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How Do Plows Affect Society
"Heavy plough accounts for more than 10% of the increase in population density and urbanization
during the high middle ages"(Anderson). Plows are a large farming implement with multiple blades
used to cut rows of any type of soil. It can be pulled by a tractor or animals for the purpose to
prepare for planting seeds the coming seasons. In the beginning, plows were never here, people use
to have one making plenty of holes going through the same process. First they would find a strong
stick with a point on it, push it into the ground, drop a seed into the hole, and cover with loose dirt
and water. Although plows have helped society with better time, efficiency, plows makes more of a
negative impact on society because less farmland, multiple machines for one job, and a maximum
capacity increase. Having less farmland it makes a negative impact on society. Farming less pushes
a negative pressure on people to tear down wooden environments. "3.5 billion to 7 billion trees are
cut down per year"(Rainforest Action Network). Which limits the amount of oxygen that is supplied
to humans, without this would causes many health issue, even death. With ... Show more content on
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The world has hit maximum capacity two separate times for hundreds of years. It says from "200
AD to 500 AD"(McGaughey). This shows that before we really started mass producing crops on
farms the world hit its maximum capacity for our species but them we started to produce more
crops. Also it say "1200 to 1300 AD"(McGaughey)that we hit our maximum capacity again. Then
we started to make plows that we strapped to animals and made them pull it. This pulls all three of
they reason together with the maximum capacity to go up it cause their to be less farming cause of
all the people expanding outward and taking all of the farmland to live on. In which that is causing
all the people to cut down all the trees for people to live and farm on in the
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Informative Essay On John Deere Tractors
I'm going to be telling about how people found out about John Deere Tractors.
Everyone that has a yard to mow or ever drove past a farm knows what a John Deere tractor looks
like. You don't have to be a farmer to recognize the green tractor with the yellow lettering as a John
Deere. These tractors are so well built and designed that television commercials say "Nothing runs
like a Deere". However, few of us may know the life story behind the man John Deere who invented
the design of the simple farm plow and in doing so started a company that would create farm
products used and recognized throughout the globe.
I'm going to be telling how John Deere Lived.
John Deere was born on February 4, 1804 in Vermont. His parents William and Sarah Deere. They
were tailors that had immigrated to Vermont from England. Life was hard for the Deere family when
their blacksmith business slowed in 1808. John's dad took a trip back to his home country in hopes
of finding a better life for his family. Unfortunately, Mr. Deere did not return from England and no
one ever found out what happened to him. John was only four years old . As a young boy, John
spent a lot of time outside a blacksmith shop in his hometown dreaming that he would one day
become a blacksmith. At the age ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Farmers across the Midwest raved about John's new plow. His plow helped farmers throughout the
Midwest be successful at farming. In 1838, John sent word his business had grown so much that he
had to relocate the John Deere Company to Moline, Illinois. As usual, John's curious mind made
him experiment with other farm tools such as the steam plow, cultivators, planters, and a grain drill.
(Just like his re–designed steel plow these additional tools became important to farmers.) On each of
the tools, the name John Deere stood out boldly. Through hard work and imagination, the company
being the name John Deere became a leading manufacturer of equipment used by
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History And Background Of John Deere
History and Background of John Deere John Deere (also known as Deere and Company) began
when founder John Deere, a blacksmith and a repair man, began to grow tired with the traditional
way of making plows. "Plows in the nineteenth century were made to order and usually made from
wood or iron. In 1837, John Deere created a plow using a steel saw blade. The smooth –sided plow
was much easier and faster to clean than traditional plows" (Wikipedia). John Deere decided that he
would manufacture the plows and then put them up for sale. This allowed customers to actually see
what they were buying beforehand. His business started to gain popularity. "In 1912, the company
began to expand into the tractor business. In 1918 Deere and Company purchased
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Simkin Haymaking Forks
Serf farmers farmed the land (Bennett 77). They used a variety of tools to do this. One of the tools
was a scythe. Scythes were used to mow fields (Bennett 82). They also allowed farmers to cut corn
while they were standing (Simkin). Medieval farmers used axes to kill animals and cut down trees
(Simkin). They used flails to separate grain from harvested sheaves (Simkin). A "flail was two
pieces of wood joined together" (Simkin). The longer piece of wood was the handle, and the shorter
piece was called the striker (Simkin). They used winnowing baskets to separate corn kernels from
the outer husks or chaffs of the corn (Simkin). The serf farmers also used harrows to break up soil
and cover seeds (Simkin). Harrows were made of four to six wooden beams called bulls, which were
set into wood or iron teeth, and joined together by wooden cross beams (Simkin). ... Show more
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Rakes were also used during haymaking to spread and collect grass (Simkin). They also had shears
