Enthusiastic crowds turned out to see the historic ’70 Tractors for 70 Years’ parade through the streets of the city of Coventry, England, on Saturday last, 30 July. The cavalcade and display of machines old and new was staged by Culture Coventry to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the start of production of the iconic Ferguson TE20 tractor.

In July 1946, the first Ferguson TE20 tractor, affectionately known as the ‘Little Grey Fergie’, rolled off the assembly line at its former Banner Lane manufacturing plant in Coventry. The tractor was the brainchild of Irish engineer and inventor Harry Ferguson from Co Down, one of the founders of the present-day Massey Ferguson.

Legacy

The tractors for the event were brought together by the Friends of Ferguson Heritage Club. Led by a 20.3hp 1947 Ferguson TE20, equipped with a two-furrow plough, and the mighty 400hp MF 8737, the most powerful tractor in the current Massey Ferguson lineup, the procession wound its way through Coventry, finishing at Millennium Place outside Coventry Transport Museum.

Unusually, it was not the familiar Massey Ferguson red livery for the MF 8737. Instead, it had been specially prepared by Massey Ferguson with striking black paintwork, paying homage to the prototype Ferguson Black tractor of 1933, which was the first to incorporate Harry Ferguson’s pioneering ideas for a three-point linkage system to connect tractor and implement.

In a tribute to the manufacturing legacy of the Banner Lane plant, Massey Ferguson named the black MF 8737 the ‘City of Coventry’. Seated in the cab for the duration of the parade was the Lord Mayor of Coventry, Councillor Lindsley Harvard.

Global markets

“It was a marvellous event and wonderful to see this pageant celebrating the brilliant engineering of the Ferguson TE20 which changed the world of farm mechanisation,” said Campbell Scott, Massey Ferguson director marketing services (who himself drove a 1949 TEA20 tractor in the blue livery of Brighton Corporation).

“We are so proud of this superb legacy of practical and innovative technology, which continues to inspire our design engineers and is at the heart of Massey Ferguson’s 21st century mission to produce straightforward, dependable equipment to increase the efficiency and productivity of farmers all over the world. Today, more than 200,000 tractors bearing our famous Massey Ferguson triple-triangle brand are built every year for global markets.”

Tractors taking part in the pageant showcased a wide range of Ferguson, Massey-Harris and Massey Ferguson machines produced since 1946. The tractor coming from furthest afield for the event was a 1949 Ferguson TEA20 fitted with half-track equipment which travelled nearly 200 miles from Exeter in Devon. From much closer to home was a 2015 MF 5610 Dyna-4 on turf tyres based in Finham, Coventry. A beautifully-restored, prize-winning MF 65 industrial tractor, painted in the requisite yellow from Skipton, Yorkshire, represented the non-agricultural ranges.

Over half a million Ferguson TE20 tractors (Tractor England) were built at the Banner Lane plant between 6 July 1946 and 13 July 1956. Key to the global success of the tractor was its unique three-point linkage implement attachment system, controlled by the tractor’s hydraulics. Designated the ‘Ferguson system’, this effectively turned the tractor and implement into a single working unit, replacing the previous cumbersome trailed method of implement operation.

Massey Ferguson is a leading global farm machinery brand producing a full-line range of tractors, harvesting equipment and agricultural implements. Its well-known red-liveried equipment is distributed in 140 countries.

Established in 1994, The Friends of Ferguson Heritage Club has over 5,000 members worldwide who are dedicated to all things Ferguson, Massey Ferguson and Massey Harris. See www.FOFH.co.uk for more.

The Ferguson TE20’s 70th anniversary inspired Culture Coventry’s current Tractors – From Factory to Field exhibition at Coventry Transport Museum (runs until 19 September) and the public display of the Daniel Massey Bronze Sculpture at the city’s Herbert Museum and Art Gallery. Culture Coventry manages three of Coventry’s major visitor attractions including Coventry Transport Museum, Herbert Museum and Art Gallery and the Lunt Roman Fort.

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