[AT] When did tractor pulls become prevalent?
Alan Riley
arr44 at suddenlink.net
Mon Jan 21 09:37:36 PST 2019
The first tractor pull I saw was at a circus (not a fair) in the early
1950s. It pitted a Ford 8N against an elephant. Boy, I was a mad kid
when the elephant started dragging the 8N backwards!
On 1/21/2019 12:06 AM, Indiana Robinson wrote:
> I started watching tractor pulls about 1953 or 1954...
> I never saw horse pulls here at all. When tractors fully replaced
> horses here mostly by about 1945 - 1946, the horses pretty much went away.
> The tractors I saw pulling were pulling a dead sled in a muddy lot at
> county fairs. Back then most of the pullers were tractor dealers and
> rules were pretty loose. Tractors like Fords, Fergusons and Allis
> didn't usually do too well since their big work advantage was due to
> the hydraulics. Tractors like Deere 60's, Farmall M's and Oliver 88's
> tended to prevail. At first they didn't seem to have classes and a
> TO-20 Ferguson might end up pulling against a tractor at nearly double
> its weight, with 50% more HP and double the amount of rubber on the
> ground.
> At the local fairgrounds they decided to pour a large concrete slab to
> pull on and it almost did in the pulling. Dealers pulling new tractors
> and most farmers refused to pull on it because it literally ate the
> tires down visibly in one or two pulls. They then went back to dirt.
> It was some time before the progressive sleds took over.
>
>
> .
>
> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 12:28 AM Spencer Yost <spencer at rdfarms.com
> <mailto:spencer at rdfarms.com>> wrote:
>
> When I was a kid, the small local fairs that I went to all had
> horse pulls. I never saw tractor pulls. This was on 1960s. One
> fair in particular I can still see in my mind’s eye quite
> clearly. It’s damn impressive to see a team of Belgians(Belgian
> is my memory anyways) go at a nearly immovable object. A front
> loader/bucket would show up, and put weight on the sled,
> eliminating teams until one was left. My memory is of two horse
> teams.
>
> I would normally suspect my experience was slanted toward Amish as
> I was born and raised in my formative years in Pennsylvania; but
> we didn’t have a lot of Amish communities as I was on the western
> side of the state, not towards the middle (ie Lancaster). Even
> so, it was after a my father’s job relocation to Georgia as a 12
> year old before I ever saw a tractor pull.
>
> I’m sure they were around much earlier than that, and my
> recollection is probably tainted by sampling bias (which fair’s my
> family took me, geography, etc).
>
> When did tractor pulls supplant horse pulls in your area?
>
> Spencer Yost
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> AT at lists.antique-tractor.com <mailto:AT at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> http://lists.antique-tractor.com/listinfo.cgi/at-antique-tractor.com
>
>
>
> --
> --
>
> Francis Robinson
> aka "farmer"
> Central Indiana USA
> robinson46176 at gmail.com <mailto:robinson46176 at gmail.com>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> AT at lists.antique-tractor.com
> http://lists.antique-tractor.com/listinfo.cgi/at-antique-tractor.com
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.antique-tractor.com/pipermail/at-antique-tractor.com/attachments/20190121/a8b65f02/attachment.htm>
More information about the AT
mailing list