to cut wool off sheeps, and sickles to cut corn (Simkin). One of the most important tools
incorporated in medieval farming was the moulboard plough. "The plows were made of wood and
had iron blades that cut through the soil (Cels 12). They were used to turn the earth and make a deep
trench for seeds to be planted (Cels 12). They used the three field system for farming (Cels 10). In
this system one field was planted with rye and wheat in early winter, another was planted with oats,
beans, peas, and barley in early spring, and the third field was left empty (Cels 10). Each year a
different field was left unplanted so that the soil remained fertile (Cels 10). Serf farmers used an
array of different tools, and the three field farming technique to farm as efficiently as they could at
the
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Technological Improvements and Their Impact in America Essay
Improvements in agriculture, transportation, and communication between 1790 and 1860 were the
stepping stones for a greater America. From the cotton gin, to the steamboat, to the telegraph, new
innovations were appearing all over. America had finally begun to spread its wings and fly. Due to
the fact that cotton had to be separated by hand, it was costly commodity. One person could barely
separate a pound by hand over the course of a day. It was not until 1793, when Eli Whitney invented
the cotton gin that production of cotton soared. A worker on a plantation could now produce fifty
pounds of cotton a day, instead of just one. With the increase in cotton production, came the increase
in slave labor, which was used to harvest the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
After fiddling with his horse–drawn machine for almost a decade, he was ready to market it. His
product sold so fast, that in 1847, he relocated to Chicago and built a manufacturing plant for his
reapers and mowers. He had sold thousands of machines within a few years, positively altering the
scale of agriculture. ?Using a hand–held sickle, a farmer could harvest half an acre of wheat a day,
with a McCormick reaper two people could work twelve acres a day.? (Tindall, 420) Transportation
also saw some advancements just as agriculture did. In 1795, the Wilderness Road was opened to
wagon and stagecoach traffic. The introduction of this road eased the journey through the
Cumberland Gap into Kentucky and along the Walton roads into Tennessee. After completion of the
Philadelphia–Lancaster Turnpike in 1794, a movement for graded and paved roads in the northeast
gathered momentum. By 1831, around four thousand miles of turnpikes had been completed, mostly
connecting the eastern cities. At the same time, new developments in water transportation were
made that included the river steamboat and the canal barge, which carried people and commodities
for a lower price than the wagons on the National Road. The Clermont, sent up the Hudson River to
Albany by Robert Fulton and Robert R. Livingston, was the first commercially successful
steamboat. Thereafter, steamboat usage spread rapidly to other eastern rivers as well as to the Ohio
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Importance of Identity in Anglo
J. M. Synge is one of the most prominent Irish writers of the twentieth century; his writing
characterizes a broad, multifaceted range of political, social and religious anxieties shaping Ireland
for the duration of its most remarkable period of change, which transformed the place from a
relatively peaceful country to a more political and aggressive location. The picture Synge creates
shows us that the question of identity relating to Ireland is problematic; however it has produced and
provoked some of the greatest literature of the century. As G. J. Watson has asserted: "However
painful the question of identity may be for the Irish in real life, it has functioned, deeply embedded
as it is in the Irish political and literary ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Ronan McDonald states: "Enter the playboy Christy Mahon. Christy's poetry, like the cultural
flowering of the Ascendancy, is based on a dirty deed that is aestheticized as a gallous story. In the
course of the action it is exposed and then transcended. Christy comes to the Mayoites carrying a
mark of culpability which, in the course of the play, he is privileged to purge. Culture confronts and
expiates its violent origins in the controlled laboratory of the stage. The play comically, but
unnervingly, explores the process by which violence is glorified and aestheticized. Yet it also, by a
theatrical slight of hand, reveals the violence as chimerical, and allows Christy to pass through and
survive the implications of his supposed atrocity." Ireland is shown for what it is; Synge offers us a
critique which is almost satirical. There is a mystical quality to Ireland which is emphasised by its
storytelling and folklore (Shanaitue), in which the Irish are a `nation of heroes'; a notion which is
explored through the figure of Christy – who is himself a `Christ–like' figure – as he almost brings
his father back from the dead in a sense. There is a sub–textual reference to the New Testament in
this father– son relationship; Christy is in conflict with his father – and in a certain respect – he is
`sacrificed' when he is burnt because he did not live up to the expectations people had of him. Synge
treats the conflict between the relations with irony, and it is
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Run With The Horsemen Essay
Little Porter Osborne, Jr. grew up on a farm in Georgia where the people own the land and the land,
in turn, owns the people. In the novel, Run with the Horsemen, Porter fights his way through
adolescence and the depression, learning more about life every day from the big boys under the tree
at lunch. Ferrol Sams is able to portray a realistic account of life on a farm during the depression by
using humor, dialect, and vivid imagery.
