Tractor Wars II
From 1929 through 1959, the tractor industry changed focus. Rather than pioneering the idea of bringing power farming to agriculture, companies started working toward making mechanized farming part of everyday life in rural America. Tractor makers fought for market supremacy as each company improved on the basic design. The major manufacturers, International Harvester, Ford and John Deere, battled through the economic downturn of the Great Depression in the 1930s only to retool to support the war effort during World War II. By the time the 1950s rolled around, the leaders of all of the major tractor manufacturers were looking at how their designs fit into the equation of power and affordability. Watch the next installment of Iowa PBS’s Tractor Wars series, Tractor Wars II. We want to give a special thanks to J & L Videos who provided the Allis-Chalmers footage for this program.

Tractor Wars

Before Hydraulics: The Brutal Reality of 1930s Motor Graders!

Exploring the Bizarre Aircraft Designs of WWII And The Remarkable Miles Aircraft Designs

Taking Sides With Nature - The Story of the Ferguson System

USS Iowa Documentary

The Forgotten Tractor Company That Steered Every WWII Tank

Why German Generals Said The American Jeep Was The Best Weapon Of WW2

Timeless Tractors

1914-1921: The Technological Leap That Ended the Age of Distance. Henry Ford’s Rare Archival Footage

1932 - The Invention of the Ford V8 Engine

The Union Stockyards — A Chicago Stories Documentary

The Fascinating Story of Kohler Engines, The Wisconsin Company That Powers Everything

Farmers Saw Hoover's Digger Pull 500 Bushels In A Day — Then Knew 200 Years of Agony Was Over

Two Farmall Tractors for $2400 | Will They Run?? (Sitting Many Years)

Henry Ford (2013) | Full Documentary | American Experience

Truck Town: A History of International Harvester in Fort Wayne | FULL DOCUMENTARY

25 FORGOTTEN Farm Skills Every Single American Knew 100 Years Ago

Timeless Tractors: The Collectors

The Ten-Engine Titan: Inside the B-36 Peacemaker, The Cold War’s Largest Bomber

