International Harvester is credited by some with inventing the SUV before the term ever existed with its rugged Scout vehicles, which still have a cult around the country and especially in the ...
With VW resurrecting the Scout name for an all-electric off-road brand, what better time to learn its history?
The first of Volkswagen's resurrected Scout models get body-on-frame construction, a live rear axle, and tons of capability.
Jim Chapman Jul 31, 2021 Jul 31, 2021 Updated Jun 3, 2022 Jerry Betley became teary-eyed as he stared at vintage International Harvester vehicles that officials hope will someday be part of a museum. ...
The International Harvester Company was an iconic brand for rural America since 1902, when several smaller companies merged to form the conglomerate. Long associated with commercial trucks and farm ...
Vehicles from across the nation traveled to the Fort Wayne area late this week with one thing in common: they were made by International Harvester. Dennis Chan from California brought five ...
NEW HAVEN, Ind. (WANE) – The sixth annual Harvester Homecoming Festival brings car buffs from across the country together to admire classic International Harvester vehicles. Attendees are able to walk ...
Established in 1902, International Harvester was one of America's largest manufacturers of agricultural equipment. The Chicago-based company is also famous for the Scout, the small SUV that prompted ...
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) – International Harvester has a long-standing history in the city of Fort Wayne, producing the first trucks at the local plant in 1923 and going on to roll more than a million ...
The Wolfsburg-based automaker had been mulling the step for about a year in what could be the latest return of a vintage name for a planned EV brand, TechCrunch reports. The first models, expected to ...
December is Celebration Month here at autoevolution, and one important segment of our coverage has to do with pickup trucks. We tried to find as many of them as possible, and as varied, but we were ...
In Fort Wayne, Indiana, you can't get run over except by someone who once worked at International Harvester, or had a relative that did. More than 33 years after that company ceased to exist, many of ...