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Of all motor vehicles the farm tractor has proved to be among the
most beneficial. It has freed hundreds of thousands of laborers and
horses from backbreaking toil on the land in all weathers and it
has stabilized the cost of food.
Starting with steam power in the middle of the nineteenth century,
the agricultural tractor became motorized in the early years of the
twentieth century. From vast prairie types, lighter, one-man
machines arrived in time to avert famine in the First World War.
Mass production followed, which brought the price of tractors
within reach of the average farmer. Meanwhile tractors changed from
being simple substitutes for draught animals to highly
sophisticated machines, with power takeoffs and hydraulically
mounted implements. Pneumatic tires and diesel engines
revolutionized the 1930s market, after which draught control and
then inexpensive four-wheel-drive made sure that fuel and time went
into crop production rather than wheelspin. This marked the end of
the widespread use of tracked crawlers, as powerful and efficient
wheeled tractors took their place, incorporating the latest
multi-range transmission technology.
All the key developments and significant tractor makers are
described in this book, from the beginning of the tractor's
development to the 1970s. Illustrated by period views of machines
at work and in contemporary sales literature, this is a nostalgic
history of the machine that has been at the center of agricultural
life since before World War II.
Like Henry Ford, Herbert Austin had farming roots. Both brought
motoring to the masses and both attempted to take the physical
drudgery out of farming by introducing mechanisation. Austin
imported American machines in the First World War and heard about
the revolutionary new Fordson. His take on the new rigid, frameless
technology was the 1919 Austin R, built at his Birmingham car
factory. The inexorable reduction of the price of Fordsons saw
Austin move his tractors to the more protected French market, where
they soon challenged Renault's dominance. A former leather works
with farming estate at Liancourt, near Paris, became exclusive home
to Austin's tractors, and diesel technology was adopted there long
before it was introduced at Austin in England. The Second World War
saw Liancourt producing German military vehicles and the
imprisonment and in some cases execution of the Austin management.
The dreadful conditions at Liancourt were highlighted at the
Nuremberg Trials. Afterwards, there was a brave attempt to revive
the French tractors and British Austin engines were used in Bristol
crawlers. This book tells the fascinating and largely untold story
of the tractors made by one of Britain's biggest car makers, and
also looks other uses of Austin engines in the Austin Champ and
Gipsy.
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