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As one of North America's top three school bus manufacturers - the other two being Thomas-Built (Daimler) and IC (Navistar) - Fort Valley, Georgia's Blue Bird Corporation delivers thousands of school buses to the market each year. According to current CEO Phil Horlock:
The firm can be traced to the Houston County
Motor Co., a small Georgia Ford distributor founded in 1920 by Illinois
native Albert L. Luce (b. June 26, 1888 – d. November 16, 1962). Albert Laurence Luce was born on June 26,
1888 in La Grange,
Cook County, Illinois to George Peck (b. in Penn., Apr. 26, 1860 -
d.Dec.
10, 1923)
and Jennifer Ophelia (Squier, in Penn., Jul. 22, 1866 - d. Mar. 26,
1938)
Luce. Siblings included Edna Helene
(b. Jan. 1892 - d. 1929);
Ruth Isabel (aka Isabella b. Nov. 1892 - d. 1955); Esther Faith
(b. 1902 - d. 1971) and
Clayton Squier (b. 1904 - d. 1994) Luce. The 1900 US Census lists the
Luce
family in Downers Grove, Dupage County, Illinois, George’s occupation
‘lumber
merchant.’ The 1910 and 1920 US Census lists the Luce
family in the Chicago,
Illinois suburb of La Grange, Cook County, Illinois, George’s
occupation is listed as ‘manager’ of a ‘lumber yard’. The elder Luce
was manager of
the P.A. Lord Lumber Co., which in addition to supplying lumber and
coal to
citizens of LaGrange manufactured its own line of church furniture. Albert attended Northwestern University in
Evanston, Illinois, his yearbook photo in the 1911 Syllabus list his
interests as
‘Y.M.C.A., University Band, Scientific Course’, his moto, ‘better late
than never.’ The ‘Recent Agencies Appointed by Motor Car
Manufacturers’ column of the September 16, 1915 issue of Motor Age
lists A.L. Luce as
El Centro, California’s Maxwell distributor, which is confirmed by his
June 5, 1917 draft registration card, which lists his address as S. 6th
St., El Centro, Imperial County, California, his occupation,
‘automobile
dealer’ for ‘himself’. El Centro was a small border city located 115
miles east of
San Diego, located across the US Mexican border from Mexicali, Baja
California, Mexico. Luce enlisted in the US Army during the
First World War,
serving in the Company I of the 126th Infantry, which embarked for
France on February
19, 1918. Initially used as a supply and replacement outfit, the 126th
were
eventually sent into battle seeing service in four major campaigns
prior to the
signing of the Armistice on November, 11, 1918. Members of the 126th
all earned the French ‘Croix de Guerre’ (translated as ‘Cross of War)
medallion, an award created to recognize French and Allied soldiers who
helped
liberate France during the War. When the 126th Infantry returned to the
United States in May
of 1919, Luce’s previous experience as a Maxwell distributor enabled
him to get
the Ford Motor Co. franchise for Fort Valley, Georgia, a small pecan
and peach growing community located 25 miles south of Macon. Luce’s
Fort
Valley Ford dealership was located on North Macon St. (Georgia Route 49
aka
Macon Hwy., now North Camellia Blvd.), an area which continued to house
most of the
city’s auto-related business into the 1950s. The building was later
home to
the M Supply Co. (Ernest McGee). Luce’s second Ford Motor Co.
distributorship, the Houston Valley Motor Co., was
located 12 miles southeast at the corner of Ball and Commerce streets
(Georgia Routes 341 and 41 respectively) in Perry, Georgia, Houston
County's
seat. On June 23, 1920 Luce married Helen Tryphena
Mathews (b. April 10, 1890 – d. July 2, 1976) of Fort Valley, Georgia,
daughter of
the Reverend George Mathews, one of the founders of the Indian Springs
Holiness encampment, and to the blessed union was born three sons;
George Edgar
(b. May 21, 1921 in South Carolina - d. Jul. 5, 1990), Albert L. Jr.
(aka
Buddy, b. Jul 31, 1922-present) and Joseph Parley (b. Jul. 3, 1926-d.
Dec. 17,
2006) Luce. In 1925 the Penn Dixie Cement Co. requested a vehicle to transport workers to and from one of their cement plants. Luce equipped a Model T chassis with a rudimentary open-sided wooden bus body he secured from a North Carolina manufacturer (Thomas Car or Hackney Bros.), but was very dissatisfied with the coachwork, which he did not consider to be of very high quality. In fact the bus's coachwork literally rattled itself apart on the unimproved Georgia roads and, as it was purchased on installments, Luce worried the body would fall apart before the customer to finish paying for it. In a 1976 interview with Bobbie Hickson Nelson, Perry, Georgia resident Frances Hall remembered a similar motorized bus that her father, Homer Hall, had constructed. When the family moved beyond Houston Lake, he wished his children to continue going to school in Perry. He contacted the Houston County Board of Education and promised to supply a vehicle for all the area children if the Board would supply gas and oil. He bought an old truck, lined the sides and back with board seats, and covered the homemade body with a canvas curtain. Busses were later jointly owned by local farmers and the school districts typically the buseinssmen owned teh chassis, the school system, the bus body. In some areas this practice continued through the second World War after which the counties (or states) began to purchase buses via a closed bidding system. To spare himself another embarrasment Luce investigated ways of building a better bus and in collaboration with a local blacksmith constructed a body using steel angles and channels, steel sheets, wood and canvas. Mounted on a 1927 Ford Model T chassis, it was built without proper window sashes, only a thin roll-up canvas curtain shielded its occupants during inclement weather. In a 1976 interview with Bobbie Hickson Nelson, former Blue Bird employee Francis Nunn recalled working on the prototype bus body in the shops of the Houston County Motor Co. at the corner of Ball and Commerce streets in Perry. The bus, the very first Blue Bird
constructed, was sold to Frank Slade of Marshallville, Georgia who used
it to transport
children to and from a rural school. Although it was deemed a success,
few bus projects followed; none were built in 1928 and only a single
example in 1929, a year in which he sold 107 Model T's out of his Fort
Valley dealership. The 1930 US Census lists Luce in Fort Valley, Georgia, his occupation ‘dealer’ in ‘Ford Cars.’ Only one Luce-built bus body was delivered during the year which saw a notable reduction new car sales with only 57 new Fords delivered in Fort Valley and 150 in Perry. The following year was much worse, only 10 new Fords were delivered in all of 1931, 3 in Fort Valley and 7 in Perry; however, he managed to sell a few bus bodies, delivering 7 during the year. By the end of 1931 Luce had closed down the Fort Valley branch and consolidated all auto sales and body-building activity in Perry. In the meantime several close relatives had fallen into poverty and Luce considered getting out of the automobile business entirely, but his wife Helen, a devout Methodist, implored her husband:
In 1932 he sold off the Perry Ford dealership and invested his last $12,000 in capital in the construction of 25 bus bodies, most of which were sold to operators who used them to transport children to and from school. Luce stated the inspiration for starting the new company was directly attributed to his wife's support and the family's strong Methodist faith. Luce took the slowdown in automobile sales as a sign he should move into the school bus manufacturing field permanently, a business that would not only benefit his family, but the local population as well. At that time public education in the rural South consisted of small, neighborhood schoolhouses within walking distance of most students' homes. Luce reasoned as rural districts consolidated, and one-room schoolhouses were discontinued, their students would have to be bused to town centers, and he would be the man to supply them with their transportation. Several theories surround the naming of the
company, the family history stating that Luce felt using the family
name would conjure up bad puns such as 'loose bus.' While showing a
scale model of a blue & yellow bus to school officials,
a student pronounced it a 'pretty little blue bird,' and the name
stuck. To save money,
Luce did not build his own plant right away; instead he assembled the
bodies in a rented peach-packing shed seen to the right. Although Luce
had sold 25 bodies
during the year, he had depleted his capital to the tune of $5,000, the
remaining $7,000 being tied up in his house and equipment.
