The International Harvesters Collectors Club provides a worldwide collectors network for the preservation of history, products, literature and memorabilia of the International Harvester Company.
IH Collectors of MN #15 is one of thirty seven chapters in this worldwide network. As a state chapter we bring the collecting and preserving of IH related products and history to the local level. And while we are involved in preserving history relating to a company that played an important role in the development of rural America, we strive to do so in a way that brings as much pleasure and enjoyment as possible to the participants.
The history of IHC starts in the wheat fields of Virginia
during the 1830s on the farm of Robert McCormick. Farming at that time
was hard work using only the power and sweat of the farm workers aided
by horses. One of the most backbreaking and important jobs was reaping
the standing grain, a job done in the hottest part of the year. A
mechanized reaper was the dream of many a farmer and many experiments
were underway both in the US and Europe.
The farmer working as a reaper used a scythe with a cradle to cut the
wheat and lay it in bundles. A binder followed the reaper and tied the
bundles into shocks with twists of wheat. A good scythe-man could cut
2-3 acres per day.
Between 1810 and 1830 Robert McCormick experimented with mechanical
harvesting of wheat and demonstrated a working version in 1831. Cyrus
McCormick (b.1809) continued his father's experiments and eventually
developed a working model of a practical reaper. The mechanical reaper
had several important components.
Straight reciprocating knife to cut the standing wheat.
Fingers to guide the wheat stalk to the knife.
Reel to pull the wheat stalk against the knife.
Platform to catch the falling wheat.
Single main power wheel.
Cutting to one side of the draft.
Divider bar to separate cut and standing grain.
In 1931 a reproduction of the first reaper was built by the
International Harvester Company to celebrate the century of the reaper.
One is on display at the Ardenwood Farms Museum is occasionally loaned
to other tractor shows. If you have a chance to see this remarkable
machine, do so.
It took a while for the mechanical reaper to be accepted by farmers of
the day and the first machines were not sold until 1840 and full
production started in 1846. Meanwhile other inventors were working on
the mechanical reaper and many public trials were held between
competing designs. One inventor in particular was Obed Hussey whose
machines faced off the McCormick machines in several field trials. Both
machines had strengths and weaknesses and both introduced refinements
to the design of reapers. For many years the origins of the reaper were
in dispute and countless hours of court testimony has done little to
clear the air.
In the late 1840s, Cyrus moved his reaper company to Chicago to be near
the center of US farming then moving into the plains of Illinois and
Iowa. Chicago also provided ready access to ship transportation to
support a growing export business. With Cyrus running the business and
his brother Leander directing manufacturing operations, the company
continued to grow.
Eventually in 1879 the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company was formed
to manufacture and sell agriculture machinery. Over the years many
improvements were added to the reaper and other types of agricultural
machinery were added to the company line as mechanical farming gained
popularity. By the turn of the century man and horse power were aided
by mechanical farm implements from plowing to harvesting. Grain
harvesting became completely mechanized.
As the McCormick company grew so did its needs for capital and as
mechanical farming grew, the marketplace became ever more competitive.
One of the biggest competitors was Deering Harvester company. Deering
manufactured much of the same equipment as McCormick and beat McCormick
to many improvements. In 1902 under the direction of J.P. Morgan
& Company the two companies merged with several others to form
the International Harvester Company.
During the several years following the merger, the IHC company
fought off several lawsuits. The company pulled out of several states
due to lawsuits that went on until the 1920s. For a while the company
maintained the names of the component companies and McCormick Deering.
Eventually after several settlements the company settled on
International Harvester Company.
The IHC company was a full line manufacture of agriculture equipment.
With new capital the company was able to compete in all phases of farm
equipment. Eventually the company made and sold tractors, stationary
engines, trucks, plows, Scout off road vehicles, construction
equipment, household appliances, jet engines, along with a full line of
farm equipment.
Early machines were powered by teams of horses. The care and feeding of
horses was almost as much work as was the rest of the farm. Horses
needed care year round, their feed represented a significant portion of
the farm crops, and horses could not be worked long hours. A harvest
crew could require nearly 50 horses. In the beginning of the new
century the internal combustion engine was developed to the point that
it was light weight and reliable enough for farm use. Both McCormick
and Deering had been experimenting with Internal combustion engine
power farm implements from before the merger.
These early experiments taught the companies much about IC engines but
neither developed a product to market. IHC continued development of the
IC engine and introduced a complete line of engines for portable farm
work.
The Famous Engines introduced in 1906 were used to power an IHC line of
friction drive tractors. These were large tractors used as traction
engines to pull large plows and for belt work on threshing machines.
There was limited use for large heavy tractors so a smaller tractor was
needed. IHC lead the development of farm tractors and later in
construction equipment. Over the years many were tested in the Nebraska
Tractor Tests.
In 1924 IHC was facing fierce competition from small cheap tractors in
the Fordson. The 10-20 and 15-30 were powerful tractors of high quality
and reliability but were also very expensive. The 10-20 sold for over
$1000 while the Fordson could be had for as little as $350. The problem
was that both tractors were designed for tasks such as plowing. Horses
were still needed for careful work such as cultivating.
IHC experimented with a general purpose tractor. A tractor with the
visibility necessary for working close to the crop as in cultivating
but with the power and balance for traction work such as plowing. The
result was the Farmall. Shortly after the introduction of the Farmall
in 1924, Ford moved all production of the Fordson to England and ceased
to be an important player in the US market until the 9N of 1939.
The Farmall introduced the tricycle style of row crop tractor. The
narrow frame aided visibility around crop rows and tall wheels were
designed to work tall row crops such as corn and cotton. Mounted
implements such as cultivators and corn pickers further extended the
use of the tractor. The row crop Farmall replaced the last horses on
many American farms and was the start of a long and distinguished line
of Farmalls.
Over the years several books have been written about IHC. The company
had a long history but was merged with J.I. Case in 1982 to form Case
IHC. The truck division was split off to form Navistar and has
continued to be a successful leader in the heavy truck industry.
After the merger of IHC and Case in the early eighties, many of the
archives of the IHC company were moved to the Wisconsin Historical
Society. www.wisconsinhistory.org/libraryarchives/ihc/