Humor is used throughout the book to keep the reader interested in what would otherwise be a
boring story of hard work and hard times. The boring and tedious act of plowing is turned into a
dangerous, yet humorous, occurrence when a release of methane gas from the mule was met ...
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Although the members of the Osborne family speak properly, the farm hands (who were, up until a
short time before the novel, slaves), speak in a southern dialect which portrays them as uneducated.
A good example of this is when Buddy pleads with Porter to, "Keep yo head down, Sambo! For
God's sake, keep yo head down an be stiller'n you ever been in yo life befo!" The same words are
used as would be used by an educated person, only they are shortened or run together.
The vivid imagery used throughout the novel allows the reader to have a better idea of what life was
like. The summer plowing is said to have a rhythm that is "almost musical," The stride of a man
"matched that of a mule in a one–plane dance down a cotton row with ears of the mule plunging
forward then backward in unison with the pull of the forelegs, now the hind legs, as the heavy plow
was dragged smoothly through the whispering earth." This passage allows the reader to imagine the
rhythm of the plowing, which makes it seem more real than just saying that the mule plowed up and
down the row. All this plowing happened as, "Over and above and beyond and around could be
heard bird song." The imagery of a man plowing in the heat with birds
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Analysis Of Speed The Plough
'No doubt they'll soon get well; the shock and the strain / have caused their stammering,
disconnected talk,' writes Siegfried Sassoon in the poem Survivors (1917). Sassoon's irony in these
lines condense a prevalent view of non–combatants during the First World War that the soldiers
would recover from their physical injuries and mental illness after the phase of shock had
concluded. In the short story Speed the Plough (1923), Mary Butts articulates scepticism towards the
idea that Shell Shock will simply pass. Instead of employing the habitual indicators of war, the story
showcases Butts's fixation in avoiding them. Modernist writers, such as Butts, were interested in
innovation and experimentation with language to create new forms of expression. The following
analysis will explore how the modernist aesthetics shape this passage in order to express the
experience of war but avoid recurring to the same language that explicitly evokes it. The third–
person, omniscient narrative voice in this passage of Speed the Plough gives Butts's freedom to
reveal the interiority of the character, to describe the images that are particular to the subject's mind.
This narrative voice is in command of the times present, past and future of the soldier. It tells the
reader that the soldier would 'always be lame' and that he afflicted with these images 'for years'. But
the use of the third–person in this passage has the effect of compromising its assumed objectivity.
