T.A. Peterman
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T.A. Peterman | |
|---|---|
| Born | March 22, 1893 |
| Died | November 16, 1944 (aged 51) |
| Known for | Founding the Peterbilt Motors Company. |
T.A. Peterman, short for Theodore Alfred "Al" Peterman, was the founder of Peterbilt Motors Company.
Theodore Alfred Peterman was born on March 22, 1893 to Theodore F. Peterman, a German and the founder of Peterman Manufacturing Company, and his mother, Katherine Corcoran.[1] The Roblin Roll of Non-Reservation Indians in Western Washington (1919) lists Theodore Alfred Peterman as having Cowlitz ancestry through his mother.[2][non-primary source needed]
Early career
Peterman's early business career was in logging and timber in Washington state. He owned a mill in Tacoma that produced plywood. For company use, he began to invest in modifying and rebuilding surplus military vehicles and older logging trucks. One early invention, in association with an employee Ed Valentine, was the use of a drum brake not cooled by water. He lived in Morton, Washington during the 1930s, opening a logging company specifically for his mill. During his time in Morton, Peterman introduced another advancement, the use of trailer rollers to allow logs to shift during transport, preventing momentum from carrying trucks off the road during cornering. Peterman, who went by the nickname Al, was described as tall and "rangy", and reputed by townspeople to be kind and a "renaissance man in the logging world." He left Morton in 1940.[3]