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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Drill and ridging ploughs

Drill ploughs played an important role in the cultivation of a range of green crops including potatoes and turnips. By the early twentieth century most farmers used drill ploughs for growing potatoes. Where they did not, they used a single plough instead.

In 1910 you could purchase a drill and ridging plough from a number of makers in Scotland. Gavin Callander made a one horse drill plough which sold for £2 10s. Thomas Hunter & Sons, Maybole, had an improved mould or drill plough with curved steel moulds and marker for £5 10s. A. Newlands & Son, Linlithgow, had a section including a one horse drill plough with steel moulds and expanding screw (£4 10s), a combined drill and potato plough with marker and steel moulds and expanding screw (£6 18s 6d), and a combined drill and potato plough with marker sn steel moulds and expanding screw (£6 18s 6d). Kemp & Nicholson, Stirling, and George Sellar & Son also made these ploughs.

There are still a few drill ploughs around the rally fields.

The photographs of the Sellar drill ploughs were taken at the Highland Folk Museum, May 2016.

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Harrow makers in Scotland in 1952

If you were a farmer wanting to buy a set of Scottish-made harrows in 1952 you could have bought a set from a number of makers.

Disc harrows were largely made by English makers such as E. H. Bental & Co. Ltd, Heybridge, Maldon, Harry Ferguson Ltd, International Harvester Company of Great Britain Ltd, and Martin’s Cultivator Co Ltd, but there were also Scottish makers. A. Newlands & Sons Ltd, Linlithgow, manufactured a set of tractor-drawn tandem harrows which had a working width of 7 feet 6 inch and either 20 or 24 inch diameter discs. A. & W. Pollock, Machine, had two sets of tandem harrows for the tractor: 24 inch x18 inch diameter discs and the larger 28 in x 18 inch diameter discs.

More commonly, Scottish makers manufactured a range of harrows. Some of them had been making implements for decades and were well-renowned makers. In the east, Lennox M. Blyth, Chirnside, Berwickshire, manufactured zigzag harrows for the tractor. They had independently held tines, pointed at both ends, and were reversible. They could be fitted to a transport tree to fit Nuffield, Ferguson, Fordson, and David down tractors. In the south-west, John Wallace & Sons (Ayr) Ltd, Ayr, had chain and zigzag harrows, while Charles Weir Ltd, Striven, was also a maker of harrows.

In Edinburgh there were two makers: J. L. & J. Ballach, Gorgie Implement Works, who made tractor drawn diamond harrows (the company was also a noted maker of harrow teeth) and James H. Steele, Harrison Road, who made tractor drawn zig zag harrows with combined whippletree and transporter.

In central and eastern Scotland, there was Alexander Thomas, Guildton, Perthshire, and McCartney & Miller, Bridgend, Ceres, Fife, the latter of which made horse drawn harrows to take 26, 27 or 28 inch drills. A. Newlands & Sons Ltd, Linlithgow, had tractor or horse drawn spring tooth harrows. Perhaps the most extensive maker of all was Cruikshank & Co., Denny, Stirlingshire, with its “Denny” range. They included the spring tine for horse draught; zigzag harrows for either horse or tractor draught, zigzag harrows for tractor draught (with a working width of from 12 feet 6 ins to 19 feet), grass seed and wheat (working width 8ft-16ft), saddleback (with two or three rows), or “Staryator”, a star wheel harrow attached to a plough.

From the north-east, George R. Brown, Pluscardin, Elgin, manufactured all types as well as drill harrows for the Ferguson lift. George Forsyth, Tocherford Smithy, Wartle, Aberdeenshire, made harrows for tractor draught. MacDonald Bros, Portsoy, made spring tooth harrows for the tractor which could also be used as a cultivator. William Nicol, Tillyfourie, Aberdeen, made a range of tractor drawn harrows, including spring tine ones (13 or 15 tines in 2 rows, or 13, 16, 19 tines in 3 rows), seed harrows, potato harrows, and chain harrows.

