The Templar

23-Templar-Model-4-45_DV-10-GG_001

The Templar Automobile Company was a manufacturer of automobiles in Lakewood, Ohio from 1917 to 1924. The company was named after the Knights Templar and used a Maltese Cross as an emblem.The Templar Emblem

Advertising themselves as “The pioneer builder of quality small cars”, the first Templar car had a four-cylinder, overhead-valve engine of 3.2 liters capacity coupled to a three-speed transmission mounted in a chassis with a 118-inch wheelbase. The entry of the United States into World War I severely curtailed production, the company making artillery shells for the war effort. Only around 150 cars were made in 1918. Body styles included a coupe with coachwork by Leon Rubay out of Cleveland at US $4250, a Victoria Elite tourer, a 3-door sedan and a sports model called the Sportette at US$2400. The cars were extremely well equipped with compass and Kodak camera as standard equipment.

23-Templar-Model-4-45_DV-10-GG_005Full production resumed in 1919 with 3 body types, the coupe, Sportette and sedan. 1800 cars were built by the 900 employees. While the post war boom continued, the company could sell every car it made and Templar even increased prices in 1920 and 1921. The 1921 coupe, still basically the 1917 car, cost US$3785, as did the five-passenger sedan, while the five-seat tourer, four-passenger Sportette, and two-seat touring roadster were US$2885.

Competition was increasing, so in 1922, two cheaper models were announced, a roadster and a Deluxe Sports at US$1985. Production was severely affected following a major fire which had swept through the works in December 1921 and receivers were appointed in October 1922.

23-Templar-Model-4-45_DV-10-GG_007The company was re-financed and became the Templar Motor Car Company in 1923, and work started on a six-cylinder engine. The new models were based around a 122-inch wheelbase frame with a range of four- and five-seat bodies. Four-wheel brakes were also introduced. However, only 125 cars were sold in 1923.

By late 1924 it seems the money ran out, and the company passed into the ownership of a local bank who had called in a loan, and production ceased.

For more information see: http://templarmotors.com/alice.shtml