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  2. Gravely Tractor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravely_Tractor

    Gravely, of Brillion, Wisconsin, is a manufacturer of powered lawn and garden implements which it describes as "walk-behind, zero turn and outfront mowers". [1] It started as a manufacturer of "walk-behind" or two-wheel tractors.

  3. Jacobsen Manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobsen_Manufacturing

    Jacobsen Manufacturing is a former U.S. lawn mower and light-duty tractor manufacturer, in operation there from the early 1920s until around 2020. It was located in Racine, Wisconsin, from 1921 to 2001, when It moved to Charlotte, North Carolina.

  4. Simplicity Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simplicity_Manufacturing...

    The company was founded by William J. Niederkorn in 1922, and started building walk-behind two-wheeled tractors in 1939. Between 1941 and 1945, due to World War II , Simplicity Manufacturing temporarily halted production of lawn and garden products, and manufactured electric fence controllers and external surface grinders to satisfy the War ...

  5. Brush hog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brush_hog

    Two archetypes of this type of mower are the Bush Hog which is made by Bush Hog, Inc. [1] of Selma, Alabama, and the Flex-Wing by RhinoAg of Gibson City, Illinois.The formal name for this type of implement is a rotary cutter or rotary mower, although it differs from mowers in that it does not cut with a sharp blade, but rather severs with an intentionally very dull wedge-like blade.

  6. Worthington Mower Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worthington_Mower_Company

    Later this became the Worthington Mower Company, based in nearby Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. [5] The first Worthington gang mower was three-wheeled, pulled by horses with their hooves covered in leather to prevent damage to the grass. In 1919 Worthington designed and built a gasoline-powered tractor to pull the mowers. [5]

  7. The Toro Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Toro_Company

    The Toro Company was established as the "Toro Motor Company" in 1914 to build tractor engines for The Bull Tractor Company. [4] It built steam engines to support war efforts during World War I, and changed its name to Toro Manufacturing Company in 1920 when it began to refocus on manufacturing farm equipment. [5]