The interiority of
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Who Is John Deere Innovator
John Deere, he was the farming innovator. John Deere was the first man to solve most of the major
plow issues. The first man to set up a major corporation, and it lasted a lifetime even lasted to this
day. John Deere's company has made so many technological advances over the hundreds of years
that his company has been open. John Deere was an innovator and a very smart man. John Deere
always had a good idea of how to make his original designs better. John Deere was born in Rutland,
Vermont on February 7, 1804 (John Deere Leader Biography). He was the son of William Rinold
Deere and Sarah Yates Deere. In 1805, William Deere moved to Middlebury, Vermont (The Man
Behind The Company). The rest of the Deere family followed behind and moved when ... Show
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John Deere said it was a good deal. Deere kept his end of the bargain and kept sending all of his
manufactured goods down the Mississippi River to St. Louis and that is where all of John Deeres
goods caught the train and headed for the western parts of the United States. After Deere signed
another contract with the train company in 1871, he decided to have them ship a few of his
technology and manufactured goods down south to Texas and clear over to California to see how
much money he would make at that place. John Deere had a range in expertise from the train to
farming equipment. John Deere helped invent the mechanical reaper for wheat in the 1859 (John
Deere Facts). In the eyes of the farmers that farmed in the Great Plains this machine saved some
time and it made everyone else happy to, because more they got planted. The more they got cut. The
more the people had to eat, Which really was a win for everybody. The farmers were able to produce
so much of their own crop that they had quite a bit left over, so they could feed their families, and
they still could sell it for some money if
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Plough: Tillage and Soil
The plough is a tool used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or
planting. It has been a basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major
advances in agriculture. The primary purpose of ploughing is to turn over the upper layer of the soil,
bringing fresh nutrients to the surface, while burying weeds and the remains of previous crops,
allowing them to break down. It also aerates the soil, and allows it to hold moisture better. In
modern use, a ploughed field is typically left to dry out, and is then harrowed before planting.The
plough is a tool used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or
planting. It has been a basic instrument for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It has been a basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major advances
in agriculture. The primary purpose of ploughing is to turn over the upper layer of the soil, bringing
fresh nutrients to the surface, while burying weeds and the remains of previous crops, allowing them
to break down. It also aerates the soil, and allows it to hold moisture better. In modern use, a
ploughed field is typically left to dry out, and is then harrowed before planting.The plough is a tool
used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or planting. It has been a
basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major advances in
agriculture. The primary purpose of ploughing is to turn over the upper layer of the soil, bringing
fresh nutrients to the surface, while burying weeds and the remains of previous crops, allowing them
to break down. It also aerates the soil, and allows it to hold moisture better. In modern use, a
ploughed field is typically left to dry out, and is then harrowed before planting.The plough is a tool
used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or planting. It has been a
basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major advances
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Analysis Of ' The Abbey Theatre ' Production Of The Plough...
In the Abbey Theatre's production of The Plough and the Stars, there is a sparseness that fills the
stage and leaves gaps that the audience can fill in for themselves. The production paints a stark,
modernish–period mashup that puts a spotlight on the struggles of the average folks in tenement–
dwelling Ireland during the Easter Rising of 1916. The play's strident use of visual effects, sound,
and lighting elements, for me, really helped immerse me in the world of the play and provided
social, political, and emotional relevance that allowed me access to the material.
Social Relevance This production truly highlighted the relationships between the characters and the
importance of the social bond when lives and survival is on the line. All of the people living in the
tenement house rely on each other for their existence. Though this reliance is not always based on
friendship, there are the basic human needs that must be met. The most powerful of these, I thought,
was Bessie Borgess. The actress' portrayal of the drunken, British–sympathizer really captivated me
in her constant rants to Mrs. Gogan and her disdain for Nora and all of her fancy clothes. In truth,
we really only see Nora in fairly plain clothes, a very plain dress, and a white t–shirt that clearly
looks like she's wearing Jack's undershirt in the last scene, as she waits in her delusion for him to
return. What Nora did appear to be in this production was clean; and I think that was intentional.
Until she
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The Importance Of Agriculture In Iowa
Before the European settlement of Iowa, the state was a land covered in tall prairie grasses,
wetlands, and small forests. The Native Americans thrived on these lands by using pockets of the
fertile soil for agriculture and hunting the abundance of wildlife that roamed these plains. By the late
1800s however, the prairie had become farmland and the Europeans had begun their new lives along
Iowa's waterways and railroads. Within a century Iowa's landscape had changed rapidly due to
human activity. As settlers began to enter Iowa they would encounter woodland areas in the extreme
southeastern corner of the state, and then move on the grasslands that covered most of the state.
Iowa served as a transition zone from the wooded East Coast to the Great Plains of the west. In
Central Iowa the grass the prairie grass would measure from ... Show more content on
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Every year the Wildlife Bureau of the DNR purchases land for public use and wildlife habitats. The
restoration of Iowa's prairie land is considered important because it can restore the natural
ecosystem, benefit water quality, and reduces soil erosion caused by runoff. Other farming practices
such as having buffer strips near streams and cover crops have helped manage the soil erosion in
Iowa, but since 1850 we have lost nearly 14 inches in topsoil depth and growing. Iowa has changed
rapidly from the vast prairie lands it used to be, but many of these lands are being slowly reclaimed
and restored to their once natural splendor. The most rapid change in Iowa's landscape occurred
during the Industrial Revolution, and when large scale farming became a possibility. This has left
serious consequences on Iowa's landscape with erosion, but is being combatted by more productive
farming practices. Iowa as the "middle lands" is continuously changing, for the better or the worse,
alongside the people who call it
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John Deere Tractors
I researched a John Deere. A John Deere helps farmers to plow up the land easier than doing it by
hand or horses. John Deere tractors can help with just about anything on the farm, such as
planting,harvesting, and mowing. It's not as back breaking as it would be by doing it by hand. John
Deere has technology that can help plowing be more efficient and straighter rows then doing it with
animals are yourself.