On several occasions Luce found himself unable to make payroll, his son
Buddy (A.L. Luce Jr.) recalling:
Business improved during 1933 and in 1934 he moved out of the peach packing shed he was using in Perry to a former livery stable located in Fort Valley, also pictured to the right. The school bus business operated on an
unusual schedule for most of the next two decades. Although school
boards and
superintendents put off ordering new busses for the coming school year
until the very last minute –
typically April or May – they demanded the vehicles be ready in time
for the
upcoming school year, typically the last two weeks of August or first
week of
September. Unless the constructor was well-heeled, building school bus bodies was a highly seasonal enterprise, with four months on, then eight months off. Money was unavailable until deposits were made in the spring, and the flow of money ended when the buses were delivered in August. Consequently most Blue Bird employees were full-time farmers, relying upon their bus building income to tide them over during the hot summer sabbatical. Inside the stables Joe Twombly, an out-of-work peanut plant mechanic, installed a rudimentary assembly line where bodies were dragged from work station to work station on skids constructed of 4x4-in timbers. Each station contained a parts bin loaded with the raw materials needed for each subsequent operation. When completed the worker (or workers) would drag the skidded body to the next station. At year's end he had completed 87 bus bodies and made a large enough profit to purchase a plot of land in Five Points, a neighborhood located just north of town on Georgia Route 49 (aka Macon highway). Minutes of the February 21, 1935 meeting of
the Fort Valley
City Council, state that A. L. Luce was planning on building a factory
to
‘build school bus bodies’:
Lumber for the new 1-story 27,000 sq. ft. plant was purchased on credit from Perry, Georgia's J. Mead Tolleson and the structure erected by Luce's own employees. At this time Blue Bird was still building composite bus bodies created using sheet metal panels nailed to a sturdy screwed and glued ash wood framework. wrought iron braces were supplied by a Fort Valley blacksmith and a small sheet-metal shop located at 197-199 Church St., supplied Luce with headlamp buckets and other sheet-metal parts. In early July Luce brought in a sales manager, Carlyle Irby, who by year's end had helped Blue Bird deliver 100 school buses, with an estimated profit for the year of $25,000. Most of the buses were built for regional school districts alhtough one was built for hauling Americus, Georgia's semi-pro baseball team from game to game. Luce built a company that emphasized
community and, influenced by his religious beliefs, clean living.
Religious services
were offered at the factory's lunchroom every other Monday. In the mid-1930s a number of high-profile school bus-train accidents involving multiple fatalities got Luce interested in converting the Blue Bird factory over to the manufacture of all steel school bus bodies. Luce reasoned that if the unfortunate students had been riding in all-metal bus bodies, many lives may have been spared. He resolved that as soon as it was feasible, all Blue Bird buses would be made with all-steel coachwork. After hearing from a school superintendent whose daughter had caught a cold and died as a result of riding in a school bus with no side curtains, Luce resolved to install all-weather windows in his all-steel buses too. After several hurdles were passed, one of the most difficult being developing a window sash that wouldn't leak, Blue Bird's first all-steel bus body debuted in late 1937 in time for the 1938 school bus season. The change to all steel construction also
proved a boon to business, as several large
orders were clinched when the purchaser discovered that Blue Bird's
buses were all-steel and the comptitions were not. Sales
manager Carlyle Irby recalled one such sale to the city of Gunderson,
Florida during 1938. Although Irby had learned that the school board
had already agreed to buy 8 bus bodies from a Florida outfit, he met
with the
school superintendent to stress the safety factor of Blue Bird's
all-steel bodies. The school board was called together hastily, and
they reconsidered their decision gave the order to Blue Bird based
solely on the reputation for safety that all-steel buses enjoyed at the
time. To say that Luce was 'tight' with his money is an understatement. In a 1986 interview with Forbes' magazine's Rita Koselka, George E. Luce recalled a 1939 incident that illustrated his father's resolve to manage costs even when dealing with his own children. His father told them:
The senior Luce proposed the following: he would lend his sons $500 each at the commencement of the school year. The loans would be repaid by studying, with an hour's worth of studying prior to dinner counting for one dollar and an hour of studying after dinner being worth 75 cents. (The discrepancy in the amount was due to Luce's belief that studying before dinner was more productive.) Just as his salesmen were required to report their daily activities via a postcard to Blue Bird's bookkeeper, so were Luce's sons. Any amount of the loan that remained unpaid by the end of the school year were to be worked off during the summer at the bus plant at 40 cents per hour. A continued rise in fatal school bus
accidents resulted in an April
1939 conference in New York City where representatives from all 48
states
gathered to develop a set of national standards for school bus
construction and
operation. The symposium was chaired by Frank W. Cyr, a Columbia
University
professor and a former superintendent of the Chappell, Nebraska school
district. The conference was attended by
representatives of the bus
body industry and at the end of the 7-day event the group released a
list of
minimum standards and recommendations. Among them were specifications
for type
of construction, body length, ceiling height and aisle width and color. Strips of different colors were hung from
the wall and the
participants in the conference slowly narrowed down the colors until
three
slightly different shades of yellow remained. National School Bus Chrome became the chosen
shade with
slight variations allowed as yellow was a difficult color to reproduce
exactly.
Yellow had been decided upon because it provided good visibility in the
semi-darkness of early morning and late afternoon. Since then, 12 National School
Transportation Conferences
have been held, giving state and industry representatives a forum to
revise
existing and establish new safety guidelines operating procedures for
school
buses. For many years the Federal Government
allowed the industry to
regulate itself, but they became directly involved in motor vehicle
safety with
the passing of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of
1966. A
School Bus Safety Amendment was passed in 1974, and since that time the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has issued 36 Federal
Motor
Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS) which apply to school buses. At the start of the Second World War school
bus body
manufacturers were forced to convert their factories over to military
goods.
Blue Bird won several contracts for military buses, one of which
resulted in a number of headaches for the firm. Unfortunately the firm’s normal all
metal-buses
were too heavy, the government contracts stipulating military bodies
could use no more than
1,000 lbs. of the precious metal. Wood 2 x 4’s were substituted for the
steel
cross sills and tongue and groove boards replaced the stamped sheet
metal
flooring beneath the seats. Some buses were fitted with molded Masonite
roof
panels and steam-bent oak replaced the tubular steel formerly used in
the seat
frames. Several lightweight military spec bus bodies
constructed for
hauling workers to and from a Maine Naval shipyard were experiencing
severe
vibrations that were literally tearing the coachwork apart at the
seams. Johnny
Wells a Blue Bird engineer dispatched to the site reported that the
rear-most
part of the chassis was insufficiently braced to handle the weight of
the overhung rear body. Senior engineer Bob Peeples was sent north to
assist Wells.
They determined the chassis was insufficiently braced and after
fishplating
the chassis from the cowl back, further strengthened it by sistering
oak 3
x 4 timbers to the rear of the frame. The solution was awkward but it
worked, and local mechanics modified the remainder of the fleet to the
Navy’s
satisfaction. Another project completed during the War was
the construction
of several hundred 4-stretcher ambulance bodies that were distributed
to major metropolitan
areas to be used in the event of an aerial bombardment, which
fortunately never
happened. After his graduation from Fort Valley High
School, George E. Luce attended Asbury College in Wilmore, Kentucky and
the Georgia
School of Technology. On June 29, 1946 George married Willouise Butts
(b.1921-d.2005) and to the blessed union were born two children. After his graduation from Fort Valley High
School, A.L. ‘Buddy’ Luce Jr. attended Georgia Tech’s George W.
Woodruff School of
Mechanical Engineering during the War, enlisting in the US Army
Reserves at Fort
McPherson, Atlanta, Georgia on March 15, 1943, and in 1944 graduated
from Asbury College in Wilmore, Kentucky. After his graduation from Fort Valley High School, Joseph P. Luce enlisted in the US Navy. He trained with an Aviation Ordinance Flight Crew as a gunner and made it as far as San Diego to be shipped out when the war ended. He then attended Emory at Oxford and Georgia Tech, Le Tourneau Tech in Texas, and in 1950 graduated from Asbury College in Wilmore, Kentucky with a degree in History. Following graduation, Joseph married Marilyn Beth Stull, the daughter of Christian and Missionary Alliance missionaries, and to the blessed union was born four children, Steve, Burt, Beth and Jenny Luce. (Following Marilyn‘s untimely passing Joseph re-married Mary Jim Fuller Lester on January 25, 2003.) By the early 1940s Blue Bird buses could be
found in a number of states bordering Georgia, and by the end of World
War II the
firm ranked seventh out of twelve bus manufacturers accounted for. Tragedy struck the firm on one unusually
cold winter morning in 1945. A blocked vent pipe on the coal stove that
heated the
administrative and engineering departments on the second floor of the
Blue Bird
plant created a fire in the wooden ceiling. The resulting blaze
destroyed the entire plant and almost
took the firm’s founder and president along with it. Luce, who was in his office
at the time, ran downstairs to retrieve a pyrene fire extinguisher, and
returned to battle the flames. By that time the fire had spread to the
roof and in mere minutes had become unmanageable. Realizing the gravity
of the
situation, and his employer’s location, Jolly Bryant climbed the stairs
hoping to
warn his boss, but he found the acrid smoke and flames unbearable.
Bryant
eventually located Luce after hearing his cries for help, and got Luce
down the
stairs and out of the building just in time to see the fire spread
along the
ceiling to the paint shop. The volatile paints cans started exploding
and within 20 minutes the entire structure was involved and the entire
building collpased 45 minutes after the first sparkes erupted. George
E. Luce later recalled:
The fire took place during business hours
and most of the
firm’s equipment and a majority of the buses located inside were saved
thanks to Blue Bird’s dedicated employees. Everything that had been
saved from
the fire was taken to a building they owned across the road where they
rigged up a temporary assembly line. Space was at a premium and many
operations had
to be completed outside under make-shift tents. Luce was determined to get a proper factory
up and running as soon as possible, which meant a metal building was
his only option.
However locating one was another matter, although wartime restrictions
on
commercial steel had been lifted, finding any for sale was near
impossible. Johnny Wells, the same metal fabricator who
had helped solve their Naval bus problem during the War located a scrap
metal dealer in
Knoxville, Tennessee, who had 175,000 lbs. of steel beams and trusses
for sale. After his structural engineer assured him they were usable,
Luce
purchased the lot and soon after its arrival in Fort Valley his
employees commenced
assembling the structural elements of the new factory building. Getting galvanized sheet metal for the roof and sides of the new building was another matter. None was available through regular channels, but a helpful steel salesman put him in touch with a Birmingham, Alabama firm called Tennessee Coal and Iron, who had just enough of the material on hand to finish enclosing the new building. Thanks to Luces' determination and Blue Bird's dedicated employees, new buses began exiting the new factory within in the Spring of 1946, just a few short months after the fire destroyed its predecessor. A little more than six months after Luce escaped death by fire, he nearly succumbed to a heart attack suffered on the way to work. Attentive staff noticed his suffering – which he had dismissed - and sent for the ambulance. While he was reuperating in the hospital, Luce casually mentioned to his sons that he would like to find the first bus he had built back in 1927. Although long-retired, 'Blue Bird No. 1" was
still owned by the orignal purchaser, Frank Slade, who had relegated it
to a scrapheap behind his farm in Marshalville. Although it had
set outside for close to two decades, the structure was still intact,
and Luce's sons set about getting it restored in time for
Christmas.Slade donated it to Luce and sold them a suitable 1927 Model
T donor to use as the chassis. Its retoration was undertaken by a group
of volunteer employees and then
stored in the paint booth under wraps until the day of the firm's
Christmas chapel service. At the end of the service, Blue Bird employee
Walt Anderson cranked it up and drove the bus out to present it to his
boss. With tears
in his eyes, Luce exclaimed:
The bus was exhibited at the 1947 National School Administrators Show in Atlantic City, and also was on hand when Blue Bird opened its satellite facility in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. Thirty years after its first restoration, Bleu Bird No. 1 was completely disassembled and restored, and after being displayed at The Henry Ford Museum in Greenfield Village, returned to Fort Valley, where it remains on display on the Blue Bird factory floor. When Luce was able to come back to work for
a short time each day, his son Buddy (Albert L. Luce Jr.) called the
management team
together:
Many Blue Bird employees became more
enthusiastic about their faith while working at the plant, especially
when it resulted in an additional 30-minute respite from work.
