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Russell 1853 Newspaper Ad for Russells' Improved Separator Russell Newspaper Ad for Farm Engines and Threshing Machines North front of Russell & Co Works, Massillon, Ohio, 1908. Banner states - Engines, Saw Mills and Threshing Machines. In 1838 Nahum and Clement Russell started a general carpentry business in Massillon, Ohio. They used a two ...
Some threshing machines were equipped with a bagger, which invariably held two bags, one being filled, and the other being replaced with an empty. A worker called a sewer removed and replaced the bags, and sewed full bags shut with a needle and thread. Other threshing machines would discharge grain from a conveyor, for bagging by hand.
The Advance-Rumely Company of La Porte, Indiana was an American pioneering producer of many types of agricultural machinery, most notably threshing machines and large tractors. Started in 1853 manufacturing threshers and later moved on to steam engines. Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co. purchased Advance-Rumley in 1931. The company's main works ...
R&T has one of the world’s best and largest collections of old traction engines, with over two dozen machines. There are also all kinds of antique farm implements and machinery, plus three barns full of old steam engines and old stationary gas engines, including an Otto-Langen Engine, one of the world’s few surviving examples of the first ...
1855 - Andrei Terentyev artisans and Moses Creek created the first Russian threshing machine. 1888 - Fyodor Blinov mechanic built the world's first model of crawler tractor. 1893 - Yakov Mamin invented the plow with two plowshares; 1910 - Yakov Mamin created tractor "Dwarf", later known as the "Russian tractor".
1936 Case Model CC Tractor Preferred share of the J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company, issued 29. August 1911 A Case row-crop model, circa 1940s Case Model 830 Case Model 2090 The Case Corporation was a manufacturer of agricultural machinery and construction equipment .
It was the product of a merger of three companies in 1929: Minneapolis Steel & Machinery (MSM) which was noted for its Twin City tractors, Minneapolis Threshing Machine Company (MTM) which also produced Minneapolis tractors, and the Moline Implement Company formerly known as the Moline Plow Company.
Instead of harvesting grain by hand with a sharp blade, wheeled machines cut a continuous swath. Instead of threshing the grain by beating it with sticks, threshing machines separated the seeds from the heads and stalks. The first tractors appeared in the late 19th century. [3]