Background
Former farmboy Henry Ford’s interest in tractors dated back to adolescent days
operating, repairing, and maintaining steam traction engines for neighboring Dearborn,
Michigan area farmers. By 1917, enriched and encouraged by the runaway success of
his Model T, Ford began manufacturing a tractor incorporating many of that car’s
world-changing ideas; namely simplicity, ease of use, durability, and low cost.
The so-called Fordson tractor continued to evolve throughout the 1920s and 1930s, and
by production’s end at the close of WW2, just short of a million of the closely-related
Models F and N had been manufactured at factories as far flung as Cork, Ireland,
Dagenam, England, and even Leningrad and Stalingrad in the Soviet Union.
In 1939, a new Ford tractor emerged, and though conceived with the same overriding
design philosophy as its predecessors, the machine was marketed under a more
familiar blue oval badge.







