Ternstedt Rejoins Fisher Body
   DETROIT, MICH., Nov. 4, 1968--  Ternstedt and Fisher Body Division-- separated two decades ago when Ternstedt was made a separate General Motors division-- are being united again.
    Chairman of the Board James M. Roche announced today that consolidation of Ternstedt into Fisher Body Division will permit increased coordination of automotive body design and engineering.  The headquarters of the two divisions now face each other across one of the Technical Center lakes.
    Ternstedt was named after its founder, Alvar K. Ternstedt, inventor of the first practical car window regulator. A native of Sweden, he applied for a patent on his invention in 1911 but it was not granted until 1916.
    The regulator utilized a chain and sprocket mechanism that offered greater east of operation than any previous device.  Ternstedt needed financial backing to start his own company so in 1917 he invited the Fishers and several others to join him.  At that time, the Fisher organization was already the largest body-building firm in the world.
    At a meeting in Detroit on April 17, 1917, the Ternstedt Manufacturing Co. was incorporated.  Ternstedt was elected chairman.  The seven other directors were four of the Fisher brothers and three  other major Fisher Body Company shareholders.
     But Ternstedt didn't live long enough to enjoy the success of his venture. He died six months later and in 1920, Fisher Body acquired the Ternstedt firm.
    When Fisher Body became a division of GM in 1926, Ternstedt became a division within Fisher Body.  Ternstedt became a separate division in 1948 and now, 20 years later, is now rejoining Fisher Body.
    Alvar Ternstedt lived long enough to start manufacturing operations at a building located at Fort Street and Livernois in Detroit, site of the present Fisher Body Fort Street Plant.  That remained the Ternstedt headquarters until a new divisional office building on the Tech Center site in 1962.
    At present, Ternstedt operates seven plants and has nearly 25,000 employees.  There are 400 Ternstedt products on the average GM car such as door handles, window regulators,  locks, wheel covers and many of the  brightly-plated trim parts found on vehicles. 
   

   
Ternstedt Division of Fisher Body made the cover of Automotive Industries magazine in 1924.
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