It its early years the bi-weekly chapel services took place on Monday,
but by the mid 1950s they had becaome a weekly affair which had moved
to lunchtime on Wednesdays. Although never mandatory, a surprising
number of Blue
Bird employees once a week. The senior Luce’s health improved during
1947 and in the
fall of 1948 he and his wife Helen embarked on a trip to Europe to
visit their
son George E., who was in Belgium with his wife Willouise studying the
native
tongue in preparation for a missionary trip to the Congo. Their visit
coincided
with the 1948 ‘Salon de l'Automobile de Paris’ (aka
Paris Auto
Salon), and the two men decided to spend a day touring Europe’s
preeminent
automotive event. One display attracted the attention of the
senior Luce, a streamlined forward-control, front-engined General
Motors-chassised bus
manufactured by General Motors’ at its Antwerp, Belgium Opel assembly
plant. The coachwork was likely supplied by Van Hool (in Lier) or
Jonckheere
(in Roeselare), two Belgian firms that specialized in autobus coachwork. The next day the Luces called on the Opel
plant in Antwerp to ask about buying a chassis. They learned that it
was a model being
built exclusively for European bus manufacturers and was unavailable
for
export to the US. George recalled:
The Luces then called upon the coachbuilder
(either Van Hool, in Lier or Jonckheere in Roeselare), who agreed to
furnish them
with a complete motor coach, and arrangements were made to have it
shipped
back home. Upon its arrival, Luce’s engineers discovered that the
chassis was
basically a modified Chevrolet bus chassis equipped with a wider front
axle, a
remote-controlled transmission and a relocated steering sector. They
set about improving
the overall designs, correcting several faults they discovered along
the
way, one of which required an all-new remote control shifter which was
developed
in-house by engineer Wilbur Rumph. By early 1949 the all-new Blue Bird
‘All
American’ was ready for the road. A few early examples utilized
GM-sourced
chassis, but they required so much modification that Blue Bird started
building
their own chassis, which debuted when the first production ‘All
American’ coaches
were delivered in 1950. A dedicated 'All American' school bus debuted
on May 9, 1952. Still in production today, the ‘All
American’ is the longest-produced
transit-style (Type D) school bus offered by an American manufacturer.
The All American was substantially redesigned in 1957 with an enlarged
panoramic windshieldwhich wrapped around to the entry door on one side
and the
driver's window on the other. A taller roof allowed passengers to walk
the length of the coach without stooping and flatter body panels gave
it a much more modern appearance. In
1958, quad headlights were added after federal legislation was enacted
to
permit them, and in 1961 a rear-engined 'All American' (RE) was made
available, albeit with a chassis sourced from GMC. Luce’s three sons, George, Albert 'Buddy,' Jr., and Joseph, gradually took over control of the business after their father's heart attack and in 1950 Buddy took over as Blue Bird president. In the days before the government got
involved in the
purchase of school buses, more often than not, coaches were sold to
third
parties unconnected to the school district. Most were local individuals
or
small fleet operators who had won a bid for transporting a certain
number of students
to a certain school. The sale of a school bus was more akin to selling
a motor
vehicle to a single customer, sometimes a lot of leg work was involved
in order
to get a single bus sold and financed. During the 1950s more money
became
available for school transportation and many school districts began
operating
their own fleets, buying their own buses and hiring their own drivers
on a
non-profit absolute cost basis. Bids for bus fleets would be let at a
certain place and
time, each salesman knowing that if he could learn the exact amount of
his
competitors’ bids, he would more often than not win the contract, even
if he
beat it by just a dollar or two. ‘Red Willie’, Blue Bird’s star salesman in
those days, took
whatever opportunity he could to get the sale, much to the chagrin of
A.L.
Luce Jr. and Sr. In an interview with Blue Bird historian Bernard
Palmer, he
recalled one scheme he used on several occasions which involved him
putting a ‘dummy bid’ in his pants pocket which he subsequently
‘misplaced’ while
sitting in the rival’s demonstrator:
Another popular scheme he called ‘the pigeon
drop’ utilized an ‘inside man’, typically a secretary or assistant
superintendent who
was short on cash. Red’s ‘friend’ would place a fictitious bid from him
on
top of a pile of papers sitting on the superintendent’s desk when Red
knew a
competitor was due to arrive. Red would arrive later in the day with a
slightly
lower bid, and if nobody caught on, Red would get the contract. As
time went on, Red Willie's shenanigans could no longer be tolerated,
and a
more professional sales manager replaced him. By that time most
contracts were secured through a more transparent public bidding
process which required that the firm's
sales people do their research, going through old newspaper article
that provided exact dollar amounts of their competitors bids on similar
coaches. Despite their exhasutive efforts to stay on
the up and up,
Blue Bird and their Austin, Texas distributor were sued for price
rigging, the April 26, 1961 edition of the San Antonio
Express and News reporting:
The
lawsuit's resolution is currently unknown, although it's likely the
distributors took the fall, receiving a slap on the wrist and a small
fine. After his 1948 trips to Europe the senior Luce began thinking about expanding into foreign markets, which might keep the factory busy during the seasonal downtimes in the US school bus market. George E. Luce recalled:
Consequently the senior Luce made a trip to
South America
where he paid a visit to the Venezuela’s Wayne Works distributor, who
on an
initial visit seemed disinterested in handling a second line. On a
return visit
the next day Luce offered to send him a demonstrator on consignment,
providing
the dealer paid for the duty and the shipping. Again, Luce got no
response. He
then made an offer that no man could refuse, offering to pay the
freight, the
duty and agreeing to accept payment only after the bus was sold. That
day
marked the beginning of a decades-long relationship with the Venezuelan
importer. The technique worked in a number of other Central and South
American
countries, and eventually became standard practice in communities where
Blue
Bird had difficulty finding a distributor or importer. Soon afterwards
a
retired Marine Colonel turned Ford distributor named Green provided
Blue Bird with
an entry into the Columbian marketplace. One problem Blue Bird hadn’t counted on
became
apparent soon after
they began operating outside of the United States. Bribes and kickbacks
were a
well-known cost of doing business in foreign countries. Blue Bird’s
competitors
had been paying them for years, but that didn’t mean Blue Bird was
going to
follow suit. In a 1976 interview with Blue Bird historian Bernard
Palmer,
former sales manager John Terry recalled:
Albert L. (Buddy) Luce Jr. told Palmer:
During
the early 1950s Blue Bird introduced the 'Chick Express' a
seat-less bus that was marketed to the Southeast's live chicken
haulers. 'Driver rides INSIDE with the chicks' claimed the
vehicle's tearsheet which also touted its automatic climate control,
custom ventilation system and generous carrying capacity. The vehicle
'met the requirements of USDA Chick Transport Research', making it
'ideal for chicks, poults, eggs and heavy supplies.' Another
unsual offering was the 77" 'High
Headroom'
bus which offered its passengers 'all the comfort and passengers
conveniences of transit type buses while retaining all the
profit-making advantages of a conventional bus'. The high headroom
option, exclusive to Blue Bird, continues to remain an option on
certain Blue Bird buses. In early October, 1962 Albert L. Luce Sr.
