![]() ![]() He took his machine to Europe, where it created a sensation, and its use increased grain productivity exponentially. Cyrus swept the competition from the field (so to speak), through superior quality parts and machines, enabling buying on credit, and a policy to never sue a farmer for his failure to pay. They succeeded, but the ending of his patent only spurred the energetic McCormick to greater efforts of marketing and manufacturing his machines. Competitors “lawyered up” and formed a cabal of resistance before the patent office to block McCormick’s patent renewal in 1852. Cyrus convinced two of his brothers to move there and assist him. From 1842 to 1850 he built 778 machines, only a very few shipping by wagon to the grain states of the midwest, “where land was flat and labor scarce.”Īn 1884 version of the McCormick Reaper which also bound the harvestĬyrus formed a partnership with the mayor of Chicago who invested $25,000 in the company, enabling the company to move the manufacturing to that city. Improved castings, further field trials and exhibitions in rural counties around Rockbridge enabled Cyrus to begin manufacturing and selling his machine. The demand for reapers, however, took five years to stimulate after the patent had been secured. The reaper needed tweaking but eventually received newspaper coverage and endorsement by prominent Virginia supporters. Providentially, twenty-two-year-old Cyrus McCormick proved to be a man of “inventive genius, undaunted courage, untiring energy and of unswerving courage.” He scheduled field trials in farms around Lexington, the county seat. His father told a neighbor, “I am proud that I have a son who could accomplish what I failed to do.” Would that every father could have the occasion to say those words.Įvery future competitor copied the salient features of the prototype McCormick Reaper, setting off a lifetime of lawsuits, controversies with the patent office, and fixing the occasional mechanical difficulties. The year was 1841, and the patent took three years to reach fruition on June 21, 1834. causing the machine to accommodate itself to the irregularities of the ground.”* the machine was balanced upon two wheels, the horses in front and to one side. A very successful experiment was made with it in a field cutting oats. with a vibrating blade operated by a crank and the grain supported at the edge while cutting by means of fixed pieces of iron projections before it. Building upon his father’s idea, Cyrus described his creative adaptation thus: Those experiments did not go to waste, however, for Cyrus-with the assistance of Jo Anderson, one of the McCormick servants-designed and fabricated a reaper pulled by horses. The farm was built by Cyrus’s father, Robert, and it was in this blacksmith shop on the left where Cyrus built his first harvesters. The McCormick family farm, Walnut Grove, in Steele’s Tavern, VA. ![]()
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