Buying a potato planter in 1952

If you wanted to but a potato planter in 1952 you could have chosen one from a number of makers throughout Britain.

By this date there were few makers of potato planters in Scotland. The most notable was J. L. & J. Ballach, Gorgie Implement Works, Edinburgh. It manufactured its “Richardson”, a 2 row multi-purpose machine with Ferguson attachment. It was a tractor mounted planter, for three point hydraulic linkage. It was for using on drills with a width of between 24 and 30 inch wide.

Most of the makers of planters were made by English makers, with some of them being well-known. They included the tractor maker, Harry Ferguson Ltd, Coventry. It had two models. One with a 3 cwt capacity, attached to a hydraulic mounted toolbar. It was hand operated with an adjustable timing device. It came with a conversion set for chitted seed. A second planter had a 3 1/2 cwt hopper attached to a hydraulic mounted Ferguson toolbar. It was of the hand dropper type with a timing device. It could be provided as separate models for seed potatoes and chatted potatoes, spacing the seed at between 8 and 16 inches. You can still see some of the Ferguson tattle planters round the Scottish rallies.

Other makers included E. O. Culverwell, Lewes, Sussex, with its three row, semi-automatic, tractor trailing or hydraulic mounted, “Cover-well”. It could be used with Fordson Major tractor. W. T. Teague (Machinery) Ltd, Truro, Cornwall, had a 2 or 3 row planter for use with the Fordson Major and Nuffield tractors. It was designed with hoppers for either unchitted and with trays for chatted seeds. Transplanters (Robot) Ltd, Sandridge, Hertfordshire, made a range of models for 2 or 3 rows, for tractor use. One of its models, a 2 row, tractor drawn, semi-automatic, had a fertiliser attachment. It worked off the flat, with ridging bodies or discs. It worked on drills 28 inches as standard, though it could also work on ones for 24, 26 and 30 inches. It could space the sets from anything between 12 and 36 inches. at anything from between 1 and 6 inches below the ground.

Another maker that was well-known in Scotland was Modern Designs ltd, Longfield Road, Twyford, Berkshire. It was known for its “Packman” planters. it made three models, all for the tractor. One of them was its tractor drawn, 3-row semi-automatic, which worked on 26, 27, 28 or 30 inch rows. It could space the sets (chitted seed) between 7 1/2 and 18 inches apart. It had a hopper capacity of 6 cwt. It required three people on the back of the planter – one to put seed into the cups for each drill. One of the drawbacks of the planter was that if the operator let down the planter too quickly at the end of the field it would shear the bolts for the ploughs and when the tractor left the end of the field, the plough bodies would be left at the end of the field!

Despite the fact that Scotland was such an important country for potatoes (seed and ware) by the 1950s, there were few Scottish makers. Scottish farmers and agriculturists had to look further afield to England to have a wide selection of planters. This was also to be the same for potato harvesters that were to come onto the scene in increasing numbers in the following decade.

The photographs of the Packman planter were taken at the Fife Vintage Agricultural Implement rally, June 2016.

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Pollock of Mauchline: a famous implement and machine maker

One of the famous implement and machine makers in Ayrshire is Pollock Farm Equipment Limited. Its roots go back to 1867 when Andrew Pollock started a shop in the Cowgate, Machine. By 1877 his address was the “Implement and Machine Works, Mauchline”. He was an agricultural implement maker, a smith and a smith and farrier.

Andrew quickly recognised the importance of providing farmers with a broad range of implements and machines. In addition to making his own ones, he also acted as an agent for other makers. By 1886 he acted for W. N. Nicholson & Son, Newark on Trent, famous for their horse rakes. In later years he also sold manufactures from other of the makers such as Thomas Corbett, Perseverance Iron Works, Shrewsbury, and Harrison, McGregor & Co. Ltd, Leigh, Lancashire. All are major English makers.


Andrew became well-renowned for his own manufactures, winning a number of awards for them. But it was those implements for cultivation of the soil, hay and straw trussers, potato diggers and cheese presses that he was especially known, even well through the twentieth century. His manufactures were, according to the North British Agriculturist in 1893, “characteristically those designed for farming as carried on in Ayrshire and the adjoining counties”. He was also an inventor, applying for two patents in relation to his machine for topping and tailing turnips in 1878.


He was well-known throughout the implement-making community of Scotland, also exhibiting his manufactures at major agricultural shows including the Highland Show where he was a regular exhibitor from 1875 onwards.

The development and reputation of his business was summed up by the North British Agriculturist in 1893. It noted how “Mr Andrew Pollock has worked his way up from the position of a local blacksmith to that of possessing one of “tidiest little” implement businesses in the west of Scotland”.

