Anybody who knows trucks knows about International ... and it’s still cranking out semis 122 years after International Harvester was founded. It’s been owned by a company named Navistar ...
The last International Harvester Scout rolled off the assembly line in Fort Wayne, Indiana in 1980 after nearly two decades ...
The 1966 International Harvester Travelall, a favorite of John Wayne, is everything you'd expect from the legendary cowboy: ...
Volkswagen's Scout brand will unveil its electric pickup truck on October 24, featuring a design inspired by the Scout 2.
Fort Wayne, the birthplace of the International Harvester Scout, will be represented at the reveal of the new EV Scout by ...
International Harvester would go on to become a major player in not only tractor and agricultural equipment, but also military vehicles and heavy trucks. In November 1960, International Harvester ...
The rebranding reflects a new more dedicated focus on customer solutions beyond the trucks themselves and ... equipment firms to form International Harvester, which by 1910 was the fourth largest ...
The 120-year-old truck manufacturer is rebranding as ... the then Chicago-based International Harvester sold its first engine-powered farm tractor in 1906. It followed that up with an early ...
Navistar was formed in 1986 after the sell-off of International Harvester’s agricultural equipment business to Case Corporation. While trucks were built with the International badge, components ...
The lineage of Navistar and its corporate predecessors can be traced to the early 1900s when a merger resulted in the then-named International Harvester Co. But the story goes back even further.
Avarvarii Automotive Artworks (aka 'avarvarii' on social media) has taken a good, extended look at Volkswagen's plans for ...