C. H. Wills and Company

C. Harold Wills (1878-1940) began working as a draftsman for Henry Ford in 1902. When the Ford Motor Company was organized in 1903, Wills was its chief engineer and metallurgist. He designed every Ford car until he resigned in 1919. Deciding to manufacture his own car, Wills selected Marysville, a hamlet of two hundred on the banks of the St. Clair River, as the site of C. H. Wills and Company.

In 1921 the first overhead cam, V-8, Wills Sainte Claire was produced. Remembered for its Flying Gray Goose radiator emblem, it utilized strong, lightweight molybdenum steel and was the first car to have backup lights. Hydraulic brakes, balloon tires, and a six-cylinder engine were added before the factory closed in 1926, having produced fourteen thousand cars. The property was purchased by the Chrysler Corporation in 1935.

 

site number: L1100

era: Two World Wars and the Depression (1915-1945)

year listed: 1979

year erected: 1985

 
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