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Topic: Superior Coach Company


  
  Superior Coaches | History
As sales grew, the company constructed a new 180,000 square foot Lima plant in 1995 which is where Superior Coaches funeral coaches and six-door limousines are built today on Cadillac and Lincoln chassis.
In 1999, the Company acquired the Eureka Coach and Miller-Meteor funeral vehicle lines and the Company name was changed to Accubuilt in 2000.
Today, as we enter the third millennium, Superior Coaches is recognized as the leader in traditional styling in its design and manufacture of funeral coaches and limousines.
www.superiorcoaches.com /history.asp   (521 words)

  
  Coachbult.com - Superior Motor Coach Co., Superior Body Co.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Superior produced a new box-shaped 25-passenger forward control school body that was fabricated in sections using an all-steel framework covered by an aluminum skin.
Superior's first complete bus was an integral type known as the Avenue, with a Ford V-8 rear-mounted engine, put on the market in 1938 and joined in the next year by an over-the-road version called the Rocket.
Superior had been producing school buses as well as professional cars during the 1930s and 1940s and unlike some of their competition, put them in position to profit from lucrative war contracts.
www.coachbuilt.com /bui/s/superior/superior.htm   (3752 words)

  
  Spartanburg SC | GoUpstate.com | Spartanburg Herald-Journal   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Superior Coach was once a school bus body and professional car manufacturer, but today it focuses on building hearses and is located in Lima in Allen County, Ohio.
In 1969, Superior Coach Company was acquired by a industrial conglomerate and auto parts maker, the Toledo, Ohio-based Sheller-Globe Corporation.
By 1980, Superior was one of the big six school bus body manufacturing companies in the United States, competing with Blue Bird Body Company, Carpenter Body Company, Thomas Built Buses, Inc., Ward Body Company, and Wayne Corporation, as well as Gillig Bros. and Crown Coach Corporation (manufacturers which traded primarily on the West Coast).
www.goupstate.com /apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=NEWS&template=wiki&text=Superior_Coach_Company   (858 words)

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