JOHN CARROLL
Inroduction: Driving the Legend
Chronology
1. Testing Times
2. British & Allied Army Jeeps
3. US Army Jeeps
4. Amphibious Jeeps
5. Experimental Jeeps
6. The Postwar Jeeps
7. Jeep Station Wagon
8. Jeep Trucks
9. Licence-built Jeeps
Acknowledgements
Pictures Credits
Index
This illustrated account of the extraordinary career of the Jeep takes the story from the early 1940s to the turn of the century. Carroll recalls the wartime origins of this, the most successful offroad vehicle of all time, and traces its military and civilian evolution over the following 60 years. The historical photographs he has collected give a keen insight into the thinking behind the Jeep and its consistant development into the rugged, functional offroad machine it has become. This text should be of interest to Jeep owners and enthusiasts, and to all who are interested in the story of four-wheel drive. The Jeep was conceived as a simple, robust, light utility vehicle for the Allied armies of World War II. Since then, it has efficiently served the same purpose during subsequent conflicts all over the world, notably in Korea and Vietnam. Carroll illustrates this familiar aspect of the story with unusual shots of the Jeep at war in the Pacific, Britain, mainland Europe and the Far East. He also shows how, after World War II, the Jeep continued as a functional, go-anywhere vehicle for farmers, ranchers and any individuals and organizations who lived or worked off the beaten track.