and his wife
Helen took a week-long trip to California during which time he
suffered
a second, more damaging heart attack from which he did not recover,
passing
away of pneumonia October 16, 1962 at San Francisco’s Presbyterian
Hospital. His son
George made arrangements for Albert and his widow to return to Fort
Valley, where
Albert was interred at Oaklawn Cemetery. At that time Blue Bird was the fourth-largest school bus company in the nation, battling for market share with five others; Carpenter, Superior (Pathfinder), Thomas, Ward and Wayne Works. Several competitors - Hicks, Oneida, Hackney and Marmon-Herrington - had already withdrawn from the field. Each of the brothers had specific areas of responsibility. In addition to his corporate post of Blue Bird president, Albert L. Jr. (Buddy) Luce served as the firm's general manager, keeping a close watch on the firms sales and finances. With his engineering background George E. Luce oversaw the firm's engineering and machine tool departments. He also oversaw the installation of equipment at the firm's South and Central American assembly plants where he knowledge of foreign languages proved invaluable. Joe Luce, the youngest of the three brothers, proved adept at problem solveing and dealing with the workforce, keeping a keen eye on the firm's various assembly lines and production facilities. In the mid-1960s the firm introduced the
Blue Bird Galaxy Cargo
System, a tandem-axle bus which offered two-point access for palletized
cargo. Developed in conjunction with a regional soft drink
manufacturer, less than 50 examples are thought to have been
constructed - all equiped with a GMC V-6 engine. Blue Bird also ventured into the charter bus and municipal transit bus field on several occasions, with mixed results, one example being the Blue Bird City Bird. They also tried manufacturing window fans, yet another product which failed to find customers. One notable exception to the aformentioned experiments was their foray into the field of recreational vehicles. In October of 1963 Blue Bird introduced the
Blue Bird Transit Home, a high-end recreational vehicle based upon the
All American, and manufactured by a new subsidiary, the Cardinal
Manufacturing Co. Originally priced at $12,000, there was little
interest at first and Blue Bird sent the prototype around the country
campgrounds and RV parks to see if they could generate some interest in
their new product, which the were rightly proud of. The trip was
largely unrewarding for the firm, however it attracted the attention of
House Beautiful magazine who in1965 published a story on Land Yachts
which included pictures and a description of the Blue Bird Transit Home
and 10 of its competitors.
Shortly after the story appeared, Blue Bird received five Transit Home
orders,
and sales took off from there. By 1968 the price of the Transit Home had
risen to $25,000 and the original moniker had been abandoned in favor
of the name it's known by today, Wanderlodge. Notable As the demand for school buses in Central America increased a Blue-Bird financed assembly plant, Blue Bird Centro Americana, was established in Guatemala City, Guatemala in 1966. In 1967, Blue Bird's decades-old rounded front roof cap was replaced by a new vertical design which would remain in use for several more decades - in fact it's still used on the Vision. The following year (1968) the Wanderlodge and All-American's horisontal dual headlamps were superceded by vertically-oriented units. During the October 12, 1974 US House of
Representatives
hearings on school bus safety, Georgia Rep. Jack Brinkley (D) commended
Blue
Bird on its flawless safety record:
Established in 1975, Omnibus BB Transporters
S.A. was a joint venture with a Hungarian entrepreneur named Bela Botar
Kendur that assembled Blue Bird buses in Quito, Ecuador. In 1981
General Motors
purchased a controlling interest in the firm, which now assembles
trucks, buses and
automobiles for the Ecuadoran market. Although safety was an oft-mentioned phrase
in each respective
manufacturer’s advertisements, aside from the adoption of ‘National
School Bus
Yellow’ in 1939, no Federal legislation mandating standards were
enacted until
1973, when emergency exits and window releases became mandatory.
Illinois Senator
Charles Percy pointed out in a 1973 congressional hearing on the
subject that
school administrators typically purchased school buses on bids, and
more often
than not, the contract was awarded to the lowest bidder. Although
several firms,
in particular Ward and Wayne Works, had started offering extra-safe
‘superbuses’
most school districts couldn’t justify the additional expense to
budget-minded voters
and administrators. Sen. Percy summed up the need for a Federal Safety
Standard as follows:
On October 17, 1976 the Associated Press
distributed the
following article in which Jay Perkins explains the long overdue
Federal School
Bus Safety Standards which were to take effect on April 1, 1977. The
first Federal
Safety Standard relating to school buses - FMVSS No. 217 (Bus Emergency
Exits
and Window Retention and Release) had already taken effect (on
September 1,
1973). The next four implemented were FMVSS No. 220 (School Bus
Rollover
Protection); FMVSS No 221 (School Bus Body Joint Strength); FMVSS No.
222 (School
Bus Passenger Seating and Crash Protection) and FMVSS No 301 (Fuel
System
Integrity - School Buses).
The new bus-related Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards are outlined as follows: Standard No. 217 - Bus Emergency Exits and
Window Retention and Release:
Standard No. 220 - School Bus Rollover
Protection:
Standard No. 221 - School Bus Body Joint
Strength:
Standard No. 222 - School Bus Passenger
Seating and Crash
Protection:
Standard No. 301 - Fuel System Integrity -
School Buses:
Standard No. 131 - School Bus Pedestrian
Safety Devices (not implemented until May 5, 1991).
