ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Celebrities

John Deere

Author : Chad Koch
JOHN DEERE



GO WEST YOUNG MAN

THE BLACKSMITH

MASS APPEAL

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE

COMMITMENT

LEGENDARY

LEAPING FORWARD

THE CLASSIC



"I will never put my name on a product that does not have in it the best that is in me." – John Deere



JOHN DEERE

In 1962, a University of Illinois archaeological team unearthed the exact location of the blacksmith shop where John Deere developed the first successful steel plow in 1837. The site is now preserved by an exhibit hall complete with a simulated conversation between John and Demarius Deere talking about their every events on the farm and his development of the self-polishing steel plow that eventually opened the prairie to agriculture.



GO WEST YOUNG MAN



As a young journeyman blacksmith in Middlebury, Vermont, John Deere soon gained fame for his considerable workmanship and ingenuity. It was a golden age of the burgeoning pioneer and John headed west to join the adventure. It took him many weeks by canal boat, lake boat and stagecoach to reach Grand Detour, Illinois – a journey of more than a thousand miles that could easily be accomplished in 16 hours by car today.



BLACKSMITH



The cast iron plows the pioneers used were designed for sandy New England and proved no match for the rich Midwestern soil. So Deere decided to come up with something better, he took an old steel saw blade and made a plow with a properly shaped moldboard and share that scoured itself as it turned the furrow slice, basically it was a self-cleaning plow blade that made the hard work fast.



MASS APPEAL



In his day it was common practice for blacksmiths to build tools as customers ordered them, however seeing the future as it was, Deere decided to start hammering out the new plows without orders. It was an entirely new way of doing business and made John Deere a very popular man.



NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEER



Ten years after he developed his first plow, Deere was producing a 1000 plows a year. Many years later in 1911, the company purchased the Waterloo Gasoline Traction Engine Company and tractors were added to production line. By 1955 they were the leading producer of farm equipment in the world. Today, the company has become globally renowned with net sales exceeding $640 million dollars.



COMMITMENT



Constant research and development has always been key to the John Deere company, as Deere himself once said, “They haven't got to take what we make and somebody else will beat us, and we will lose our trade." To this day, the company spends more on research and development than most other companies in its industry.



LEGENDARY



February 7, 2004 marked the 200th birthday of John Deere, the man. His one man blacksmith shop in 1836 has spawned one of the most celebrated equipment manufacturing companies in the world.



LEAPING FORWARD



The famous leaping deer logo has gone through several changes over the years. Deere first registered it for use in 1876, it read “John Deere – Moline, Illinois”. Interestingly, the first deer to appear on the logo was an African deer and not the American white tail used today. Over the years the wording changed and the deer was simplified into line art versus the illustration style of the original. Eventually the deer as the only thing on the logo and it simply read, “John Deere”. The clean cut 1968 version was updated in 200 with the deer leaping up and forward rather than down and forward. The famous green and yellow leaping deer logo has become a hip and modern symbol of John Deere’s and Americans’ ingenuity and integrity.



THE CLASSIC



The John Deere Classic, a charitable golf tournament is played on a course built in the Friendship Farm in Illinois. For many years the farm had been one of the top Arabian horse breeding operations in the United States and the property still maintains a natural beauty to this day. In 2003, $1.5 million dollars was donated to more than 400 charities to benefit children, families and handicapped individuals. This is just one of the many reasons that John Deere was named one of the 100 Best Corporate Citizens for 2002 by Business Ethics magazine.


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





To read more articles by Chad, please visit the American Pop Culture Encyclopedia at: www.americanpopcultureencyclopedia.com. If you would like to read this article, or others like it, on American Pop Culture Encyclopedia visit:
www.americanpopcultureencyclopedia.com/john%20deere.htm





Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Coaching Celebrities
  2. Carey Hart of Hart & Huntington Tattoo Company
  3. Thomas Pendelton of Hart & Huntington Tattoo Company
  4. Addiction to Fame and Celebrity
  5. 4 Secrets To Becoming A Guest On Top Tv Talk Shows
  6. John Deere
  7. Are celebrities happy?
  8. Lance Armstrong Bracelets: Fashion Accessories for a Worthy Cause
  9. Haunted Houses, Dead Tenants and a Big Tummy Ache
  10. Paris Hilton the Modern Day Aphrodite
  11. Psychic Jane Doherty: How she became a Psychic Ghost Hunter
  12. Why a Celebrity Lookalike or a Female Impersonator Would Be a Big Hit at Your next Event!
  13. Jules Obtains the Jewels
More related feeds
JOHN DEERE Frame - Picture Old TRACTOR
Year:New Price:$ 3.00 Description:This item is a JOHN DEERE Photo Picture Frame. This is an Officially Licensed John Deere Product. It has a lovely handpainted farm scene, featuring an OLD 2-CYLINDER JOHN DEERE TRACTOR. ...

John Deere
If you like John Deere tractors you will want to see the display case by the Reference Desk. The husband of one of our worker's owns the John Deere collectables. If you have a wonderful collection, please think about sharing it with the ...

John Deere 8100 - Used Tractors - Row Crop (100-275hp) - John ...
STOCK# 102525, TAG# 11460, Serial #: RW8100P020753 John Deere 8100 - Used Tractors - Row Crop (100-275hp)

New Holland 7740 - Used Tractors - Utility (40-100hp) - John Deere ...
STOCK# 102200, TAG# 11426, EQUIPED WITH ALAMO INDUSTRIAL SIDE FLAIL AND REAR FLAIL MOWERS Serial #: 078370B New Holland 7740 - Used Tractors - Utility (40-100hp)

John Deere 430 - Used Tillage - John Deere MachineFinder.com
STOCK# 102527, TAG# 11462, ROTARY HOE Serial #: 001929N John Deere 430 - Used Tillage.

John Deere 722 - Used Tillage - John Deere MachineFinder.com
STOCK# 102526, TAG# 11461, TINE HARROW, SHANKS TIGHT, SWEEPS GOOD, MANUAL GUADGE WHEELS, Serial #: N00722X000202 John Deere 722 - Used Tillage.

John Deere 945 - Used Hay Equipment - Mower Conditioners & Mowers ...
CALL Mendota 815 539-6742 or 800 541-4814 JD 945 moco eq 71044 Serial #: MISSING John Deere 945 - Used Hay Equipment - Mower Conditioners & Mowers.

John Deere 457 - Used Hay Equipment - Round Balers - John Deere ...
CALL Princeton 815 875-3838 or 800 666-4960 JD 457, 2001, 540 pto, 11Lx14 float tires, bale ramps, cover edge surface wrap, RH/LH guage wheels, eq 73146 Serial #: E00457X152381 John Deere 457 - Used Hay Equipment - Round Balers.

New Holland 1000 - Used Hay Equipment - Handling and Transport ...
Serial #: NA New Holland 1000 - Used Hay Equipment - Handling and Transport.

Retirees discuss potential lawsuit against John Deere
John Deere flex retirees will decide their next step in fighting changes to their health care plans.

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved