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Karl Probst

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Children
  
Jean "Jack", Charles

Name
  
Karl Probst

Education
  
Ohio State University

Significant design
  
Bantam Jeep

Role
  
Engineer

Engineering discipline
  
Engineer

Karl Probst
Born
  
20 October 1883
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

Parent(s)
  
Charles and Eva (Knight) Probst

Significant projects
  
Bantam Automobile Company

Died
  
August 25, 1963, Dayton, Ohio, United States

Karl Probst (20 October 1883 – 25 August 1963) was an American freelance engineer and automotive pioneer, credited with the design of the Jeep in 1940. He was born in Point Pleasant, West Virginia to Charles and Eva (Knight) Probst. He studied engineering at Ohio State University and graduated in 1906.

Probst was recruited by American Bantam Car Company in 1940 to help it win a contract to provide the U.S. Army with a lightweight reconnaissance vehicle that could transport troops and equipment across rugged terrain. Probst drafted the design for the Jeep in two days, commencing on 17 June 1940. Bantam's first hand-built prototype was complete and running by September 21, 1940, just meeting the 49-day deadline and was delivered to the Army Quartermaster Corps for testing at Camp Holabird, MD.

He died in Dayton, Ohio.

Recognition

The Port Authority of Allegheny County pays homage to Karl Probst by putting his name on one or more of the city buses.

Around 1990, a crescent-shaped street in Caen (France) was named after Karl Probst, both extremities of which open on another street named after Commodore John Hughes-Hallett, in a district close to the Memorial pour la Paix museum, where a majority of streets commemorate personalities linked with the Second World War, the Resistance, and the subsequent making of the European Community.

References

Karl Probst Wikipedia