To meet the new rules, Blue Bird fitted the All American with higher-back seats and made several changes to improve the strength of the body. On the outside, the curved rear roof cap was redesigned to match the vertical front cap allowing addtional real estate to install 8-light warning systems, which were now mandated in numerous states. Surprisingly, compulsory installation of
seat belts in
school buses has yet (as of 2015) to be made a Federal requirement,
although several
states have
enacted legislation that requires them; California, Florida, Louisiana,
New Jersey,
New York and Texas, although New Jersey is the only state that mandates
their use. The second-generation All American went
through the 1980s
with relatively little change save for a 1982 modification that
replaced the formerly fixed-position
rear seat passenger
window with a drop-sash window. While
gasoline engines were still available
in high-capacity buses, most school distrcits and fleets were opting
for more economical diesel powertrains. A downturn in overseas
sales saw the1982 closure ot two Bleu Bird plants, Blue Bird
East in Buena Vista,
Virginia and Blue Bird Central America in Guatemala
City, Guatemala. Heart
problems continued to plague the Luce family and all three Luce
brothers underwent bypass surgery in the early 1980s. As they
were no longer capable of handling the day-to-day operations of the
firm the board of directors brought in Paul Glaske as president in
1984.
Glaske had previously served as president of Marathon LeTourneau, the
heavy equipment manufacturer headquartered in Longview, Texas. Glaske
would mind the farm until the third generation of Luces gained enough
experience to take the helm. Still in their 30s, Albert L. Luce
Jr.’s son,
Robert, worked in the firm's manufacturing section while Joseph D.
Luce's two sons, Stephen and
Burton worked
in Blue Bird’s marketing and administration departments. During the decade sales of the firm's Wanderlodge continued to rise, and by the late 1980s the pricey RV accounted for 20% of Blue Bird sales, selling from 150 to 200 untirs pwer year. The price of a Wanderlodge had risen exponentially since its debut depdening on the size and equipment was now priced between $200,000 and $350,000, before options.Blue Bird offered Wanderloge owners free camping at the firm's Wanderlodge Wayside Park, while their Wanderlodges were in for scheduled service or upgrades. By the
mid-1980s one out of every three school bus sales was a Blue Bird, and
the
company sold about 11,000 school buses annually. Blue Bird employees,
which
numbered about 1,500 in Fort Valley alone, were paid above the local
average
wage, and the sense of family and community bred by the elder Luce
continued--the Luce brothers knew many of their employees by name. In 1988, Blue Bird began offering its
own rear-engine
chassis for the All American, allowing them to better compete on price
in markets where rear-engine buses were
in
demand. In an effort to
secure bids
from larger fleet operators Blue Bird
introduced a budget-priced All American dubbed the TC/2000 which was
priced nearly in line with the firms conventional school buses. A substantially upgraded All-American debuted in 1989. Fitted with a completely redesigned drivers compartment with a new insturment cluster and down-sized engine cover, the coach's entry doors were fitted with substantially larger glass panels - a feature soon adopted across the entire Blue Bird lineup. The front end was also modified to include access panels for ease of maintenance and the vertically-oriented dual headlights units were replaced by horizontal rectangular units mounted just above the front bumper. At the start of the 1990s Blue Bird
controlled a remarkable 50% of the North American school bus market
which saw
a
pronounced consolidation in the early 1990s. By the end of the decade
three
major players were gone; Superior Coach, Wayne Corp. and Carpenter;
Ward Body
Works had been acquired by Navistar and reorganized as IC Corp. Even
Blue Bird saw an
unanticipated slowdown in
school bus sales prompting a reduction in its salaried workforce from
427
to 300. It turned out that the third
generation of Luce's were uninterested in running the company and they
all left to pursue other interests. When George E. Luce died in 1990,
Buddy (A.L. Luce Jr.)
approached
president Glaske and told him that the brothers planned to put the
company up
for sale prompting a steady stream of prospective buyers to visit the
plant during the summer of 1991. The Luce family preferred that
current management (including Glaske) be retained, and even gave them a
piece of the firm when the deal was concluded that November. Of the six bidders, Merrill Lynch Capital Partners, Inc., a division of Merrill Lynch & Co., made the best offer, agreeing to pay $397 million for an 82 percent share in Blue Bird. Glaske, along with 14 other Blue Bird managers selected by the Luce brothers, acquired the remainder which was reorganized as the Blue Bird Corporation. In early 1992 Albert L. 'Buddy' Luce told the Atlanta Journal and Constitution:
In 1991, the Wanderlodge motorhome ended the use of the Blue Bird-built All American school bus chassis and went to a dedicated Class A motorcoach chassis manufactured by Spartan Motors. Also introduced that year was the first compressed natural gas-powered Blue Bird coach, the CNG All-American RE. In 1992
Blue Bird introduced the Q-Bus, a 37-foot 45-passenger medium-duty
restroom-equipped intercity transit coach that
was targeted at the expanding commuter market. Blue
Bird also entered into an agreement with Drummondville, Quebec's
Girardin Autobus to supply its US dealers with a single rear-wheel Type
1 cutaway van-based minibus called the Blue Bird MB-II/IV (by
Girardin). Using grants supplied by the California
Energy Commision, Blue Bird teamed with Westinghouse Electronic Sytems
to develop an all-electric prototype school bus for the Lancaster,
California's Antelope Valley
School District in 1994.
