Sterling was originally a company bought by White in 1953 and the name was retired in 1955. The name was resurrected in 1997, when Daimler A.G. (parent company of Mercedes-Benz, Freightliner, Western Star, Thomas Built Buses, and until 2007, Chrysler Group) bought out Ford's heavy truck division. They went out of production in 2009, and the last Sterling factory was shut down in 2010.
No, the Sterling car was built in Great Britain and the Sterling Sports Car is a kit car built in the U.S. Sterling trucks were built in the U.S. Honda had no interest in any of these companies.
You can find Sterling trucks for sale using the dealer locator on the official Sterling Trucks website. You can also find them from personal sellers on the auto section of the eBay website.
Sterling Trucks used to manufacture heavy duty trucks, but it seems now they have closed. They were based in Portland, Oregon. they were bought and rebranded in 1997.
Ernest R. Sternberg has written: 'History of Sterling trucks' -- subject(s): History, Sterling Motor Truck Company, Sterling trucks 'A history of motor truck development' -- subject(s): History, Trucks
"Rascal" by Sterling North was first published in 1963.
You can foind Sterling Trucks dealers in their web site: http://www.sterlingtrucks.com/dealers/default.asp
On September 18 in the year 1964
Caterpillar and John Deere are two US made brands. For road tractors (semi trucks), Freightliner, Western Star, Sterling, Mack, Volvo (US), Peterbilt, and Kenworth are made in the US, although usually not 100% Freightliner, Western Star, and Sterling are owned by Daimler-Benz. Volvo Trucks USA and Mack are owned by Volvo A.B. of Sweden. Peterbilt and Kenworth are owned by US-based PACCAR, Inc.
It is unknown, due to the fact the first 'Trucks' were made in Roman times.
When they first made trucks in the early 1900s.
I believe it was around 3,600
Well Ford and General Motors made the first trucks, but by today's standards they are not that great...