In 1902, the Sandusky Automobile Company was incorporated
with James J. Hinde as President;
Edward J. Cable, Secretary; F.P. Zollinger, Treasurer; and J. S. Bennett, Vice
President. The factory was located on the west side of Sandusky ,
on Camp Street ,
and manufactured an automobile called
the Sandusky .
The Sandusky Automobile Company re-organized in 1904, and a
new line of automobile called the Courier was manufactured. The Brown family is pictured below in a “Courier” automobile
in 1904.
Within a year of its reorganization the Sandusky Automobile
Company went bankrupt. The building was later used by the Brown Clutch Company for
several years.
J. J. Hinde was associated with other successful businesses.
He was the senior partner in the Hinde and Dauch Paper Company until 1910. He
is said to have been the man who introduced the tractor to Henry Ford. His obituary in 1931 stated that he
was a “farmer, industrialist, and globe trotter.” He was long considered a
booster of the Sandusky community.
The Fall 1980 issue of the Northwest Ohio Quarterly,
available at the Archives
Research Center
of the Sandusky Library, features the Sandusky Automobile Company in its lead
article by John L. Butler. The second volume of From the Widow's Walk by Helen
Hansen and Virginia Steinemann also contains an article about Sandusky ’s early automobiles.