| History of the Jeep by Mark
Neustedt
The history of the jeep goes back about 65 years to
around the 1940s. It was after World War I, that the US
Army knew that they needed a vehicle that could go
anywhere. In 1940 the army put out the specifications for
a vehicle they believed would be the vehicle of the
army’s future.
There were over 130 U.S. auto manufacturers that were
asked to place their bids for the first 70 jeeps for the
U.S. army. The first jeep delivered to the army was from
the Bantam Company and was called the Model 60, or better
known as the MKII.
Shortly after this Willys Overland and Ford delivered
their first model to the army. They were the Quad from
Willys and the Ford Pigmy. Each company built 1500 units
of each model for the army to field test. Each model was
modified after field-testing and became the Bantam 40 BRC,
the Ford GP and the Willys MA.
Willys won the army’s contract to build a model that
combined the best of all three models and was named the
MP.
It was not long after this that WWII broke out and Ford
was brought in to build the GPW.
Not long after WWII Willys built the first civilian
version of the jeep, the CJ2A and soon after that came the
CJ-3A. It wasn’t until 1970 that the well-known CJ-5 was
built and this is when the history of the jeep began to
take off.
In 1986 the jeep wrangler YJ was introduced and by 1996
there were a total of 632,231 of the YJs built. It was in
1997 that the jeep TJ was built and is still the jeep of
choice today.
The newest jeep that was introduced in 2004.5 is the
jeep wrangler unlimited. The wrangler unlimited is 15
inches longer than the jeep TJ with 13 inches added to the
rear cargo area and an extra 2 inches added to the rear
seat area for some much needed extra leg room.
Mark Neustedt is a life long off road enthusiast and
jeep owner. He is the owner and web master of http://www.Best-Jeep-Guide.com
For more information on the history of the jeep please
visit http://www.Best-Jeep-Guide.com/history-of-jeeps.html.
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