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1866 |
Carl Benz becomes draftsman and designer at a scales factory in Mannheim |
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1871 |
Benz and August Ritter set up a mechanical workshop on the plot known as T 6, 11 in Mannheim |
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1879 |
Benz two-stroke engine |
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1882 |
Gasmotoren-Fabrik Mannheim founded with financial backing from Emil Bühler |
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1883 |
Benz, Rose and Eßlinger found Benz & Cie., Rheinische Gasmotoren-Fabrik |
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1886 |
New factory building goes up in Waldhofstraße |
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1886 |
German Patent No. 37435 awarded for the Benz patent motor car |
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1887 |
Move to new plant premises, Waldhofstraße 24 |
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1888 |
Bertha Benz’s long-distance journey from Mannheim to Pforzheim and back |
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1893 |
Technical laboratory for developing and testing cars |
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1895 |
Benz builds the world’s first motorized bus for regular service |
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1899 |
Benz & Cie., Rheinische Gasmotoren-Fabrik in Mannheim converts to a joint stock company |
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1900 |
Benz & Cie. becomes the world’s leading car manufacturer |
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1903 |
Carl Benz steps down from company management, returning in 1904 to take a seat on the supervisory board |
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1905 |
Benz & Cie. returns to profitability after economic crisis |
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1906 |
Benz & Cie. purchases plot measuring 311,180 square meters on the Luzenberg in Mannheim-Waldhof for a new plant destined for car production |
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1907 |
Construction work begins based on plans by the architect Albert Speer |
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1907 |
Fritz Erle wins the Herkomer Trial in a 50 hp car |
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1908 |
Official opening of new plant on October 12 |
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1909 |
Move to new premises completed successfully |
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1911 |
Following three-year development work, Mannheim plant begins production of aircraft engines |
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1911 |
Company name changed to Benz & Cie., Rheinische Automobil- und Motorenfabrik AG |
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1912 |
New repair workshop built using reinforced concrete |
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1914 |
Benz shares launched on Mannheim stock market |
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1915 |
15 women employed at the Mannheim plant for first time |
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1916 |
Training department established |
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1921 |
Department for stationary engines sold off as Motoren-Werke Mannheim |
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1923 |
Series production of a four-cylinder diesel engine for tractors and commercial vehicles |
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1924 |
Joint venture between Benz & Cie. and DMG |
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1925 |
City of Mannheim renames two streets bordering former plant Carl-Benz-Straße |
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1926 |
TH Hanover pays tribute to Carl Benz by driving to Ladenburg via Mannheim in a Benz Comfortable of 1895 |
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1926 |
Merger of DMG and Benz & Cie. |
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1929 |
Rumors about possible plant closure in Mannheim |
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1930 |
Wave of redundancies begins; by 1932 the global economic crisis accounts for the loss of almost 90 percent of all jobs at the plant |
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1933 |
Reopening of the foundry, closed since 1930, and full employment returns for production of the Mercedes-Benz Mannheim and Nürburg models |
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1937 |
Mannheim plant launches truck production |
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1939 |
During the Second World War, the plant employs 448 prisoners-of-war and forced laborers from concentration camps, as well as 1,249 civilian foreign workers |
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1945 |
US army occupies plant on March 23 |
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1945 |
In spite of 20 percent of all facilities being destroyed, production of the three-ton L 701 truck starts up again in June 1945 |
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1949 |
Introduction of new Mercedes L 3250 truck from Mannheim |
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1949 |
Production start-up for new 300 engine series |
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1949 |
The O 3500 is the first bus to come out of post-war Mannheim production |
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1949 |
Remanufacturing of engines for commercial vehicles begins |
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1951 |
All Mercedes-Benz bus production concentrated at Mannheim |
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1953 |
Plant introduces vocational school education |
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1953 |
L 4500 truck presented at the IAA |
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1954 |
The O 321 H is the first bus to feature the semi-integral design approach of a highly rigid frame floor assembly welded to the body |
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1954 |
Mannheim plant introduces plant suggestions scheme |
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1955 |
Mannheim is Europe’s largest bus plant |
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1957 |
Premiere of the first modern large-capacity bus by Mercedes-Benz, the O 317 |
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1960 |
Largest commercial vehicle plant on the continent |
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1965 |
Truck production moved from Mannheim to Wörth |
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1965 |
Opening of new foundry |
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1968 |
Differentiation of bus series into coaches and urban buses |
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1970 |
Construction of new production halls for engine assembly |
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1972 |
Production start-up for new generation of commercial vehicle diesel engines, the OM 400 series |
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1974 |
Enlargement of vocational college by the addition of seven new teaching rooms in lightweight construction |
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1977 |
Acquisition of flywheel and gear rim production from Untertürkheim and part of textile production from Sindelfingen |
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1978 |
Introduction of paint robots in engine assembly |
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1978 |
Series production of crankcase core in “cold box” process at the new core shop |
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1979 |
The public road Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Straße becomes part of the plant premises; number of western plant gates cut from six to one |
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1981 |
Construction of a new administration building |
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1983 |
Production of the two-millionth commercial vehicle engine since 1949 |
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1983 |
Conversion to district heating supply |
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1984 |
Modernization of the bus plant and foundry |
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1984 |
O 405 – second generation of standard bus |
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1985 |
O 407 – new standardized inter-urban bus |
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1988 |
Large-scale production starts of the 600 engine series |
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1989 |
O 405 N – almost ground-level entry in an urban bus |
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1990 |
Cataphoretic dip priming used in bus production |
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1991 |
O 404 – a pooling of top technology |
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1995 |
Foundation of EvoBus GmbH with Mercedes-Benz and Setra |
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1995 |
100th anniversary of the bus |
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1996 |
Presentation of the Innovisia research vehicle, a bus featuring technology of the future |
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1996 |
Production launch of the Integro interurban bus |
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1996 |
Introduction of the first fuel cell powered bus NEBUS based on the O 405 |
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1996 |
Presentation of the Cito urban midibus |
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1996 |
Large-scale production of the OM 904 LA engine series and engines from the 500 series |
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1997 |
Premiere of the innovative Citaro regular service bus |
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1999 |
New Mercedes-Benz Travego touring coach |
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1999 |
Expansion of the cataphoretic dip priming facility |
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1999 |
50th anniversary of remanufactured engines from Mannheim and 300 engine series |
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2001 |
New delivery hall |
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2001 |
Official opening of the design studio for Mercedes-Benz Buses |
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2001 |
Premiere of the new interurban Conecto H bus |
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2004 |
Opening of used bus center |
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2005 |
Introduction of Citaro low-entry vehicle |
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2007 |
Investment in the “synchronous factory” with a view to modernizing production |
|
2007 |
Renamed “Mercedes-Benz Mannheim – a plant of Daimler AG” |
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2008 |
Plant visited by Federal Research Minister Dr. Annette Schavan |