"Early Reaper
Brought Fears to Farm Laborers" Prior to the mid-twentieth century
agriculture was the predominant occupation in Carroll County. New trends in agriculture
were, therefore, of great interest to many local residents. The invention of threshing and
reaping machines attracted attention when they appeared in the early to mid-nineteenth
century. Some recollections about the early reapers appeared in the June 29, 1871 issue of
the Westminster Democratic Advocate newspaper
under the headline of The First Reaper In Carroll
County: |
The first threshing machine was introduced some
ten years earlier. Judge Hanson T. Webb remembers the first one introduced in Union
Town District, and drove the team that hauled it, being then about 17 years of age.
This was about the year 1834. What immense numbers of these machines have been
manufactured since that day, and how impracticable it would be to undertake to conduct the
farming operations of the present time without the aid of labor-saving machinery, and
laborers are quite as well paid and have as much to do as they had before they were
invented." |
| The reference to the first thresher
likely refers to the efforts of several Union Bridge men who developed a reaper before
Cyrus McCormick. Obed Hussey improved on a design by Jacob R. Thomas and received a U. S.
patent for his invention on December 31, 1833. A State Roads Commission historic marker on
Bucher John road outside of Union Bridge records what happened nearby, "The first
reaping machine in the world was invented by Jacob R. Thomas and tried near this spot in
1811. Obed Hussey perfected and patented the invention in 1839 [sic] one year prior to the
McCormick reaper."
|
| Photo caption: | A steel engraving of Obed Hussey's reaper patented in 1833. Courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution. |