By the time Andrew died in 1904 he had a well-regarded and successful business. His widow, Mrs Martha Jamieson or Pollock, carried on the business until it was transferred to his sons Andrew and William, to form A. & W. Pollock on 31 December 1912.

Pollock Farm Equipment is celebrating 150 years of Pollock in Ayrshire. Please support the company in its celebrations. The company’s website is at www.pollockfarmequip.co.uk; Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pollockfarmequipmentltd/

The A. & W. Pollock carts were photographed at the AVTMC annual vintage rally, Ayr, 19 July 2015.

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An Ayrshire name: John Morton, Galston

The historical record will only give us a few details about the work and activities of some of the Scottish agricultural implement makers. Sometimes they may appear fro a year or a small number of years in local trade and other directories. They may advertise on one or two occasions in the farming press. Or they may appear at the Highland Show when it was visiting their area. Local records such as valuation rolls, census and other family history papers may provide additional information.

One Ayrshire implement maker for which there are few details is John Morton, Boghall Smithy, Galston. He is recorded at that address in the mid 1890s. By the fiirst decade of the twentieth century he may have moved premises, as there is a John Morton recorded at Strath Road, Newmilns. At Galston, Morton undertook business which extended to the south of Scotland. He exhibited at the Highland Show in Edinburgh in 1893, at the Dumfries show in 1895 and the Glasgow show in 1897. There he exhibited his rick lifter and a patent steel plough. By the first decade of the twentieth century, trade directories record him as an agricultural implement maker, a millwright and a smith.

Have you seen any implements or machines made by John Morton?

The photograph of the nameplate was taken at Ayrshire vintage rally, July 2016.

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A Cumnock name: George McCartney, Cumnock

One of the well-known Ayrshire implement and machine makers of yesteryear was George McCartney & Co., engineers, Cunnock. The company was already established by 1850. By 1894 it was located at Glaisnock Street in Old Cumnock, and in 1903 it gave its address as Burnside Works, Cumnock, where it remained in business until the 1930s.

In 1893 the company described itself as engineers, millwrights and ironmongers. It was also an agricultural implement maker, electrical accessory and appliance manufacturer, engineer, manufacturer and mechanical engineer. It was most well known fro its thrashing machines and reaping machines. In 1870 the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland awarded its silver medal for its 3 or 4 horse power thrashing machine and in 1875 that society also awarded it a medium silver medal for one of its thrashing machines. It was its thrashing machines that it also heavily advertised in the Scottish agricultural press, in the North British Agriculturist from 1861, and the Scottish Farmer from 1893. In 1910 its threshing machines included a 3 feet 8 in bolster high speed threshing machine, with crank shakers, riddle and fanners (which sold at £77; with double blast £83), its “Eclipse” combined thresher and dresser, 20 inch wide, with horse gear (for £32); and a 16 inch thresher dresser, with revolving shakers and horse gear (for £27).

The company was a frequent attender at the Highland Show from 1850, though after 1852 it did not attend again until the 1870 show. Attendance was sporadic, with the company favouring the show in the south of Scotland and central Scotland show districts.

The company continued in business until 1933. However, its legacy continued. On 14 October 1933 William Dickie & Sons, East Kilbride advertised “McCartney & Co., Cumnock, the old established firm has given up business. We have secured the patterns and drawings for their threshing mills, water wheels, gears, water bowls &c.” If you bought a threshing mill from Dickie’s of East Kilbride, after 1933, the chance is that it would have been one that used the patterns from George McCartney & Co.

The photographs of the nameplates were taken at the Ayrshire Vintage Rally, July 2016.

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A Lanarkshire name: Charles Weir, Strathaven

C. & J. Weir, was a partnership known in the town of Strathaven, in 1882. By 1885 that partnership had dissolved and Charles Weir announced his business as millwright and engineer in the North British Agriculturist, the national Scottish agricultural newspaper. Two years later he gave his address as the agricultural implement works, Strathaven. Charles Weir of Strathaven was a name that became well known in the west of Scotland – it had a Glasgow depot from 1906 – and beyond until 1973. From 1934 the company became a company limited by guarantee, as Charles Weir Ltd.

There Weir family went much further back than 1882. In 1925 Charles Weir announced in the Scottish Farmer that it had been established since 1632 – quite an engineering heritage. By 1885 the company descibed itself as a millwright and engineer. These were two trades that were at the heart of the company’s skills and activities for decades. In 1936, for example, trade directories record the company as an agricultural engineer, an agricultural implement maker and agent, an agricultural implement manufacturer, and millwright. By 1955 another one describes the company as also a dairy appliance manufacturer.

While the company was old established, it did not promote its manufactures at the Highland Show until 1912, and only thereafter sporadically until 1958. The most frequent decade for its attendance was the 1930s. From 1914 it was also a regular advertiser in the Scottish Farmer.