So, if you wanted to buy a set of Scottish-made harrows in 1952 you could choose one from a number of makers, making either horse of tractor harrows of a range of types including diamond, zig-zag, spring tooth, spring tine, seed, potato, chain, and drill. Some were long-established and well-known makers, dating back to the second half of the nineteenth century when Scottish agricultural implement making became a well-established industry.

The photographs of the harrows were taken at the Fife Vintage Agricultural Machinery Rally, June 2015.

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An eminent Stirling name: Kemp & Nicholson

If you were a farmer or agriculturist in the Stirling area before the early 1930s you would have been familiar with the eminent name of Kemp & Nicholson of Scottish Central Works.

The company conducted business from their premises in Dumbarton Road, Stirling, as Kemp, Murray & Nicholson, in 1858. The company had further business activities further east in East Lothian. In the North British Agriculturist in November 1858 stated that “Kemp, Murray & Nicholson have removed from their branch establishment, Haddington, to their headquarters in Stirling where they have been in business for the last 10 years and where their business will henceforth be exclusively carried on.” By 1859 the company described itself as agricultural implement manufacturers, though by 1870 it had expanded its range of trades to be joiners, agricultural implement and reaping machine makers and engineers, activities that it became renowned for in the following decades.

The company underwent a number of significant changes in its early years: the partnership changed in 1876 so that it became renamed Kemp & Nicholson, a title it retained until the 1930s; in 1884 it moved from Dumbarton Road to more commodious premises at Cow Park Siding which adjoined the goods station of the North British Railway; it set up the Scottish Implement Works in the mid 1880s; by the 1890s it became an important agent as well as manufacturer of agricultural implements and machines, selling manufactures from the leading makers throughout Britain and further afield (this activity had started in the early 1870s with the company stated that “in addition to implements of their own manufacture, they have always in stock implements and machines of the best English manufacture”); by the mid 1890s it was also a cart, van and wagon builder.

The company was quick to publicise its manufactures to the farmers of Scotland. From 1858 until 1931 it was a regular exhibitor at the Highland Show, also having an extensive stand. It was also a regular advertiser in the Scottish agricultural press, being one of the few Scottish companies to advertise throughout the year.

The company was renowned for a number of types of implements and machines. From the 1870s, at the height of the development of local harvesting machinery, it quickly established its reputation as a maker of reaping machines, for which it continued to be renowned until the 1900s. By 1890 its specialisms were reapers, mowers, horse takes, grubbers, harrows and ploughs. In 1903 these specialisms were reapers, mowers, horse rakes, harrows, food coolers and turnip slicers, and two years later reapers, mowers, horse rakes, grubbers, harrows, ploughs, carts, vans, turnip cutters and hay presses. These were to be its staple manufactures into the early 1930s.

The company was highly recognised for its manufactures. In 1857 it was awarded 4 sovereigns for the best three row sowing machine for beans at the Highland Show. The company received a long list of awards from the Highland Show in following years: best harvest cart (1857), commended best sowing machine for grass seeds (1858), bronze medal for second best harrows for heavy land (1860), bronze medal for second best harrows for light land (1860), bronze medal for the second best harrows for light land (1860), bronze medal for second best drill sowing machine for grain (1860), best sowing machine for grass seeds (1860), best one harvest part with harvest frame (1860), best sowing machine for grass seeds 91861), highly commended combined reaping and mowing machine (1861), commended for food cooling barrows (1868) silver medal for collection (1870), medium silver medal for collection (1871), medium silver medal for collection (1873), medium silver medal for collection (1875).

