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Gehl Company
Type Public
Founded 1859
Headquarters West Bend, WI, USA
Key people William D. Gehl, CEO & Chairman
Industry Heavy equipment
Products Construction & Agriculture Machinery
Revenue (turnover) increaseUS$457.6 million (2007)[1]
Net income increaseUS$24.9 million (2007)[1]
Employees 500
Parent Manitou
Website http://www.gehl.com/

Gehl Company is a United States-based corporation headquartered in West Bend, Wisconsin, USA. Founded by Louis Lucas in 1859, Gehl is a manufacturer of heavy equipment used worldwide in construction and agricultural markets. Their product line includes skid steer loaders, as well as asphalt pavers, compact excavators and telehandlers.[2] Gehl is also North America's largest non-tractor maker of agricultural machinery. [3] The Gehl Company also owns the rights to manufacture Mustang skid steer loaders, and distributes Takeuchi Compact Track Loaders under the names Gehl and Mustang. Gehl was acquired in September 2008 for $30 a share by the French equipment maker Manitou.[4] This allows the company to expand its telehandler market into the US and enter several new equipment markets.[2][5] The company was delisted from NASDAQ under its ticker symbol GEHL.

History

Details of the companies history required - can you help expand this section ?

Mustang brand

Gehl owns the Mustang brand of skid steer loaders which started out being manufactured by the Owatonna Manufacturing Company of Minnesota. Owatonna Mfg was one of the first manufactures of skid steers in the USA starting production in 1965.[6] Gehl bought the Mustang Manufacturing Company in 1988 to add to it's existing skid steer loader lines and manufacturing capacity.

Model range

Over the years, Gehl has produced various implements, as well as the skid-steers and construction equipment.

Skid-steer Loaders

Gallery

Sponsorships

In 2007, Gehl and the Milwaukee Brewers announced a naming rights deal for a group party club area in Miller Park. [7]

See also

References

External links



Smallwikipedialogo This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Gehl. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia


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