Heritage / The Name
THE
BANTAM
NAME
A name that meant small, scrappy, and ready to fight. A name that built the Jeep. A name that never forgot what it started.
When a company’s name contains the word American, the products they sell in the USA must be built in the USA. No two ways about it.
Etymology
WHERE THE NAME COMES FROM
A bantam is a breed of small domestic fowl known for one thing above all others: it fights well above its weight. Small in stature. Outsized in attitude. Willing to take on anything larger — and win.
Roy Evans knew exactly what he was naming when he founded the American Bantam Car Company in Butler, Pennsylvania in 1935. He was building a small car in a world dominated by large ones. He was a smaller company in a market run by giants — Ford, General Motors, Chrysler. The name was not accidental. It was a declaration.
Small company. Serious vehicle. Willing to fight anyone for the right to build it.
2. A person or thing that is small, spirited, and not to be underestimated.
3. In competitive sports: a weight class for those who overcome a size disadvantage through speed, endurance, and technique.
What It Means
THE TRAITS THAT DEFINE US
In 1940, the U.S. Army needed a reconnaissance vehicle — and needed it in 49 days. They asked three companies. Only American Bantam delivered on time. On budget. Ready to go to war.
That’s not luck. That’s Bantam.
Today’s BRC-50 Marshall™ carries the same philosophy: not the biggest vehicle on the road, not the most expensive. Just the most capable for its price — built by people who have something to prove.
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Small in SizeCompact enough to go where full-sizes can’t. Designed to fit the job, not fill a parking space.
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Outsized in Capability4,222 lbs payload in a compact footprint. More than most 3/4-ton trucks. Don’t judge by the size.
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Ready to FightIn 1940 we competed against far larger manufacturers and delivered first. In 2026, we’re doing it again.
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American by Name and NatureThe word American is in our name. That’s not marketing. That’s a legal and moral obligation we take seriously.
September 23, 1940 — Butler, Pennsylvania
THE DAY THE NAME PROVED ITSELF
The Army needed a reconnaissance vehicle and gave three manufacturers the same assignment. The vehicle had to weigh under 1,300 lbs, carry three men and a machine gun, and be ready to test in 49 days. American Bantam was the smallest of the three companies. American Bantam was the only one that delivered on time. The vehicle they submitted became the foundation of every Jeep that followed — and helped win a World War. The world gave the credit to Willys-Overland. American Bantam kept the name.
The Record
87 YEARS IN THE MAKING
“The world remembers Willys.
We remember who built the first one.”
American Bantam Car Corp. — Est. Butler, Pennsylvania, 1935