If only old history such as this could talk, the stories it could tell.an amusement park in New Jersey dedicated to those loving construction equipment!
https://www.diggerlandusa.com/
Okay I won't read it as I can't see it anyways I am half blind
This is so great! Wow, 1911!
What a shame.Thanks for the picture and info...About 10 years ago the prices for scrap metals was high and a lot of these old machines were sent to the scrap yards!!!
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Wonderful story, except for the part about antiques and bells in the city being lost.I knew what it was because the little town where I was born had one parked in front of the highway department garage as an ornament.
It was one that my great uncle used when he worked for the highway department. After the horses retired they pulled it with a truck or farm tractor until it was finally retired. It sat behind the highway garage for many years until it was rediscovered and painted.
One day it disappeared from in front of the garage and no one had a good explanation of what happened to it just a lot of whispers and winks.
Ken is right about the scrap value of these old items. Before zoning laws went into effect many farmers kept private junkyards and every year or two when scrap was high a buyer would come through the area and cut a deal to buy the scrap machinery and haul it away.
Many antique items were also lost during the scrap drives during WWII. The bells in our city haul were taken down and donated to one of those scrap drives. It was a different time when people felt a duty and a responsibility to their country.
Wonderful!We have a similar road grader sitting outside our county museum.
Love the old equipment.... My stepfather and uncle had an old cable operated bulldozer...
My 1st experience was driving it....
The road grader isn't ours... ment our county museum has one on display...Wonderful!
I hope it survives for many years more.![]()
Hoping the museum hangs onto it for years to come.The road grader isn't ours... ment our county museum has one on display...
The familys Dozer was gone by the early 70s...
I think I got Pappy mixed up with someone else on the forum, as he lives in Florida.Thanks for the picture and info.![]()
Not silly at all, Gaer, I didn't even know what it was! ROFLMAO!Silly me. I thought it was a thrashing machine. (for wheat)
Thank you, it was @Pappy who posted the picture of the tractor..I think I got Pappy mixed up with someone else on the forum, as he lives in Florida.
Nonetheless, Ken, you are my official, go-to authority now for all things tractor/machinery.
Additionally, I may even need to tap into Aunt Bea's, expertise when and where I can.
The one with the paddles on the back tires to help it go through wet and mushy/soggy ground?Thank you, it was @Pappy who posted the picture of the tractor..
YesThe one with the paddles on the back tires to help it go through wet and mushy/soggy ground?