The following year they installed a John Deere-sourced CNG engine in a
demonstrator for Sand Diego California's Poway Unified
School
District. Two years later Blue Bird teamed with Electrosource, Inc. in
the development of an advanced battery system to power buses and other
large electric vehicles. In
1995, the company opened its first factory in
Mexico
(Blue Bird de Mexico) in Monterrey, Nuevo León, but they overestimated
the potential market and closed it down 6 years later (2001). In 1997, Blue Bird introduced the TC/1000 an
all-new
front-engined Type D bus that was equipped with smaller wheels
providing a flat floored opassenger compartment. Wanderlodge also
entered the competitive commercial highway coach
market with the
LTC-40 (Luxury Touring Coach, 40 feet long) which was produced in very
small numbers into 2003. In 1999, Blue Bird introduced the third
generation All
American, an all-new coach internally designated at the 'A3'. Available
in both front- (FE) and rear- (RE) engined versions it replaced the
TC/2000 RE, but not the TC/2000 FE and TC/1000 which continued into
production for several more years (2003/2001 respectively). The new All
American featured a
larger windshield, a redsigned drivers' compartment and a revoltionary
'dropped' front frame which reduced the size of the engine housing and
its
intrusion in
the driver's compartment. As the close of the decade approached,
Merrill
Lynch Capital Partners decided they no longer were interested in the
motor coach business (specifically Blue Bird's $237 million debt
service) and began searching for a buyer. In 1999,
Britain’s largest
transit coach supplier, Henlys Group PLC, purchased Blue Bird from
Merrill
Lynch Capital Partners for $428 million, which included assumption of
Blue
Bird’s $237 million of debt. At the time Henlys Group also controlled
UK’s
Transbus International (a joint venture with the Mayflower Group which
included
British bus manufacturers Plaxton, Northern Counties, Dennis and Walter
Alexander) as well as a 49% share in Quebec’s Prevost Car, which was
51% owned
by Volvo Group, who held a 10% stake in Henlys. Prevost Car owned Nova
Bus, a
transit coach operator with plants in Quebec and Roswell, New Mexico. Henlys chairman Norman Askew announced his pleasure with the acquisition in a prepared statement, stating:
Unfortunately problems in the UK, which were
precipitated by
the 2004 failure of the Mayflower Group, forced TransBus into
administration at
which time Henlys brought in a new chairman, David James, in an
attempt to
rescue Henlys North American operations, which remained profitable. James determined that Henlys' debt service,
in particular the
debt incurred by overpaying for Blue Bird, was unsustainable and
recommended a
complete restructuring of the firm. Volvo emerged the big winner in the
subsequent reorganization which saw it take complete control of Prevost
Car/Novabus and a 42.5% share in Peach County Holdings, a new holding
company
of which Blue Bird was a wholly-owned subsidiary. Another 42.5% share
in Peach
County was taken by Henlys’ creditors while the remaining 15% was split
among
Henlys pension fund and a group of Blue Bird executives. After a
bankruptcy
filing in 2006, Blue Bird was acquired by Cerberus Capital
Management. In the early 2000s Blue Bird’s commercial
bus production
increased and in 2002 it realigned its bus manufacturing facilities.
Blue Bird Midwest in Mount Pleasant,
Iowa was closed down and all school bus manufacturing operations were
relocated to
a new satellite facility in LaFayette, Georgia, with the Fort Valley
plants
reserved for the manufacture of transit buses and the Wanderlodge motor
coach.
In 2002, the poor-selling Q-Bus was replaced
by the Xcel102,
a high floor shuttle bus with a low two step entry, extra-wide
102” body and lengths of up to 40 feet. In 2003 Blue Bird introduced
two all-new low-floor transit buses, the Ultra
LF and Ultra LMB. Another cleverly packaged vehicle, the Ultras failed
to find an audience and the line was sold off to NABI (American Ikarus)
in 2007. What would soon become Blue Bird's most
successful offering ever, the first-generation Blue Bird Vision was
introduced
in 2003 as the
replacement for the conventional Blue Bird CV200 school bus, which
had utilized
third-party chassis from Freightliner, General Motors,
and Navistar. The Vision debuted Blue Bird's all-new
proprietary type C bus chassis although its most obvious feature was
its sharply
angled hood which allowed the driver to see small children passing in
front of the bus. Maneuverability
was increased through the introduction of a 50° turning angle (wheel
cut) which gave the Vision an industry-leading turning radius. Other
features included an all-new instrument panel
with large back-lit gauges and switches and a high roof-option which
included a totally flat floor, a ncessary option when the coach was
outfitted with a wheelchair lift which were designated as ''Handy
Buses'. Between 2003 to 2005, the Vision was equipped with a
Caterpillar C7 engine with a Cummins ISB engine becomgin an option in
2006. In 2005, the Mini Bird was discontinued
after a 28-year run which saw very few changes save for a
switch from round headlights to square headlights in the mid-1990s. Blue Bird borrowed a substantial amount of money to finance the development of the Vision, hoping that increased sales and profits would help finance the debt service. The Visions proved to be a success, but profits were offset by the failure of the firm's redesigned transit coaches. In September of 2005, Blue Bird concluded
that they were
financing more bank debt than they could support, and worked out a
restructuring plan. On January 3, 2006 Volvo Group, Peach
County
Holdings/Blue Bird’s majority shareholder, abandoned its plans to
purchase the
remainder of Blue Bird’s shares from the firm’s other investors,
prompting Blue
Bird’s lenders to seek out a new partner. To ensure that would happen,
on
January 26, 2006 Peach County Holdings and its subsidiary, Blue Bird
Body
Company filed voluntary provisions for relief under Chapter 11 of title
11 of
the Bankruptcy Code. The firm’s debtors were all proponents of the
Joint
Prepackaged Plan of Reorganization of Blue Bird Body and Certain
Affiliates,
dated January 24, 2006. The firm looked attractive to the New
York-based private
equity group Cerebus Capital Management, and during 2006, a Cerebus
subsidiary,
Traxis Group, B.V., headquartered in New Haven, Connecticut, purchased
a
controlling interest in Blue Bird from Volvo. On a buying spree,
Cerebus would
purchase Chrysler from Daimler-Benz in 2007. Blue Bird Canada, the firm’s last remaining
international
plant (located in Brantford,
Ontario) was closed August 10, 2007, the firm's other
Canadian assembly plant, located in St. Lin, Quebec, had closed 25
years earlier, in 1982. At
the end of 2007, Blue Bird ended all motorcoach production as the
rights to the
Wanderlodge were sold to Coachworks Holdings, Inc., a sister company to
Complete Coach Works Inc., a 22-year-old California company that
specialized in refurbishing and selling used transit buses. In April of 2009 Coachworks Holdings Inc., shut down production of luxury Blue Bird Wanderlodge buses and filed for bankruptcy protection. The firm's motor coach building assets were auctioned off at the former Wanderlodge plant at 10:00 AM on Thursday, October 15, 2009 by Hudson & Marshall, auctioneers. Steve Mitchell, president of Parliament Coach, Clearwater, Florida, purchased the firm’s intellectual property and rights to the Wanderlodge trade name for $55,000. After all useful parts and equipment was auctioned off, whatever remained was sold to the handful of scrap metal dealers that remained. What remained at day’s end was sold off the following Saturday, October 17, 2009. In 2008 Blue Bird established a second plant
