Everything about John Deere totally explained
John Deere (
February 7,
1804 –
May 17,
1886) was an American blacksmith and manufacturer who founded
Deere & Company— the largest agricultural and construction equipment manufacturers in the world.
Early life
Deere was born in
Rutland, Vermont in 1804, the son of William Rinold Deere, a tailor. William Deere disappeared on the way to
England in 1808 when a young John Deere was only four, where he was seeking a possible inheritance. John Deere received a basic education from the local
common school and briefly attended
Middlebury College before dropping out. With no inheritance and a meager education, he was apprenticed in 1821, at age 17, by his mother. He served four years as apprentice to Captain Benjamin Lawrence, a prosperous Middlebury blacksmith, and entered the trade for himself in 1825.
He married Demarius Lamb, and by 1836 the couple had four children, with a fifth child on the way. The business wasn't doing very well, and Deere was having trouble with his creditors. Facing bankruptcy, Deere sold the shop to his father-in-law and departed for Illinois. He left his wife and family, who were to join him later.
Steel plow
Deere settled in
Grand Detour, Illinois. As there were no other blacksmiths in the area, he'd no difficulty finding work. Growing up in his father’s Rutland, Vermont, tailor shop, Deere had polished and sharpened needles by running them through sand. This polishing helped the needles sew through tough leather. Deere found that cast-iron plows were not working very well in the tough
prairie soil of Illinois and remembered the polished needles.
There are varying versions of the inspiration for Deere's famous invention, the steel plow. In another 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. 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. So two neighbors soon placed orders with Deere. Confident that he'd some stability, Deere moved his family to Grand Detour later that year.
By 1841, Deere was manufacturing 75-100 plows per year. In 1848, Deere dissolved the partnership with Andrus and moved to
Moline, Illinois, because of the city's location on the
Mississippi River, which helped make it a transportation hub. By 1855, Deere's factory sold more than 10,000 such plows.
From the beginning, Deere insisted on making high-quality equipment. He once said, "I will never put my name on a product that doesn't have in it the best that's in me." As the business improved, Deere left the day-to-day operations to his son
Charles. In 1868, Deere incorporated his business as
Deere & Company.
Late life
Later in life Deere focused most of his attention on civil and political affairs. He served as President of the National Bank of Moline, a director of the Moline Free Public Library, and was a trustee of the First Congregational Church. Deere also served as
Moline's second
mayor for a two year term, where despite his disastrous handling of liquor licensing, Deere improved the city's infrastructure by having streetlights, sewage and water piping (including fire hydrants) installed and sidewalks repaired, and bought eighty-three acres for $15,000 for the creation of a city park. Due to chest pains and dysentery Deere refused to run for a second term.
Further Information
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