John Deere (February 7, 1804 – May 17, 1886) was an American blacksmith, businessman, inventor and politician. He founded Deere & Company, one of the largest and leading agricultural and construction-equipment manufacturers in the world. Born in Rutland, Vermont, Deere moved to Illinois and invented the first commercially successful steel plow in 1837.

Early life

John Deere was born on February 7, 1804, in Rutland, Vermont. After a brief educational period at Middlebury College, at age 17 in 1821, he began an apprenticeship with Captain Benjamin Lawrence, a successful Middlebury blacksmith, and entered the trade for himself in 1826.

Marriage and children

He married Demarius Lamb in 1827 and fathered nine children.

  • Francis Albert Deere (1828–1848)
  • Jeannette Deere Chapman (1830–1916)
  • Ellen Sarah Deere Webber (1832–1898)
  • Frances Alma Deere (1834–1851)
  • Charles Henry Deere (1837–1907)
  • Emma Charlotte Deere Velie (1840–1911)
  • Hiram Alvin Deere (1842–1844)
  • Alice Maria Deere Cady (1844–1900)
  • Mary Frances Deere (1851–1852)

Their daughter Alice Maria married Merton Yale Cady, grandson of Linus Yale Sr. of the Yale Lock Company, and was the proprietor of Alderney Hill Farm, formerly Mr. John Deere's blooded-stock farm. They were the grandparents of Jane Mabel Skinner, wife of Warren Crandall Giles, president of the National League and Cincinnati Reds, and parents of William Yale Giles, co-proprietor of the Philadelphia Phillies.

Deere worked in Burlington before opening his own shops, first in Vergennes, and then in Leicester. In 1836, Deere left Vermont due to hard times and followed Leonard Andrus, a business associate, to Illinois.

Steel plow

thumb|Early John Deere plow, c. 1845, made in Grand Detour, Illinois, displayed at [[The Henry Ford Museum]]

John Deere settled in Grand Detour, Illinois. At the time, Deere had no difficulty finding work due to a lack of blacksmiths working in the area. Deere found that cast-iron plows were not working very well in the tough prairie soil of Illinois and remembered the needles he had previously polished by running them through sand as he grew up in his father's tailor shop in Rutland.

Varying versions serve as the inspiration for Deere's famous steel plow. In one version, he recalled the way the polished steel pitchfork tines moved through hay and soil and thought that same effect could be obtained for a plow. Another version is that he used an old sawblade that had been polished from years of use.

In 1837, Deere developed and manufactured the first commercially successful cast-steel plow. The wrought-iron framed plow had a polished steel share. This made it ideal for the tough soil of the Midwest and worked better than other plows. By early 1838, Deere completed his first steel plow and sold it to a local farmer, Lewis Crandall, who quickly spread word of his success with Deere's plow. Subsequently, two neighbors soon placed orders with Deere. By 1841, Deere was manufacturing 75–100 plows per year. In 1848, Deere dissolved the partnership with Andrus and moved to Moline, Illinois, because the city was a transportation hub on the Mississippi River. By 1855, Deere's factory sold more than 10,000 such plows. It became known as "The Plow that Broke the Plains" and is commemorated as such in a historic place marker in Vermont.

Deere insisted on making high-quality equipment. He once said, "I will never put my name on a product that does not have in it the best that is in me." Following the Panic of 1857, as business improved, Deere left the day-to-day operations to his son Charles. In 1868, Deere incorporated his business as Deere & Company. Deere also served as Moline's mayor for two years but due to chest pains and dysentery Deere refused to run for a second term. In 1875, he acquired, expanded and modernized the house now known as John Deere House. He died at home, named by him Red Cliff, on May 17, 1886, at the age of 82.

<gallery widths="200" heights="200">

File:Ogle County-Ashton-Gr Detour 027.jpg|The John Deere House in Grand Detour, Illinois, built 1836

File:MiddleburyJohnDeereMonument.jpg|A monument in Middlebury, Vermont marking the shop in the town where John Deere learned the blacksmith trade

File:John Deere grave.JPG|John Deere grave in Riverside Cemetery, Moline

</gallery>

References

Further reading

  • Wayne G. Broehl, Jr. (1984). John Deere's Company.
  • Neil Dahlstrom and Jeremy Dahlstrom (2005). The John Deere Story: A Biography of Plowmakers John and Charles Deere. Northern Illinois University Press. 204 pp.
  • Leslie J. Stegh (Feb. 2000). "Deere, John" . American National Biography Online.