in Fort Valley
(called Blue Bird
South) in order to fabricate various components required in the bus
assembly
process such as
seat frames, steps, sheet metal panels, bumpers, etc. For the 2008 model year, Blue Bird updated the exterior body design of the Vision. The sharply angled hood was replaced with a rounded design that offered a larger grille. Instead of sourcing parts from the All American, the new Vision sourced some of its parts (headlights, steering column, instrument cluster) from Volvo trucks; in the early 2000s, Volvo was one of the parent companies of Blue Bird. Along with the traditional manual and air-powered service doors, an electric-powered service door became an option. The new-generation 2010 All American, known
by the code name
"D3", was unveiled at an industry trade show in Myrtle Beach, South
Carolina on October 28, 2008. The exterior features the most
extensive
changes to the All American's body design in nearly 50 years. A notable feature of the D3's redesign was
the design of the
headlights: the 2010 All American is the first version since the 1950s
to have
dual headlights instead of quad headlights and it is the first All
American to
have round headlights since 1988. Inside, the driver's compartment was
completely redesigned for better visibility and ergonomics. Other
changes were intended to make the D3
more
passenger-friendly; the D3's roof has squared-off corners to increase
headroom
while standing up and a flat floor is available as an option in
front-engine
models. Both of these designs were influenced by the TC/1000 of
1997-2001. In 2009, a CNG (compressed naural gas - or propane) option was made available on the Vision. Equipped with a GMC 8.1L Vortec V8 engine, it was the first CNG school bus to be offered by a school bus manufacturer - previous school buses fueled by propane were all converted by third parties. In October 2009, Blue Bird further
streamlined its bus
production as it entered into another joint venture, Micro Bird, Inc.,
with Quebec's Girardin Autobus. The new plant assumed production of all
of Blue Bird's Type A (van-based cutaway) buses, company officials
stating the joint venture provided greater production capacity in
Fort Valley and a 'first-class'
Type A
bus for Blue Bird customers. In
August of 2010, Blue Bird closed down its LaFayette, Georgia Type C
school bus plant, which had been established back in 1982. All
conventional school bus manufacturing was consolidated at Fort
Valley and 350 employees were put out of work.The move resulted from
gradually declining school bus sales, the firm stating that moving the
Lafayette
operations
to Fort Valley would centralize all production, technical staff and
services
and would bolster efficiency. The move coincided with additional
investments in
manufacturing
technology and a revised production line layout, which helped to
further increase Fort Valley's capacity and efficiency. For 2011, Blue Bird made several detail
changes to the
Vision. On the outside, the exterior design of the rub rails were
changed. On
the inside, Blue Bird replaced the Volvo-sourced instrument cluster and
steering
column to increase parts commonality with the All American.
CNG-equipped buses switched from GM power to Ford's 6.8L V-10. At the end of 2012 Blue Bird introduced an updated rear-engined school bus , the 2014 All-American RE, to celebrate its 85 years in business. Previous updates to the model were done in 2010, 1999, 1989, 1977, and in 1962. Blue Bird also introduced a new front-engined transit/shuttle bus called the Sigma FE. Built under license from Quebec's Sigma Industries, a leading composite and metal products manufacturer, the coach is availible with para-transit capabilities and capacities of up to 89 persons. The rising star for Blue Bird has been its
propane autogas
school buses, sales of which have consistently grown year over year. In
2013 in
particular, the company’s propane bus sales multiplied compared to
2012. CEO Horlock noted that
customers were seeing multiple benefits with the propane buses, such as
lower
fuel and maintenance costs, quieter operation and more reliable
starting in
cold weather. While many school bus operations were initially buying one or two propane buses at a time, large orders have become more common in the past few years and between 2012 and 2014 the company’s total sales increased a record 40% and more than 200 new employees were added to the roster. One thing that continues to set Blue Bird
apart from its competitors is its strong Christian principles. Since
its founding in 1927, Blue Bird has
continually had a
chaplain on staff, and the position is currently occupied by Jay Jones
who's held the post for over eigt years. He explains... “The Luce
family made a covenant: keep God
at the center of
the company.” With a workforce of about 1,500 people, Blue
Bird remains the region's largest employer, staff members hail from
more than 40 of
Georgia’s 159
counties. In
October 2013, the revised 2015 Vision was
introduced. A detail change saw the deletion of
the Vision's
namesake Safety View Vision Panel, while added features included
clear-lens headlights and a new grille. Propane-fueled versions gained
the
option of an extended-range 98-gallon fuel tank. In November 2014, Blue Bird introduced the
Micro Bird T-Series, a Girardin-bodied Type A school bus, the first
school
bus body ever produced for the Ford Transit in North America. On September 23, 2014 the Associated Press
carried the following item:
Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp. will buy
School Bus
Holdings Inc., an indirect parent company of Blue Bird Corp.,
in a
deal worth $500 million. The deal includes $225 million in cash and
stock and the
assumption of $235 million of Blue Bird’s debt. Upon closing, Blue Bird
will be
taken public, according to a joint press release from the companies. According to Daniel J. Hennessy, chairman
and
CEO of Houston-based HCAC:
© 2015 Mark Theobald for Coachbuilt.com Appendix 1 Blue Bird Patents:
Motor vehicle body construction – US Pat.
No. 1948223 Filed
Nov 5, 1931 - Issued Feb 20, 1934 to Albert L Luce assigned to
Albert L
Luce Window sash fastener - US Pat. No. 2031897 -
Filed Nov 19,
1934 - Issued Feb 25, 1936 to Albert L Luce assigned to Albert
L Luce Structural steel vehicle body - US Pat. No.
2199886 - Filed
May 16, 1938 - Issued May 7, 1940 to Albert L Luce assigned to
Albert L
Luce Aisle seat - US Pat. No. 2621708 - Filed
Nov 9, 1949 -
Issued Dec 16, 1952 to Albert L. Luce Jr. assigned to Albert L.
Luce
Jr. Remote gearshift control adapter - US Pat.
No. 2686435 -
Filed Mar 19, 1953 - Issued Aug 17, 1954 to Albert L. Luce Jr.
assigned
to Albert L. Luce Jr. Swingable battery carrier – US Pat. No.
2709494 - Filed Jul
7, 1954 - Issued May 31, 1955 to George E. Luce assigned to
Blue Bird
Body Co Bus door operator with positive latch – US
Pat. No. 3722303 -
Filed Oct 26, 1971 - Issued March 27, 1973 to Wilbur Rump and
William L.
Ragan – assigned to Blue Bird Body Co Wheelchair holding device for vehicles - US
Pat. No. 4027747
- Filed Feb 10, 1976 - Issued Jun 7, 1977 to James H. Moorman,
Jr. – assigned
to Blue Bird Body Co Heating system with safety features - US
Pat. No. 5178323 -
Filed Jan 2, 1991 - Issued Jan 12, 1993 to Larry G.
Hanson assigned to
Blue Bird Body Co Emergency exit window - US Pat. No. 5169205
- Filed Aug 6,
1991 - Issued Dec 8, 1992 to David R. James assigned to Blue
Bird Body
Co Appendix 2 Blue Bird Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Wx11hn7d58 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZ3wIJ50HB4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m0QvHgbD27M https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFHqWsjiEUY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XISRM_jla-Q
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