| Type | Automobile Manufacturing | 
|---|---|
| Industry | Automotive | 
| Genre | Electric and gasoline run-about called the Van Wagoner and later renamed to Syracuse | 
| Founded | 1899 | 
| Defunct | 1903 | 
| Fate | Manufactured by Syracuse Automobile Company that discontinued production in 1903. Later models produced by Century Motor Vehicle Company | 
| Headquarters | , | 
| Area served | United States | 
| Key people | William H. Van Wagoner, automobile designer | 
| Products | Automobiles | 
The Van Wagoner was an American electric automobile manufactured between 1899 and 1903 in Syracuse, New York, by the Syracuse Automobile Company. It was advertised as "built on a simple plan that does away with several levers and push buttons" and could purportedly be "controlled with one hand."[1]
During 1900 the model was renamed to the Syracuse and was produced under that name until 1903. There were a number of reported problems with the car in 1901 because the rear brake compressor periodically gave out.[1]
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