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1932 Stories

IMPROVEMENTS IN HARVESTING

By Spencer Zimmerman, Dist. 162.

 The cradle was the first instrument used for cutting grain. This was a framework fastened to the scythe. The grain was delivered in a row back of the cradle. One man did the binding while another was behind the cradle with a long-handled fork to gather it into bunches. In an early day one man could cut from two to four acres a day. One man, sometimes an Indian, would do the binding with a draw band taken from the bundle. The men that did the cradling would stop quite often and sharpen the blade with a whetstone. It was music to hear the stone sharpen the scythe.

The next improvement was a crude machine that dropped the grain on a platform. This reaper had a cutter bar and a reel. The grain had to be raked off by an extra man with an old-fashioned woodtine fork. The next machine was known as a dropper, which was hinged to the sickle bar and made of slats. When enough grain fell for a bundle on this platform, it was slightly tipped upward, which was controlled by a foot lever. With this machine the grain had to be bound as fast as it was cut. It took at least ten to do the binding.

The next invention was the self-rake and the Marsh harvester. The self -rake had a cutter bar and a platform to the back. The grain fell on this platform and was raked off by four rake arms. The principle was that each time a certain amount of grain fell on this platform one of these raker arms would shove it off in a bundle, and of course, had to be picked up and bound by hand.

The Marsh harvester came about the same time as the self-rake did. It had a platform on which two men stood and did the binding and threw the bundles off.

The next great improvement was the self-binder, which two to four horses could null. This binder used wire to tie the bundles with. This machine did good work so far as the binding was concerned, but the wire was dangerous in the straw when it was used as feed. But twine was soon introduced and is still used to tie the bundles. This great binder attracted a great number of people who were interested in seeing the first machine that would make and tie a bundle of grain. There was no bundle carrier on this machine. The first binder cut and bound several hundred acres the first year.

About forty years ago they started using, or rather invented, the bundle carrier. This enables the operator of the machine to carry the bundles and drop them into what is known as shock rows. This was really the last improvement of the present day reapers. After the bundle carrier was made, a shocker was invented but did not prove a success.

The first binders were four and six feet width of cut. They have gradually been made larger, in sizes seven and eight feet. About five years ago the first ten-foot power binder was made. This binder could only be run by tractors. The advantage of this power-driven harvester is because it does not depend on the bullwheel to supply the power. Under some conditions, especially in a wet season, the bullwheel, or the wheel that does the driving of the binder, will sometimes slip, hence the binder will not work.

And now for the last. A machine is in use today which cuts and threshes the grain in the field. The grain is elevated into a tank on top of the combine until a truck or wagon comes to haul the grain away.

We may see the time when the loaves of bread will be made in the field.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 54.


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