Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Two Trucking Fleets That Have Stood the Test of Time

We’re highlighting a couple of motor carriers that have been around just as long as HDT, if not longer. While the two companies have very different operations, they have in common a multi-generational family story.

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
December 23, 2022
Two Trucking Fleets That Have Stood the Test of Time

Two fleets that have stood the test of time have in common a multi-generational family story.

Graphic: HDT; Source: Johnson Feed, Oak Harbor

3 min to read


The 2022 year marked Heavy Duty Trucking’s 100th year of covering trucking. We’re highlighting a couple of motor carriers that have been around just as long, if not longer. While the two companies have very different operations, they have in common a multi-generational family story.

Ad Loading...

Johnson Feed Inc. — Canton, South Dakota

When Carl Johnson founded City Dray Line in 1920, the Prohibition era had just begun, Warren G. Harding was elected president, and car production was starting to ramp up to meet the demands of middle-class Americans. The trucking industry as we know it today was in its infancy. 

In fact, when City Dray Line first opened for business, the company used a horse and wagon to deliver coal and other supplies to farmers near the small town of Fairview in Southeast South Dakota. 

Ad Loading...

In the 1940s, Cliff Johnson, Carl’s son, started Johnson Feed, which was expanded to include local trucking. Cliff started with a single straight truck, and added two more, hauling grain, feed and livestock for local area farmers.

Johnson Feed Inc. grew from a horse-drawn wagon to the latest Kenworths through five generations of Johnsons.

Photos: Johnson Feed Inc.

In 1954, Darvin Johnson, Cliff’s son, returned home from the Navy to run the family business, adding semi-tractors to the fleet of straight trucks. Before long, there were five tractors running over-the-road. In 1983, Darv’s sons started joining him in business. In 1993, Johnson Feed moved into a warehouse, office, and shop in Canton, South Dakota.

 “The late ‘80s is when we really started to grow the trucking side of our business and we’ve been growing at a 10-15% clip every year since,” said Todd Johnson, one of Carl Johnson’s great-grandchildren and one of the owners of the company, along with Mitch Johnson (another great-grandson) and three of Todd’s children.

Today, Johnson Feed operates 200 Kenworth T680s and has contracts with 120 owner-operators. It runs more than 1,000 reefer, dry van, and hopper-bottom trailers. And the “family” has grown to more than 375.

Oak Harbor Freight Lines — Auburn, Washington

Oak Harbor Transfer, the forerunner to Oak Harbor Freight Lines, was founded in 1916 by Ben Koetje of Oak Harbor, Washington, a town on Whidbey Island that had been incorporated just a year earlier.

Ad Loading...

Originally, Oak Harbor was a local cartage carrier servicing the island. In 1936, John and Gus Vander Pol purchased the small carrier for $600 cash, and younger brother Henry joined them in 1937. They expanded beyond the island into Washington State. In 1942, the brothers purchased another small carrier called Oak Harbor Freight Lines, merging the two but keeping the latter name.

The brothers over time developed the carrier into a small less-than-truckload operation serving a number of counties in Western Washington. In 1974, Henry purchased the company in full, and his sons, Edward and David, began working with their father.

Oak Harbor began as a local transfer company and over the decades grew into a large regional LTL.

Photos: Oak Harbor anniversary video

With deregulation in 1980, Oak Harbor began its expansion, which continues today.

Today, the LTL carrier is based in Auburn, Washington, employing 1,700 people — about five times the city of Oak Harbor’s first census-counted population — and running 800 tractors and 2,400 trailers across five western states with 38 terminals.

Formerly owned and operated by David and Ed Vander Pol, the next generation of Vander Pols have taken up the mantle to run the company, with Eric Vander Pol and Dan Vander Pol acting as co-presidents.

Ad Loading...

Some other trucking companies that have hit their centennial in recent years include C.R. England of Salt Lake City, Utah; and Hogan Transports of St. Louis, Missouri.

Does your fleet share a long history?

HDT is looking for fleets that have been operating for at least 50 years and can share historical photos and information to highlight as we celebrate 100 years of covering the trucking industry. Contact Deborah Lockridge at dlockridge@truckinginfo.com.

This article appeared in the November/December 2022 issue of Heavy Duty Trucking.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Fleet Management

Geotab screen on AI concept background
Fleet ManagementJune 17, 2026

What Geotab's New AI Connector Means for Fleets

Fleets can now ask their usual AI assistants questions about maintenance, safety, fuel use, and vehicle performance, using their live Geotab data, and take action on the answers without leaving their preferred AI tool.

Read More →
Image of computer screen with BidBoardX interface

New C.H. Robinson Tool Opens Door to More Predictable Freight

BidBoardX lets carriers search, bid on, and secure committed freight opportunities through a single digital marketplace.

Read More →
Amazon electric cargo bike on New York City street
Fleet ManagementJune 15, 2026

New York City's Microhub Project is Delivering Results

Trucking, last-mile delivery companies, and environmental advocates like what they are seeing so far with New York's microhub program.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration of hourglass and trucks backed up to a dock
DriversJune 15, 2026

Why Truck Detention Keeps Costing Fleets Time and Money

A 2024 ATRI study found detention affects nearly 40% of truckload stops and costs the industry more than $15 billion annually. Despite the toll on drivers, fleets, and supply chains, the problem remains stubbornly persistent.

Read More →
Panel discussion
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeJune 12, 2026

Time is Running Out to Apply for Exclusive HDT Event

Heavy Duty Trucking Exchange brings fleet managers and suppliers together for the deeper conversations that lead to ideas, partnerships, and solutions. Time is running out to apply for the September event.

Read More →
Empty trailer with worker loading a pallet of cargo
Fleet ManagementJune 10, 2026

Amazon Launches Less-Than-Truckload Freight Offering for All Businesses   

This launch is the latest addition to Amazon Supply Chain Services, a portfolio of supply chain capabilities from Amazon, including freight, distribution, fulfillment, and parcel shipping.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Stacks of intermodal containers at port with truck driving between them

Import Cargo Volume to See Year-Over-Year Gain Again in June, Then Remain Below 2025 Levels Into Fall

After July, the report predicts a weakening in import volume as consumer uncertainty remains high and the impact of increasing inflation takes its toll.

Read More →
Equity Interest Auction
SponsoredJune 8, 2026

AUCTION OF EQUITY INTEREST IN HEAVY HAUL TRUCKING COMPANY!!

Mark your calendar: June 30, 2026 (10:00 a.m. PDT). A 37.5% ownership interest in MagnaTrans, LLC, a California limited liability company doing business as Magna Transportation Group, will be sold in an in-person and online auction to the highest bidder or bidders under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The Rancho Cucamonga-based heavy haul and over-dimensional trucking company operates across California, Oregon, and Arizona.

Read More →
Volvo OTA updates.

Volvo Trucks Adds Unattended Over-the-Air Software Update Capabilities

The latest evolution of Volvo’s over-the-air update technology allows software updates to run while trucks are parked, helping fleets keep vehicles current without disrupting operations.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Podcast thumbnail illustration
Fleet ManagementJune 4, 2026

How Waste Connections is Using Data, Telematics, and AI

How do you manage and maintain more than 18,000 connected trucks? Data. Lots of it.

Read More →