Gautier–Wehrlé was a French manufacturer of steam, petrol and electric powered vehicles from 1894-1900.
History
The company 'Rossel, Gautier et Wehrlé' of Paris was founded in 1894 to produce steam powered automobiles, and was renamed Société Centrale in 1896. The founders were Édouard Rossel, Charles Gautier, and Xavier Wehrlé.[1][2] Production ceased in 1900. Charles Gautier later founded Gautier et Cie.
Vehicles
The first car was entered in the 1894 Paris–Rouen contest where it finished in 16th place after completing the 127 km in 12 hours 24 minutes. Two cars were entered in the Paris–Bordeaux–Paris but neither finished.
In 1896, the 8 hp model used a gasoline engine, three-speed transmission and shaft drive. In 1898 they offered several single-cylinder models from 5 hp to 12 hp, a model with a two-cylinder engine, and electric cars.
Licensing
Linon from Belgium made some models under license.
References
- Édouard Rossel Wikipédia, retrieved April 8, 2026^
- British patent 17221 of 1896 for improvements to motor vehicles, by Gautier and Wehrlé^