The company continued to trade until shortly after the death of Major Kemp Smith in March 1930. The North British Agriculturist had commented favourably on him and his role within the Scottish agricultural implement and machinery trade in July 1894. It wrote:

“Mr J. Kemp Smith-Although the youngest of the Scottish implement trade, Mr Smith is not by any means the least important member of it. By force of circumstances he occupies the enviable position of principal in Messrs Kemp & Nicholson’s, one of the oldest and most extensive businesses in the agricultural implement trade. Mr Smith is a grandson of the late Mr john Kemp, of Stirling, whose career we fully detailed at the time of his death last autumn, and who, for some years of ill-health prior to his decease, sought for means whereby he could be relieved of the onerous duties which a large engineering business involved. While considering the advisability of forming a limited company against disposing of the whole business as a going concern by private sale, Mr Kemp was delivered from his dilemma by his being joined by his grandson, then only about nineteen years of age. Mr Smith started his apprenticeship in the works nine years ago, on 7th July 1884, and for nearly five years engaged in the practical work in the workshops. Upon his grandfather’s death, in August last year, Mr Smith found himself, with a comparatively short experience, at the head of the Scottish Central Implement works, a position which many older men, from its great responsibilities, would have hesitated from taking up. Mr Smith has, however, with great pluck, assumed the command of the works, as they are now busily employed with the production of all sorts of tillage and harvest implements, as well as of farm carts, of which latter Mr Kemp made quite a speciality. Mr Smith is a young man of good capabilities and engaging manner, so that he bids well worthy to fill the place so long occupied by his late respected grandfather.”

Kemp & Nicholson: a well-respected and long-established implement and machine maker that was renowned for its manufactures and moving with the times.

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Buying a corn and seed drill in 1952

If you were looking to buy a new corn and seed drill in 1952 you would have had a number of machines to choose from which were made by a range of makers in Scotland, England and Ireland.

By this time there were, however, only a small number of Scottish makers. If you had been purchasing a machine in 1910 you could have chosen one from makers including George Sellar & Son, Huntly, Thomas Sherriff & Co., West Barns, Thomas Turnbull, Dumfries, Kemp & Nicholson, Stirling, Bon Accord Engineering Co. Ltd, Aberdeen, and Robert G. Garvie, Aberdeen. They provided a network of sowing machine makers throughout the country.

In 1952 the most important Scottish maker was Thomas Sherriff & Co. Ltd, a long-established maker from 1816. Its grain drills included a horse drawn drill with 14 or 16 rows and a 6 inch coulter. It made two tractor drawn drills, one with 16 rows, the other with 20 rows. Both had a 6 inch coulter and rear foot boards. The other maker was McCartney & Miller, Bridgend, Ceres, Fife. It manufactured a 3-row replacement drill which was driven by a land wheel.

The English makers included some of the long-established seed drill makers such as Harrison, McGregor & Guest Ltd, Albion Iron Works, W. Rainforth & Sons, Lincoln, and Walter A. Wood Co. Ltd, Horsham, Sussex. From Ireland was Philip Pierce & Co. Ltd, Wexford, Eire, with its “Victor” tractor drawn, land wheel driven drill with from 11 to 15 rows, and Wexford Engineering Co. Ltd, Wexford, with its range of 11, 13 or 15 row machines for horse or tractor, with sowing widths from 4 feet 4 inch to 6 feet 6 inch.

The tractor makers were starting to make important inroads into the manufacture of drills. Harry Ferguson Ltd, Coventry, made a 13 row trailed drill with a hydraulic hitch attachment for one of its tractors, to which a fertiliser distributor could be attached.

There were also other English names, some well-known, others not so. They generally made either horse or tractor driven drills. The James Clay (Wellington) Ltd, Wrekin Foundry, Ketley, Salop, had a 13 row coulter drill for corn with an overall width of 7ft 9ins, and a disc drill of either 13 or 16 rows with a width of 8ft 3 ins or 9ft 9 ins. Denning & Chard & Co. (1937) Ltd, Chard, had a tractor drawn, force feed, 12 row machine with a width of 8ft 9 ins. W. T. Teague (Machinery) Ltd, Blackwater, Truro, Cornwall, had a drill with fertiliser placement.

If you were looking for a drill for horticultural use, you could purchase one from Jalp Products Ltd, Wimborne, Dorset.

