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Discovering Horse-Drawn Farm Machinery

Discovering Horse-Drawn Farm Machinery cover

Discovering Horse-Drawn Farm Machinery

Description

Until the reign of Queen Anne oxen were widely used for ploughing, and most other jobs on the farm, such as harvesting, were done manually by farm labourers. But at the beginning of the eighteenth century the Agricultural Revolution began. Oxen were displaced by horses for ploughing and the famous heavy breeds of Shires, Clydesdales and Suffolks developed. Horses were more versatile than oxen and came to be used for many tasks other than ploughing. Following the Industrial Revolution the ingenuity of Victorian manufacturers produced an enormous range of horse-drawn agricultural machinery – not just ploughs, but grubbers, cultivators, harrows, rollers, drills, reapers, binders, root lifters, manure spreaders, rakes and many other types – which continued in use until the tractor replaced the horse from the 1930s. In this book the author describes these machines and includes drawings of many of them, as well as photographs.

Product details

Published 20 May 2008
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 96
ISBN 9780852636640
Imprint Shire Publications
Illustrations 1 col
Dimensions 177 x 113 mm
Series Shire Discovering
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

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