The company’s stand at the Highland Show in 1912 provides an insight into its activities: its manufactures as well as its agencies. It exhibited:

– threshing mills, with comb drum, extra long crank shakers, riddle and sieve in motion;
oil or petrol engine driving threshing mill or churn;
– churn, 65 gallons, streamlet churn for power;
– churn, 25 gallons, streamlet churn for hand power;
– Weir’s patent rick lifter for hand power;
– Weir’s new patent rick lifter for hand or horse power;
– chain pump for liquid manure, sample to lift 10 feet (any size supplied to order);
– horse hoe or scarifier, extra long, with improved side stays;
– cheese press, double cheese press, new improved, with cut screws and brass nuts;
– curd mill, new improved, with malleable grating;
– meat cooler, 100 gallon, galvanised with malleable wheels;
– fodder barrow, large size, galvanised with malleable wheels;
– drill roller, notched drill roller;
– barn fanners, with 4 riddles and sand sieve;
– sack barrow, sack truck or barrow, varnished;
land roller, 6 ft wide by 33 inch diameter and steel covered;
– new patented, “Orwell” cultivator, 7 tines;
– “Albion” grinding mill;
– “Albion” chaff cutter for hand or power;
– weighing machine, sack weighing machine with weights;
– “New Century” latest improved binder;
– Wood’s famed non-frame mower, right or left hand;
– Wood’s new admiral mower;
– reaping attachments for above mowers;
– hay tedder, all steel, strong make;
– hay rake, all steel, strong make;
– Walter A Wood’s spring tooth harrows, with patent adjusting clip, 15 tines;
– garden seat, wood sparred and varnished, with malleable supports.

The list includes wide variety of manufactures. But it is also a range specifically for a predominantly livestock and dairying district: churns, as well as haymaking machinery, andmachiens for processing grains for animal food.

The company was also embracing the latest implements and machines from reputable companies such as Walter A. Wood, from the States and also England, as well as Harrison, McGregor of Leigh. His own manufactures, apart from the threshing machines, would have been relatively easy to manufacture.

Next time you are passing through Strathaven, think about the long tradition of agricultural implement and machine making that was carried on there. From the mid 1930s, it was carried on at the Town Park Works.

The photograph of the nameplate was taken at the Ayrshire vintage rally, July 2016.

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Buying a set of rollers in 1952

If you wanted to buy a set of rollers in 1952 you could choose from a variety of types and from a range of makers.

Rollers came in a number of different types and included flat, Cambridge, ridge, and triple-gang rollers, which could be horse or tractor drawn. Widths ranged rom 7 feet wide to 24 feet wide. Some of the makers manufactured speciific types, while others made a broad range, for the two different types of power.

English makers included The James Clay (Wellington) Ltd of Ketley, William Cook, Peterborough, Diss Foundry Ltd, Diss, East Dereham Foundry Ltd, Dereham, Norfolk, H. Leverton & Co. Ltd, Spalding, F. W. Pettit, Spalding, and Walter Wilder & Sons Ltd, near Wallingford. That latter one had a wide range including both horse and tractor drawn Cambridge, horse and tractor drawn flat, and furrow press rolls.

There were a number of roller makers scattered throughout Scotland. John Rutherford & Sons Ltd, Coldstream, manufactured triple gang rollers for the tractor. In the Lothians, A. Newlands & Sons Ltd, Linlithgow, manufactured flat tandem rollers, tractor drawn, with a working width of 15 feet to 17 feet 6 inches, as well as flat, tractor drawn harrows, 9 feet in width. In the west, Charles Weir Ltd, Strathven, had tractor drawn, flat type rollers, with a 9 foot to 16 foot rolling width as well as horse drawn, flat type rollers, with a 6 feet rolling width.

In central counties there was Cruikshank & Co, Denny, a well-known maker, with tractor drawn roll pack rollers in three sections, fro flat and Cambridge, with a 16-27 foot rolling width.

In the east there was the Forfar Foundry Ltd, of Forfar, which manufactured Cambridge rollers. Alexander Thomas, Guildtown, Perthshire, also made rollers. In the north-east there was George Forsyth, Tocherford Smithy, Wartle, Aberdeenshire, with three gang roller, while E. T. Y. Gray, Fetterangus, manufactured horse or tractor draught flat harrows from 3 feet to 27 feet in width. William Nicol, Milbank Smithy, Tillfourie, Aberdeen, had tractor drawn roller pack of 12 feet and 15 feet in width.

Roller-making was an important activity for some of the Scottish agricultural implement and machine makers. farmers and other agriculturists had a good selection of makers to choose from.

The photographs of rollers were taken at the Five Vintage and Agricultural Machinery Club rally, June 2015.

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