An Old-Time Tractor Demonstration

Miscellaneous Articles Memories of a Farmall C When in Drought, Build a Tractor Shed! The Great Escape Bringing "Sweatheart" Home Tractor Power What Price Enthusiasm? The 8N and the Fox Sunday Drives Hello Ford 601 - Goodbye Mule! Dad's old Silver King and Joe Caplco The Day Tractor Lovers Dream About Derelict (a Poem) A Lifetime of David Brown Tractors Museum Coverage: The Stuttgart Agricultural Museum Story of a Case SC Farmall 460 - That's My Girl! Getting My Old Tractor Home The Mud Daubers & the Old John Deere Dad's 1945 Farmall A Farming Never Left My Blood Godfrey, ILlinois Country Days An AC Model M Crawler The River Tractor Recollections of a John Deere GP Journey to Ankeny A Minneapolis-Moline Comes Home Machine Shops Running Beans in East Central Indiana Gathering of the Orange Magic Moments Tractors and the City Boy Stories From Old Farmer, #1 Stories From Old Farmer, #2 Stories From Old Farmer, #3 The Allis Chalmers ED40 The Roof Palamino Good as New A Towny Goes Plowing Picking Corn Introduction to the Gibson D My Ford Golden Jubilee Persistence Pays Off Case Farm Equipment A John Deere B Unstuck Women and Tractors Women and Tractors - A Woman's Touch Women and Tractor Pulls Women and Tractor - Views from the Farmer's Wife Women and Tractors - Tractor Engine Repair Memories of a Field Service Engineer More Memories of a Field Service Engineer 2 More Memories of a Field Service Engineer 3 More Memories of a Field Service Engineer 4 More Memories of a Field Service Engineer 5 More Memories of a Field Service Engineer 6 More Memories of a Field Service Engineer 7 A Threshing Demonstration When Push Comes to Shove A Farmall Story Old Tractors Still Have Their Place Box Plow Blues Farmall Stories A Lifetime of Farm Machinery A Tractor's Point of View Reflections of the Fifties Some People Like Red The Massey Show Chores It Can't Be Done! - A Tractor Story 1935 John Deere Model BN - History of My Tractor Field Modifications Fire in the Field On the Road with Dave Gohl: Deere Departed Friend On the Road with Dave Gohl: Auction Musings On the Road w/ Dave Gohl: Tractor Club Beginnings On the Road with Dave Gohl: Tractors and Farming Transfer of Power - Hoof to Tractor Unidentified Crawling Object Unidentified Crawling Object - Identified? Memories of an IH Super A A City Guy's First Tractor It's Alright Where It Is! Central Illinois Strawberry Festival Old Gold National Antique Show Self-Starting Tractor - McCormick 10-20 Yesterday (a Poem) Little M An Old-Time Tractor Demonstration The Day Mom Drove the 8N Argyle & Mt. Pleasant Labor Day Show Pop's Tractor of Gold
Contributed Article

An Old-Time Tractor Demonstration
As Told by William Samual Jenson

Sam was born in rural Kansas in 1926. His dad was a hard-working farmer and the children worked hard everyday to help ends meet. In the rural area he grew up in, the highlight of the week was Saturday when many people took a break from their work to go to town. It was on one such Saturday in the early 1940's when Sam was 16 years old that he ended up in Dennison, Kansas to watch a demonstration of a new tractor being put on by a local dealer.

It was an Allis-Chalmers tractor dealership, and to the best of Sam's recollection the tractor being demonstrated that day was a WC model. Specifically being shown off that day were the new skeleton-style steel wheels. At the time, most farmers in the area were using the older style wide steel wheels. With their relatively flat surface and heavy weight they severely packed the soil and the farmers weren't too happy with them. Remember that this was during the Second World War so although rubber tires had been in use for some time - due to war restrictions there were very few rubber-wheeled tractors available.

As everyone gathered around the tractor, the dealer spoke to the crowd about the advantages of the new skeleton-style steel wheels. The wheels were narrow which resulted in much less weight, and had tall lugs on them about 4 or 5 inches in length. This gave the tractor not only great traction, but also did not compact the soil like the older wide and heavy steel wheels did.

To further drive his sales pitch home, the dealer did an unusual thing - he placed his foot on the brick floor of his sales area and had a helper drive the tractor right over his foot. Of course with his foot placed strategically between the tall lugs of the wheels his foot was uninjured and the point was well taken by the on-lookers.

One particular farmer was very impressed and purchased this fine tractor for his farm. Upon bringing it home he promptly took it out to the field and was anxious to show his wife what the dealer had shown him about the non-compacting nature of these new steel wheels. So he had her get up on the tractor, start it up, and while he held his foot there bravely on top of the dirt - had her drive right over it. Seems in the excitement of the dealer's demonstration, this farmer had failed to notice one important point - the dealer's sales floor was made of brick! Out there in the farmer's field the wheels sank right down into that soft dirt and although they did not compact the soil (as advertised) they crushed that poor farmer's foot so bad that it was broken in several places.

Being a small town, word travelled quickly when that red-faced farmer came limping into Dennison the next Saturday. And to this day - some 50 years later - when you start talking to Sam about tractors this is his most vivid memory!


We sell tractor parts! We have the parts you need to repair your tractor - the right parts. Our low prices and years of research make us your best choice when you need parts. Shop Online Today.

Top