The Overland Co. was a United States based automobile manufacturer.
The Overland Automobile "runabout" was founded by Claude Cox, a graduate of
Rose Polytechnic Institute, while he was employed by Standard Wheel Company
of Terre Haute, Indiana, USA, in 1903. In 1905, Standard Wheel allowed Cox to
relocate the Overland Automobile Company to Indianapolis, Indiana, and he got
a partner.
In 1908, Overland Motors was purchased by John North Willys. In 1912, it was
renamed Willys-Overland.
Overlands continued to be produced until 1926 when the marque was succeeded
by the Willys Whippet.
The last vestige of the Overland automobile empire remains in the form of
bricks spelling out "Overland" in the smoke stacks at the Toledo factory
that once formed the core of Willys automotive empire. But the name would
come back when DaimlerChrysler introduced the Overland name for a trim
package on the 2003 - present Jeep Grand Cherokee. The badging is a recreation
of the Overland nameplate from the early twentieth century...