"Hibernian
Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
168 Years Ago:
Cyrus McCormick Invents the Reaper
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * June 19, 2002
One hundred sixty eight years ago this week, on June 21, 1834, Cyrus
McCormick received a letter from the U.S. Patent Office. To his delight,
it stated that the patent he submitted for his invention -- a device for
mechanically harvesting wheat and other crops -- had been granted.
It was a welcome reward for years of toil and trouble, but as McCormick
was to find out, his work was far from done. Years of labor lay ahead
before the McCormick reaper was transformed from merely a good idea into
a reality. When that eventually happened, McCormick became a rich
man and America emerged as the world's foremost agricultural producer.
Cyrus McCormick was born in 1809 in Rockbridge, County, Virginia.
His Scotch Irish ancestor Thomas McCormick had emigrated from Ulster to
Pennsylvania in the 1730s, while his mother's family traced its lineage
back to 1640s Armagh. In 1779 Cyrus' grandfather moved to Virginia
where his father, Robert McCormick, was born in 1780.
Cyrus grew up on his father's vast 532 acre farm which included a sawmill,
distillery, and two grain mills. His father liked to tinker with
machinery and over the course of his life he patented several useful farming
implements. One particular project in which he invested years of
effort and thought was the development of a mechanical harvester, or reaper.
So as young Cyrus grew up, he gained from his father a thorough knowledge
of farming and a keen interest in inventing.
It was in July 1831 when Cyrus, still only 22 years old, achieved a
breakthrough in the design of the reaper. Taking his father's prototype,
he added several new features and made a few design changes to produce
a working model. In this effort, he may very well have been assisted
by a slave named Joe Anderson who worked in the family blacksmith shop.
As with later efforts by others to invent the telephone, lightbulb, and
radio, McCormick was not alone in his quest to invent the mechanical reaper.
Several other inventors, most notably Obed Hussey, were busily working
on their own models. When McCormick learned in 1833 of Hussey's announcement
that he too had produced a working reaper, he immediately filed for a patent
and received it on June 21, 1834.
The reaper was a device on small wheels pulled by a horse. As
it passed through a field, sharp blades moved back and forth severing stalks
of wheat. The harvested grain was then collected in a cradle.
It allowed for a much faster harvest -- often crucial in times of bad weather
-- and eliminated the need to hire expensive (or out on the remote plains,
non-existent) farm labor.
Yet as many an inventor soon discovers, McCormick found that the mere
act of invention did not guarantee success. He would need to convince
the very skeptical American farmer to invest several hundred dollars in
a what one of them derided as a "contraption seemingly a cross between
a wheelbarrow, a chariot, and a flying machine."
As a result, Cyrus discovered a second talent -- marketing -- to go
with his mechanical skills. At first, he tried to drum up interest
by staging demonstrations at county fairs. Farmers were indeed impressed
with the reaper, but they saw it mainly as a sideshow, rather than a vital
piece of equipment they ought to buy.
But McCormick never lost hope and kept at it until his fortunes
began to rise in the early 1840s. One big break came in 1843 as a
result of a challenge issued by a rival reaper manufacturer. They
would have a contest to see which reaper performed best. On the day
of the contest, however, it rained and the challenger's reaper jammed on
the wet wheat. McCormick had long ago modified his machine to cut in wet
weather and his reaper performed flawlessly.
From that day forward McCormick's reaper was hailed as the best of the
many competing designs. He sold 29 reapers that year and sales continued
to rise. To overcome lingering doubts among farmers, McCormick also
developed unique business practices, including letting farmers buy on lenient
credit terms, offering written money back guarantees, making replacement
parts readily available, and educating farmers through advertising about
the benefits of new technology. Sales soared from 75 reapers in 1846,
to 1500 in 1849 to more than 4,100 in 1859.
By then he'd left the family blacksmith shop in Virginia for a
modern manufacturing facility built in Chicago in 1847. This allowed
him to produce more machines and to be at the center of the reaper market
-- the American Midwest.
McCormick and his machine achieved international fame in 1851.
He won the Gold Medal at the London Crystal Palace Exposition and then
went on a demonstration tour of Hamburg, Vienna, Paris, and other major
European capitals. His audiences were stunned and in France McCormick
was elected to the French Academy of Sciences, "as having done more for
agriculture than any other living man."
In the decades that followed, McCormick worked tirelessly to build his
company through developing new products and, not surprisingly, aggressively
defending his patent rights from a steady stream of challenges. His
entire factory was reduced to ashes in the great Chicago Fire of 1871,
but the dauntless entrepreneur rebuilt and by the time of his death in
1884, his company reigned supreme. In 1902, now operated by his sons,
the McCormick company took on the now more familiar name -- International
Harvester.
The mechanical reaper is one of the least appreciated of the breakthrough
inventions of the modern era. At some point or another American school
children learn about the invention of the steam engine, telegraph, light
bulb, automobile, and television, but perhaps only in farm states do they
learn the story of the reaper. Yet it is no exaggeration to say that
the mechanical reaper had as significant an impact on American society
as any of these inventions. In a word, it revolutionized agriculture,
transforming it from a small-scale, labor-intensive economy, to a large-scale,
highly productive, and thoroughly commercial enterprise. Just
consider the following statistics. In 1830, it took a man with a
hand-held scythe three hours to harvest one bushel of wheat. By 1900
the mechanical reaper allowed him to do the job in just 10 minutes.
The wider impact of McCormick's invention was not just efficient farming,
but the industrial revolution itself. Mechanized farming freed up
millions of workers to engage in non-agricultural work. Today the
United States is the wealthiest and best fed nation on earth, yet only
two percent of its people are farmers (vs. 90 percent when McCormick patented
his reaper). Put another way, without Cyrus McCormick and his invention,
we might never have heard of another famous Irish American by the name
of Henry Ford.
HIBERNIAN HISTORY WEEK
June 19, 1941: Nazi Germany's government officially apologizes for bombing
Dublin several days earlier.
June 20, 1867: Jerome Collins founds the revolutionary nationalist organization
Clan na Gael in New York City.
June 21, 1877: ten Irishmen known as the "Molly Maguires" are hanged
in Pennsylvania for alleged vigilante murders committed against mining
officials. Ten more would follow over the next fifteen months.
HIBERNIAN BIRTHDATES:
June 19, 1881: James “Jimmy” Walker, Mayor of New York (1925-1932) is
born in New York
June 20, 1763: United Irishman Theobald Wolfe Tone is born in Dublin.
June 25, 1870: Nationalist Erskine Childers is born in London.
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2002
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