Columbia Motors
Columbia Motors was a Detroit, Michigan, United States based automobile manufacturer that produced automobiles from 1916 to 1924.
![](../I/ColumbiaSixVenice1920.jpg.webp)
![](../I/Columbia_Motors_Comp_1921.jpg.webp)
Columbia Motors was incorporated in 1916, with John George Bayerline as company president and William E. Metzger as vice-president.[1] Bayerline was the former president and general manager of the King Motor Car Company[2] and former general manager and founder of the Warren Motor Car Company.[3] Prior to founding Columbia, Metzger was a founder of the E-M-F Company which was later purchased by the Studebaker Corporation.
Columbia Motors produced two models powered by Continental six-cylinder engines including the popular Columbia Six. In 1916, Columbia bought Argo Electric. A 1916 news item in the journal Horseless Age presents a "Columbia Touring Car".[4] In 1923, Columbia acquired Liberty Motor Car.
References
- Wise, David Burgess, Encyclopedia of Automobiles, ISBN 0-7858-1106-0
- "Officials of the Columbia Motors Co. of Detroit, Makers of the Columbia Six". Motor West. XXVII (11): 24. September 15, 1917. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
- "Artemas Ward, Jr., Now Heads King Motor Car". Michigan Manufacturer Financial Record. 15 (25). June 19, 1915. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
- "Detroit's Latest Warren-Detroit". The Automobile. 21 (13): 539. September 23, 1909.
- Editorial staff (April 1, 1916), "The new Columbia Touring Car", Horseless Age, 37 (7): 279.