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Brennan Motor Manufacturing Company

Brennan Motor Manufacturing Company
Automobile Manufacturing, Truck manufacturing, Engine manufacturing
Industry Automotive, Engine manufacture
Genre Touring cars, Trucks, Automobile engines, Marine engines
Fate Son of founder, retired
Founded 1897
Founder Patrick H. Brennan (1865 - 1934)
Defunct 1972
Headquarters Syracuse, New York, United States
Area served
United States
Key people
Emmett A. Brennan (born 1890), president until 1972
Products Automobiles
Engines
Subsidiaries Automobiles (1902-1908)

Brennan Motor Manufacturing Company (1897–1972) of Syracuse, New York, was an early manufacturer of automobile engines. From 1902 until 1908, the company produced the Brennan automobile however, after the demise of the automobile enterprise, the company again turned their focus to automobile engines and later marine engines. They were in business for 75 years when the company closed its doors in 1972.

The company was founded in 1897 by Patrick H. Brennan (1865 - January 22, 1934) and was known as Brennan Motor Manufacturing Company or Brennan Motor Company. The company motto was "Simplicity and durability."

Brennan was first engaged in the manufacture of bicycles before turning to construction of automobiles. Eldest son, Emmett A. Brennan (born 1890), took control of the company in 1934 when his father died and was president of the establishment until July 1972, when he retired.

For a brief period from 1902 until 1908, the company produced the Brennan automobile. The firm would take up auto manufacturing "occasionally, perhaps when demand was slow." The auto was similar to what was a "fairly standard American pattern" with the power unit mid-mounted under the floor and central chain transmission; however, Brennan "took the drive through a sliding gearbox, rather than an epicyclic system." Each auto was fitted with a horizontally-opposed two-cylinder engine. The rest of the vehicle had a more conventional design with full-elliptic springs, right-hand drive and channel or angle iron section chassis.

The 1902 "touring car" came complete with a 15-horsepower motor and a double opposed cylinder, horizontal motor and weighed 1,950 pounds. Ignition was by jump spark supplied by dry batteries. Two sets of batteries were carried under the bonnet and front of the dash.

The company was "pronounced the best of its kind" at the Chicago Show in June 1902, as a result of years of experience and the satisfactory use from Maine to California.

In November 1902, Brennan was an exhibitor at the Madison Square Garden Show in New York City. The event included 114 firms such as Century Motor Vehicle Company of Syracuse, Buckmobile Company of Utica, New York and H. H. Franklin Manufacturing Company, also of Syracuse.

In March 1908, an automobile gear and 28-horsepower engine for a light touring car were shipped from Syracuse to Java in the East Indies. The machine was from the Brennan factory and it was consigned to a Java importer. The body for the vehicle was built in Java. The machine was shipped by rail to New York City and from there by water to its final destination.


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