By 1952 seed drill making in Scotland was not a major activity for the implement and machine makers. If you were a farmer or agriculturist you had to look further afield, unless, of course, you wanted a machine from the most eminent maker in Scotland: Thomas Sherriff & Co., West Barns.

The photos of seed drills was taken at the Fife Vintage Agricultural Machinery rally, June 2012, and June 2015.

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Sowing the Garvie way

The name Robert G. Garvie & Sons, Aberdeen, is usually associated with threshing machines. However, Garvie also made a range of other implements. The included seed drills. The Glasgow herald announced in 1894 that at the Royal Northern Agricultural Society’s Show that “Mr Robert G. Garvie, Aberdeen shows a new implement, a broadcast folding sower for all kinds of grass seeds. It is 18 feet wide, has only one set of gearing, and swings round and fixes automatically. The gearing is in the centre thus avoiding the clogging that occurs when it is placed near the road wheels. A great advantage in sowing on hilly ground is that the road-axle is one piece of steel, and is fitted with collars binding the frame together. The seed boxes swing round and go into gear at once, being rigidly fixed without the necessity of using cutters and pins, and when the seed-boxes are folded up the machine is perfectly balanced without the boxes having to be drawn back.” By 1895 the Aberdeen Press and Journal could state that Garvie’s new broadcast seed sower claimed to have “radical improvements” made to it.

Garvie continued to develop his seed sower. By 1902 he was prominently advertising and displaying his sower. In 1902 at the Royal Northern Agricultural Show. The Aberdeen press and Journal commented that a “leading” feature on Garvie’s stand was “the 18 feet wide broadcast seed sower which contains all the ordinary parts, with some additions which Mr Garvie has introduced, and which add to the efficiency of the machine, while making it lighter, with less friction of parts.”

By 1908 Garvie’s seed sower was well-known. As the Dundee courier noted on 27 March: “The broadcast seed sowers and manure distributors sold by Mr R. G. Garvie, Bon-Accord Lane, Aberdeen, have been well-known for years, and as each machine is tested, agriculturists should have no hesitation in patronising this firm, as the workmanship is all that could be wished.”

There are still a number of Garvie seed drills around. They represented innovative and excellent workmanship by a leading implement and machine maker in Aberdeen.

The photographs of the Garvie seed drills were taken at the Fife Vintage Agricultural Machinery rally, June 2014.

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Agricultural implement makers and dealers in the Lothians in 1919

If you were a farmer in the Lothians in 1919 you would have had a number of implement and machine makers to purchase your machines from. Some were local while others trades across the Lothians and also across Scotland and further afield.

The North British Agriuclturist carried an extensive article on the agricultural traders in the Lothians in 1919. It provides a great deal of information about them, their activities and the history of their company.

