photo.
Author's photo.
Three days later on August 12, 2024, I was at
the National MVPA Convention in Oshkosh, WI. For sale outside the
vendor's building was this "Ben-Hur" one-ton, two wheel trailer for
sale. Author's photo.
The owner had this trailer for sale for
$3,600. Author's photo.
The data plate was in very rough condition.
Author's photo.
Once it was increased in size, the data
plate revealed that this was built by the Gerstenslager Company and
delivered on May 25, 1943. It has manufacturer's serial number
13261. Author's photo.
Author's photo.
There was a total
of 259,064 one-ton, two wheel trailers built
by 28 companies during World War Two. The 40,412 that the
Gerstenslager Company built was 15.6% of the total. Author's
photo.
The Gerstenslager Company built 119 of the
6-ton semitrailer vans.
The company also built 130 shoe
repair semitrailers. These were built at a cost of $1,867 each.
The Gerstenslager Company's Plants:
In 1907, the company occupied this building
when it moved to Wooster, OH from Marshallville, OH. It was
located at 572 E. Liberty St., Wooster, and was also known
as the Reed Warehouse. Note that this artist's rendering of the
plant shows an interurban line running in front of the plant along with
a railroad across the street. This building still exists and was entered into the National Register of
Historic Places on February 13, 1986. Image courtesy of the Wayne
County Library.
This Google Maps image shows the current
state of the former Gerstenslager factory.
This Google Earth view shows that the
interurban line in front of the plant is gone. However, the
section across the street has apparently been made
into a walking trail. The railroad tracks are still present and
appear to be currently in operation.
In 1929 the Gerstenslager Company moved to
this location at 1425 Bowman Street as it needed more factory floor
space than was available at the former plant on Liberty Street. It
was in this plant that the company built trailers to help win World War
Two. This Google Earth image and the one below were taken on
11-7-2021. These images provide views of a factory that has since
been razed. We are fortunate the satellite has not come back over
and re-photographed this area.
This is the same location, but the image was
taken by the Google Earth street view vehicle in
July 2024. As noted above, the main portion of the factory has
been razed.
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