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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

Old tractors are important!!!

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Bryan in Michig

08-12-2003 12:23:39




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One of the local shows in my area recently asked me to create a flier, or handout of somekind, to give to show goers that would explain the importance of antique farm machinery to the general public, especially those people that have never farmed before. So, I wrote the following essay.

I wanted to post it here and get some feedback from the antique engine and tractor community before we get some printed up. If I'm making any mistakes, I want to know.

Sorry, in know it's long --

Why you should care about what you see here:

Before 1920, most of the citizens of the United States were engaged in agriculture as their full-time job, but in most cases, it wasn’t a job like you or your parents have today – it was called subsistence farming, and it’s what a person did to feed and shelter their family. Most of the time, it involved only a modest profit, if any, but it did involve most members of the family who were old enough to work. Including the women. Livestock was raised for food and slaughtered at home. Vegetables were grown and preserved at home. Clothes were often made at home. Any cash from the sale of crops was used to buy flour, cloth, and other staples. Toys were more likely made than bought, and children sometimes had to quit school when they were old enough to work.

But, something happened in the 1920s and 1930s to change all that. Something happened that made it possible for fewer people to have to farm for a living. Something happened that gave you and I a choice our ancestors never had – we CAN be farmers, but we don’t HAVE to be. Not anymore. In the 1920s and 1930s the gasoline traction engine, or tractor, was perfected. The lumbering and expensive steam engines of the 19th century were replaced with nimble and affordable tractors that most farmers could manage to pay for. These machines allowed one man to do the work of several men. And that allowed those several men to be productive in other ways than farming, whether that was working in a factory, as a tradesman, or in an office. A child could now complete their education and a farmer could make a living.

This is a farm machinery show. There are exhibits here that chronicle the changes in mechanized agriculture that made today’s American society possible. Some of the machines here look like cobbled-together experiments from a crazy blacksmith. But, don’t be fooled by their appearance, these are not unwieldy contraptions bumbling along. They are history still alive before your very eyes. These are not machines LIKE what were used once. This is the actual equipment to which you owe a debt of gratitude.

These unfamiliar and strange machines are the sturdy workhorses that transformed the American landscape from unsettled and unproductive wilderness, to hometown communities and productive farms. They reflect the men who created them. They are tough, ingenious creations that are, in most cases, still able to perform the job they were made to do, even now decades later. Ask yourself: will those cars selling for $20,000 today still be running when they are 60 years old? And, ask yourself this: will these tractors here today still be running 60 years from now, when they’re 120 years old? Well, I don’t know the answer to either of those questions, but I know which group I would bet on. Enjoy the show today, and ask a lot of questions. These machines deserve your interest and respect. The food you eat and the clothes you wear came from a farm, not the mall.

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Jacques

08-12-2003 18:26:46




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 Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Bryan in Michigan, 08-12-2003 12:23:39  
Good job Bryan! You may want to shorten your work if it's for a handout. See if you can include some kind of graphic at the top of the text, like a tractor operating a thresher or something related to farming in your area. You may opt instead of a working tractor scene, using the logoes of some of the tractor manufacturers, like the Case eagle, IH, etc. Consider mentioning the inovations of some of the tractor builders like the use of hydraulics, the first tractors with rubber tires, and so on. Anyway, this is just my 2 cents worth. Keep up the good work, Jacques. Oh, by the way, I think it's a good idea to let the people there know that these tractors aren't just static displays, they are actually still used to do what they were intended for!

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Les...fortunate

08-12-2003 16:50:02




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 Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Bryan in Michigan, 08-12-2003 12:23:39  
"It's what a person did to feed and shelter his family" would be correct. The word "their", though widely used in situations like this by almost everybody these days, is incorrect. Even better might be to say "It's what people did to feed and shelter their families."



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MikeH-Tx

08-12-2003 16:34:12




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 Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Bryan in Michigan, 08-12-2003 12:23:39  
Bryan, that is well done. Thanks for posting it.



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KURT (mi)

08-12-2003 16:33:36




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 Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Bryan in Michigan, 08-12-2003 12:23:39  
I would add one point. and it is this. This country was founded on the rust belt industries of car, truck, tractor, and machine manufacturing. It is mass production that allowed us (by the grace of GOD) to win WW1 and WW2.



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Bryan in Michigan

08-12-2003 19:04:43




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 Re: Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to KURT (mi), 08-12-2003 16:33:36  
Yeah, this is a great point. Absolutely.



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thurlow

08-12-2003 15:00:53




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 Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Bryan in Michigan, 08-12-2003 12:23:39  
"something happened that gave you and ME a choice"



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Miss English

08-12-2003 18:29:57




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 Re: Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to thurlow, 08-12-2003 15:00:53  

"You and I" is the correct grammar.



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Sid

08-12-2003 19:09:39




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 Re: Re: Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Miss English, 08-12-2003 18:29:57  
Wel Miss English, let me tell you what my English teacher taught me, I is first person singular,active. For example, "I went to town". You would not say, "Me went to town". Me is first person singular passive. For example you would not say "He gave I an apple". You would say "He gave me an apple". Furthermore, I checked with a modern day teacher and she confirmed my suspicion that thurlow's statement is correct. I would like to commend Bryan on his post and I feel that he has summed things up pretty well. I know I more than likely have some mispelled words and my punctuation is correct. Perhaps a proffeser will step in and correct us all. But then that might take away all the fun.

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Pitch

08-12-2003 13:40:10




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 Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Bryan in Michigan, 08-12-2003 12:23:39  
Sounds really good. One suggestion for an addition though to illustrate the importance of the whole family in the farm work and also to make it relate to the kids a little. Maybe you should mention that the traditional school year and summer vacation was designed so that the children would be at school during the slow season and home to work the fields during the summer.



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Bryan in Michigan

08-12-2003 14:12:57




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 Re: Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Pitch, 08-12-2003 13:40:10  
Great idea!



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Rich in Iowa

08-12-2003 18:55:04




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 Re: Re: Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Bryan in Michigan, 08-12-2003 14:12:57  
Well done Bryan. You might add that the majority of these machines were American designed and manufactured, and did not come with a bi-lingual operators manual. God Bless the "GOOD OLD U.S.A."



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AZ Jack

08-12-2003 21:30:12




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to Rich in Iowa, 08-12-2003 18:55:04  

I love that "did not come with a bilingual instruction sheet" statement Rich.
I think you did a great job Bryan.----Jack



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Pedro

08-12-2003 22:23:43




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Old tractors are important!!! in reply to AZ Jack, 08-12-2003 21:30:12  
But if you need it translated, I can help Amigo!!!



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