“The first on our list is Mr Alex Ballach of Messrs Ballach & Sons, Leith, who has had a very long association with the implement trade. He was trained in agricultural engineering under the late Mr G. W. Murray of Banff, and has had a varied experience in Aberdeen, Edinburgh, and later on in Newton-Stewart, whence he removed to Leith about a dozen years ago. No one knows better the requirements of the farmer than does Mr Ballach. He has been eminently successful in the making of corn drills and drill scarifiers, and whatever he puts out is known for its efficiency as well as its finish.
… Mr Alex Newlands of the firm of Messrs Newlands & Sons, St Magdalene Engineering Works, Linlithgow. Mr Newland’s firm was founded by his late gather in 1861 at Inverurie, but in 1880 the latter removed to Linlithgow and acquired the premises of that famous ploughmaker-the late Mr George Ponton. Some years after his father died in 1907 Mr Newlines, along with his brother, Mr George MNewlands, erected larger worrks to increase the capacity of the output of the firm’s implements, which are principally cultivators, chilled ploughs, drill ploughs, horse rakes &c.
… Mr Wm Poole JP, possibly now the best known of all the Scottish agricultural engineers. For the past forty years he has been identified with the introduction and improvement of many of the labour-saving machines now in extensive use by the farmers of the country. On the farm of Castle Mains, Dirleton, in August 1878, Mr Poole conducted the first trial of a sheaf-binding reaper ever held in Scotland, namely, the McCormick wire sheaf-binding reaper; and during the same month at the first trial of sheaf-binders held by the Highland Society on the farm of Liberton Tower Mains, Edinburgh, he secured the Society’s Gold Medal for that machine. Owing to the strong objection to wire-bound sheaves, this machine did not become a success; but, following this, in the early “eighties” Mr Poole sold and started at work for the late Mr Waugh of Eweford, Dunbar, the first twine sheaf-binder ever put to work in Scotland (a McCormick). Closely following the introduction of the McCormick binder, Mr Poole introduced into this country the now better-known Deering twine sheaf-0binder, and, through his efforts in the harvest fields, and suggestions of improvements, this binder is now one of the most popular throughout Great Britain nd Ireland. It may well be said, through his continuous and long experience in our harvest fields, he is one of our greatest authorities on harvesting machinery, and no one now living in Scotland has bestowed greater benefits in this respect on our farmers. In 1915, in response to a requisition by the agricultural engineering trade throughout Great Britain, Mr Poole was elected a director of the Highland Society to represent their interests. During his term in office, he accomplished good work on that board in getting the Society to make an inquiry amongst farmers throughout Scotland as to the efficiency and economy resulting from the use of milking machines. The information obtained was of a satisfactory nature, and, as a result, the use of milking machines has been largely increased. So far as general work on the average farms of Scotland is concerned, Mr Poole has never been satisfied with the oil agricultural tractors that have been introduced into use during recent years, and from a recent interview, we find that he is of opinion that the tractor suitable for all-round work in Scotland is still to come. In that belief, he submitted a motion adopted by the board of the Highland Society to the effect that it should hold trials of British designed and British made oil tractors, and to award substantial prizes to the machines found to be best suited for work in this country. When these trials take place he is of opinion that oil tractors far in advance of those in present use will be produced by the engineers of our own country. At present, Mr Poole is president of the Scottish Agricultural Engineers’ Society.
Mr A. M. Russell, we always look upon as “The Universal Provider” for the varied wants of agriculturists. Shortly before the outbreak of the war he removed his headquarters adjoining the old Corn Exchange, to extensive premises at the east end of the Grassmarket. Mr Russell is a specialist in many lines, and, as our readers well know, is a specialist also in the way he advertises his goods.

Mr Wm Smith is the Scottish representative of the Dairy Supply Co. Ltd, and we may almost venture to call him “the grand old man of the implement trade”. If he does not approve of a Separist policy he at least approves of a policy of the separator, especially is it should happen to be an Alfa Laval. In addition to being a J.P., Mr Smith is a Parish Councillor. He is an acknowlwdged authority on all dairying matters, and the author of a very useful guide to dairying, which has had a large sale.
Mr Jas H. Steele is one of the juniors in the agricultural implement trade, but he has a long experience and successful record behind him. For a long number of years he was with Messrs A. & J. Main Ltd, and later represented Messrs P. & R. Fleming of Glasgow in the Scottish capital. Born and brought up on a Lanarkshire farm, he has a practical knowledge of agricultural requirements, and this gives him a great advantage in the upholding of his business motto, “Everything for the Farm”. In addition to agricultural machinery, his firm hold agencies for Messrs A. Cross & Sons Ltd, Glasgow, and Messrs Gartons Ltd, Warrington, Through enterprise, pushfulness, and attention, Mr Steele has gathered a large clientele, and supported by an able staff, he has “lengthened his cords and strengthened his stakes” by opening a new depot at 61 Harrison Road, close by Merchiston Station, on the outskirts of Edinburgh.

If you were a farmer in the 1960s you would still have recognised a good number of the key names in agricultural trading that had been recorded in 1919. It says a lot about the stature and importance of these business men and their businesses.

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