Pope Manufacturing Company is a manufacturing company started by Albert Augustus Pope in Hartford, CT. Until 1896, it was the leading US producer of bicycles. Pope, Albert Augustus US industrialist (lived 1843 -1909) _ sometimes called Colonel Pope _ founded a successful cycle manufacturing group in 1879. ... Hartford is the capital of the state of Connecticut, in Hartford County. ...
Pope Manufacturing was an innovator in the use of stamping for the production of metal parts.
Hiram Percy Maxim was head engineer of the Motor Vehicle Department. Hiram Percy Maxim (September 2, 1869 - February 17, 1936) was founder of the American Radio Relay League and had the amateur call sign W1AW (now the ARRL home station call sign). ...
In 1897, Pope Manufacturing began production of an electric vehicle. By 1899, the company had produced over 500 vehicles. The Electric Vehicle division was spun off that year as the independent company Columbia Automobile Company but it was acquired by the Electric Vehicle Company by the end of the year. Electric Vehicle Company was a US automobile holding company and manufacturer. ...
Pope tried to re-enter the automobile manufacturing market in 1901 by acquiring a number of small firms, but the process was expensive and competition in the industry was heating up.
Pope declared bankruptcy is 1907 and abandoned the automobile industry in 1915.
Pope and his lieutenants loudly dissented, arguing that their actions brought stability and prosperity to what otherwise would have been commercial anarchy.
Pope's men came very close to gaining a perpetual monopoly over the American bicycle industry, and were defeated only by the United States Supreme Court and a handful of adversaries who vowed to fight him to the finish.
Although the agreement was dated March 19, the full text of the agreement that Pope was required to submit to the patent office was not sent until April 21, suggesting that the parties were tweaking the exact language of the document for a month after entering into their initial agreement.
The Standard Columbia, built by the PopeManufacturing Co., of Hartford Connecticut, and was available in models with front-wheel diameters ranging from 42 to 58 inches.
The PopeManufacturingCompany was founded by Albert A. Pope in the 1870s and was the first company to manufacture bicycles on American soil.
Pope was a proponent of the Good Roads Movement and was a principal sponsor of the League of American Wheelmen which was founded in 1880.