Clark Material Handling Company

Clark Material Handling Company (or CMHC) is a manufacturer of forklift trucks based in Lexington, Kentucky. The company has a production plant in Changwon, South Korea. Clark currently (2018) offers some 304 different models.[1] According to the company, there are some 350,000 Clark forklift trucks currently in operation around the world.[2] Clark is credited with having invented the world's first truck with a hydraulic lifting mechanism in 1920, the Truclift, the forerunner to modern forklift trucks.

Clark Material Handling Company
Formerly
Clark Tructractor Company
Manufacturing
Headquarters
Lexington, Kentucky
,
United States
Key people
  • Dennis Lawrence
    President and CEO
  • Scott Johnson
    Vice President of Sales & Marketing
  • Chuck Moratz
    Senior Vice President Global Engineering
  • Michael Grossman
    Executive Vice President & General Counsel
  • Dan Kaiser
    Director of Finance & Controller
ProductsMaterial handling trucks and supplies
Number of employees
230
Parent
Websitewww.clarkmhc.com
German Clark forklift CY100PD

The company started as a manufacturer of transmissions and axles for the automobile industry. Since 2003, Clark has been owned by the Young An Hat Company of Korea.

Company facts

  • Clark Material Handling Company began as a division of Clark Equipment Company in 1919.[3]
  • In 1953 the factory in Mülheim an der Ruhr was opened.
  • In 1997 Clark built its 1,000,000 (millionth) forklift.
  • In 2017 Clark celebrated its 100th year in business.

Factories

The Clark company has factories in Changwon (South Korea), Quingdao (China), Vietnam, and another one in Lexington, Kentucky.

gollark: We need horrendously messy ones too.
gollark: I can't wait to see the AP in about two days.
gollark: Or which people actually like.
gollark: Or which aren't common.
gollark: Except things you're short on.

See also

References

  1. Clark Full Line Trucks
  2. Clark Company Key Facts
  3. "history". Clark. Archived from the original on 7 January 2017. Retrieved 4 August 2020.

Media related to Clark vehicles at Wikimedia Commons


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