The plow was invented in 1837 by John Deere. He knew how excruciating the pain was by doing it
by hand and the toll it took on the animals. So one day he envisioned the soil sliding easier and more
efficient. So he took one of his broken steel saw blades and started making the first plow invented.
In 1837 the first plow was made by John Deere it was pulled by animals. In 1892 in Northeast Iowa,
John Froelich invented the first ever gas powered tractor. It was the first tractor that could backup
and go forward. He used this tractor to separate the wheat from the plant easier then by hand.
In 1954 the first combine was made it was a 2 row corn head that could do 20 acres of corn in a
single operation. In 1957 the first baler was invented the 14T baler produced good shaped bales that
it could then transfer the bales onto the hay rack without them getting off the rack to pick them up.
The baler took less ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It was used for cutting yards,Golf courses, baseball fields, football fields, and other different
sporting events. Thanks to its variable speed drive it was a big seller all across the world. Fast
forward to know lawn mowers these days are far better than they were back then, they can do more
things now then they could back then because today's mowers are more efficient at cutting the grass.
There are different attachments to the mowers now then there was back then like a handle to move
the deck up and down, and adjusting the deck to a certain height for the right cut of what you want
your grass to
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How Did John Deere Impact Society
John Deere is a man who has changed the life of an Illinois farmer. His success in that lead to even
more success like his very own company. John Deere innovated plows and made an impact on
society by helping over one thousand farmers succeed in their jobs with his improved plow while
showing people that persisting can lead to a solution. John just had recently moved to Illinois and
started selling old plows that worked with the soil at his birthplace in Vermont. His business was a
success until there was a huge problem with the plows that he sold. "Customers complained that
their wood or iron plows proved ineffective in turning the prairie sod, which stuck to the implant's
surface." (Publication: Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History Document: Steel Plow) This
was because the soil had a very thick covering that would clog up the moldboards of the plow if you
ever tried to plow it. This made customers angry at John's service, so he had to fix the plow to be
back in business. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"Deere tried covering the moldboard and cutting a plowshare from salvaged steel. Steel surfaces
tended to shed the thick soil and were burnished by the abrasive action of the soil." (Publication:
Encyclopedia of World Biography Document: John Deere) It was a success because soon afterwards
his new steel plows were being used and farmers were coming to him for their needs again. The
customers did not come to him fast, of course it took time for customers to come back and find
about his steel plow. There was a problem that John could not find enough of steel, but it worked out
when he negotiated with a couple of people and made over 1000 steel plows with the steel he
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What Is The Impact Of Technology On The Great Plains Frontier
The Impact of Technology Emerging technologies affected lives of many people on the Great Plains
frontier, ones that were already living there, and others that would eventually migrate there.
Technology increased the Plains goods being produced, made life easier, and brought our country
closer together. Although there are some disagreements, I believe that commercialization and
technology was a benefit for most westerner in the late nineteenth century.
Before technological advancements were brought to the Great Plains frontier farmers would over
look the land, because it had a very little amount of trees and the ground was hard, and go towards
the Oregon area. But after the technology evolved, it made it possible to actually farm, and ... Show
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The herds of bison almost became desolate, the farmers were also plowing the natural gross for their
crops, and the cattle business became more important because the railroad could transport them
easier.
The lives of the native Americans that had already been living on the Great Plains frontier had been
affected drastically. Most people really only hear about battles like Custer's last stand, and
geronimo. What we don't read in our textbooks is how they were treated. They had been pushed out
of their land and were mostly confined to reservations, mostly areas that the white didn't feel were
very good. They also were given rations on the reservation, that Americans only had to do in hard
times such as war.
Emerging technologies affected lives of many people on the Great Plains frontier, But not only
theirs, but mine also. If we had not had little technology advancements we would not be where we
are at today. The technology in the late nineteenth century increased goods being produced, made
life more comfortable, and connected our country. The benefits of these things not only benefitted
them but evolved into better things now. I am grateful for the effect it has played on our nation and
and will continue to centuries to
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The History of Mr. John Deere
The History of Mr. John Deere "I will never put my name on a product that does not have the best
that is in me." This is arguably the most famous quote made by Deere and that has stuck with the
company for the last 175 years. Deere was the man who kick started modern farming by inventing
the first ever cast steel plow, as opposed to the much heavier cast iron plow that worked alright in
the sandy soil but the fertile heavy soil of the plains would just stick too. This is how john Deere's
steel plow became known as "The Plow That Broke the Plains." Mr. John Deere was born in Rutland
Vermont in 1804, and grew up in nearby Middlebury. Deere was just four years old when his father,
William, was lost at sea and never returned leaving his mother, Sarah Deere, to raise him. Deere was
not an only child, living with five brothers and sisters in a moderately poor family so there was no
leftover money for education. John very rarely attended school and focused his time on work to
make money to support his family. He worked for a few different people, such as farmers and shop
keepers but did not stay with a job for more than a few months at a time. until age 17 when he got an
offer for an apprenticeship working for a blacksmith in a town about 50 miles from home, with his
mothers permission he left home to go to work learning the trade of blacksmithing. Deere was
naturally gifted at working with metal or doing anything with his hands. Eventually Deere set up
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Symbolism In The Nebraska Landscape Cather
The three main symbols used in this work include the Nebraska landscape, the plough, and Jim. The
most crucial of the three is the Nebraska landscape. Cather poetically praises the setting, going as far
as to make it the most outstanding and unique part of the novel. The Nebraska landscape is used by
Cather to show their society as a whole and how they live their lives. It parallels Jim's feelings and
his relationships with the people and culture of Nebraska. In his memory, this landscape is the main
physical symbol from his childhood. "The only thing very noticeable about Nebraska was that it was
still, all day long, Nebraska." As stated in book 1 The Shimerdas. The plough is symbolic of the
people's effort to live off of the land. It is
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Gabriel's Point Of View
Gabriel's Point of view : My alarm went off and that's when I knew that it was time for me to go to
work. My job was not the best thing in the world but even though I did not like it I had to work
because i had a family to send money to Mexico. I headed out the door with my cotton sack when I
got to the fields of cotton I saw panchito, Roberto and his dad they both had there cotton sack in one
hand and a water bottle and the other as soon I got closer to them i said good morning and so they
did. After a while of getting ready to start picking the cotton the contratista came and started to yell
for everyone to start working. As we started to work I could already feel the hot sun and by this I
new it was going to be a hard long day
Panchitos ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
When we got to empty field he said "put this around your waist and furrow them" I looked at him a
frown. A couple minutes passed and he said "what are waiting for" I told him that in my country
oxen pull plows and he said well we are not in your country idiot. I got so mad because he had
called me an idiot so i told him in a loud tone that I would not do it. He told that I would regret this.
The next day non of the workers showed up to work we did this because since the contratista does
not want to show us respect then we wont get his work done. I new this was a good but bad idea at
the same time because how are we going to get money. A couple days went by and the cantratista
was begging people to come back to work. Everyone agreed that it was time to go back to work .
When we got to work the contratista told us to get in a circle so he could say some words.
Contratista point of view – I know i have been really unfair with some of you so i have decided that
it is time to have respect towards you my workers and also pay you guys more.
Workers point of view– when those words came out his mouth everyone started cheering and since
that day we knew that our job was going to great again and that we still going to be able to send
money to our families in
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John Deere Company
The John Deere Company was started by one man in 1837. John Deere was a blacksmith and an
inventor who strove to ease the job of the local farmers. That effort, with his original core values
still intact, grew into worldwide company. Along with those core values Deere and Company has
developed and maintained a reputation for their business ethics. They have a solid organization
structure built up by exceptional human resources division. With all of this, John Deere's name and
brand are known around the world. Headquartered in Moline, IL, Deere and Company, as it is
officially known, is one of the oldest industrial companies in the United States. (Cripple, 2010)
The company has grown and become a recognized symbol of Americana like apple pie ... Show
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The bottom line, to every company, however, is the financial one. In the past ten years Deere and
Company had only one year that one could call challenging; they made it through and have since
seen a steady increase toward a strong financial standing along with a steady reduction in the
number of outstanding common shares. The net income more than doubled in that same ten years.
At the end of 2014, the net income was $3,161.7 million versus the $1,446.8 million at the end of
2005. In the same ten years, stockholders have enjoyed watching their holdings increase by more
than double from the end of the fourth quarter of 2005 to the same period in 2014. The Deere and
Company financials remain strong in spite of the current common (DE) stock price was closing at
$91.25 on 7/27/2014, which was down from the opening price of $91.82. (Deere and Company
Stock Data page,
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Mechanical Reapers In The 1800s
The reaping machine commonly referred to as the mechanical reaper was invented by Cyrus
McCormick and Obed Hussey in 1833 and 1834. It followed a major pattern for its uses in the
harvesting of wheat and other small grains as well as grasses. The invention of the mechanical
reaper drastically changed the lives and yields of grain farmers. In regards to the eventual success
and large effect of the reaping machine, the historians usually ask themselves why the machines take
too long to be accepted despite its invention in 1833. The first machines that Obed Hussey invented
were adopted in the mid–1850's. Why wasn't a machine which could substantially increase
productivity immediately adopted? Wouldn't it have increased farmer's profits during ... Show more
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The model assumes that the farmers maximized their profits, the reapers could not be shared, the
farm acre increased with time and the productivity of the acre did not depend on the farm size . This
model is made to compare two distinct production techniques. It works from the statement that
given the competitive markets, the individual producers will choose the technique that gives
comparatively greater cost saving. It is what applied to the adoption of the mechanical reaper.
During the 1830s–1840s, farmers opted to use animals and human hands because they engaged in
small farming. The cost of purchasing the mechanical reaper was higher than using animals and
human hands. There was also no sharing of cost among the farmers. Nevertheless, during the 1850s
the demand for labor increased as farmers started large–scale farming. There was a need for
cooperative sharing of the cost of the reaper as it was expensive to use animals for harvesting small
grains. So, the only option for these farmers was to adopt the mechanization of the reaper. Drawing
from Clarke (2002), the "threshold model" offers the conceptual platform for examining the cost
determinant of technological diffusion. Indeed, through the assumptions of fairness asserted by
Olmstead and Rhode, people maximize their profits through the budgetary constraints . It is what
justify and support their claim about the adoption of the reaper. If these farmers could have adopted
the reaper during the 1830s–1840s, they could not maximize their profits because it would have
increased their budget. The cost of the machine was high, and they maximized profits independently.
The best time for the adoption of the reaper was the 1850s because the demand for labor was high
and the farmers had increased their acreage for
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The Role Of Apolitical Characters In 'The Plough Of The...
The characters in The Plough of the Stars can be divided into two groups; apolitical and political.
However, the extent to which the apolitical characters are 'warm and human' and the political
characters are 'cold and fanatical' can be debated. In relation to the apolitical character of Nora, it
can be argued that she is 'warm and human' when able to refuse the entry of the political into her
marriage. Mrs Gogan, as an apolitical character, attempts to present herself as 'warm and human',
but this is undercut by her juxtaposing actions. While the political characters can be categorised as
'cold', Bessie's human empathy challenges the characteristic capabilities of political characters.
Finally, it can be claimed that the political characters cannot be confined to a group, due to the vast
amount of political ideologies presented in the play.
The claim that the apolitical characters of The Plough are 'warm and human' can be argued through
the initial presentation of Nora. However, this is disrupted when she is no longer able to refuse the
political context from her marriage. Nora illustrates her personal distance from the political sphere
in her statement, 'I won't go, Jack; you can go if you wish.' Her refusal to attend a political meeting
with her husband conveys her opposition towards the political context of the play. Despite this, Nora
is depicted as tolerant of other characters' political involvement. This is illustrated in her
encouragement towards Peter to go to the meeting, as she says, Therefore, Nora's 'warm and human'
character is initially presented as accepting of the political. However, her character becomes
desperate and hysterical in her exclamation 'don't mind him, don't mind, Jack. Don't break our
happiness... Pretend we're not in. Let us forget everything tonight but our two selves!' (O'Casey, 28).
The diction of 'pretend' and 'forget' are emphasised, reflecting Nora's deliberate opposition against
politics entering her marital life (O'Casey, 28). The domestic setting in which this action unfolds
supports the idea that Nora wishes to refuse the political. This is evident in the description of the
home as 'furnished in a way that suggests an attempt towards a finer expression of domestic
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Growth And Development Of Modern Agriculture : The...
Looking back at the history of agriculture, there have been many changes to the methods we farm.
In every aspect of farming, there has been growth and development of new ideas and ways of doing
everyday work. The advancement of machinery has assisted farmers in improving the way they do
things by leaps and bounds. Comparing modern machinery to when everything was done by hand
shows how far agriculture has really advanced in that aspect alone. One of the earliest advancements
was the plow. While it may seem like a simple machine, the plow is possibly one of the most
important pieces of equipment in the field. It helped start the mechanization of agriculture as we
know it and may be the best–known invention when it comes to people's knowledge of farming. The
first and most important thing to know is what a plow is and how it works. A plow is an implement
that breaks up the soil and prepares it to be seeded. The plow also assists in breaking up what's left
of the previous growing season's crop and circulating it back into the ground to use as organic
matter for the new crop. If done at the right time, plowing can be used as weed control. If the farmer
plowed the weeds before the seeds were mature enough to reproduce, those weeds would be taken
care of and prevented from multiplying. All of this made the soil more suitable to plant seeds for
whatever crop the farmer was growing. Plowing turned over the topsoil to make it easier for farmers
to plant seeds deeper in the ground.
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John Deere
Scott Hedrick March 19, 2012 1. History of John Deere "Deere & Company began when John
Deere, born in Rutland, Vermont, USA on February 7, 1804, moved to Grand Detour, Illinois in
1836 in order to escape bankruptcy in Vermont. Already an established blacksmith, Deere opened a
1,378 square feet shop in Grand Detour in 1837 which allowed him to serve as a general repairman
in the village, as well as a manufacturer of small tools such as pitchforks and shovels. What was
more successful than these small tools was Deere's cast–steel plow, which was pioneered in 1837.
Prior to Deere's introduction of the steel plow, most farmers used iron or wooden plows which stuck
to the rich Midwestern soil and had to be cleaned very frequently. ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
John Deere bought out Tate and Gould's interests in the company in 1853, the same year that he was
joined in the business by his son Charles Deere. The business continued to expand until 1857, when
the company's production totals reached almost 1,120 implements per month. Then, in 1858 a
nationwide financial recession took a toll on the company. In order to prevent bankruptcy, the
company was reorganized and Deere sold his interests in the business to his son in law, Christopher
Webber, and his son, Charles Deere, who would take on most of his father's managerial roles. The
company was reorganized one final time in 1868, when it was incorporated as Deere &
Company. The company's original stockholders were Charles Deere, Stephen Velie, George Vinton,
and John Deere, who would serve as president of the company until 1886. Despite this, it was
Charles who effectively ran the company. In 1869, Charles began to introduce marketing centers and
independent retail dealers to advance the company's sales nationwide. John Deere died in 1886, and
the presidency of Deere & Company passed to Charles Deere. By now the company was
manufacturing a variety of farm equipment products in addition to plows, including wagons, corn
planters, cultivators. The company even expanded into the bicycle business briefly during the 1890s,
but the core focus of the company remained on agricultural implements. Increased competition
during the early 1900s from
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The Theory Of K Ā Wanatanga
Since the early 18th century, Māori have challenged the theory of kāwanatanga (governance) which
was introduced by the contradictory versions viewed in the Treaty of Waitangi. Māori, throughout
history have fought to maintain their identity and save their settlements in many ways in Aotearoa.
In this essay I will describe how kāwanatanga was first introduced in the Māori society and discuss
the consequences of it such as Parihaka pacifist movement, along with challenges including land
ownership. These disputes have been important as it signifies New Zealand's history and some of the
events have played major roles in what New Zealand is today.
Kāwanatanga caused disagreement and it first began from the translation in Article One of the ...
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Since the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, Māori gave authority to the Crown like giving small
proportion of mana to rule the upcoming colonizers but being promised tino rangatiratanga
(chieftainship) to remain with them as they had no intention to give it away (Adams 1977:235,
Fenton & Moon 2002:25). However this was a misunderstanding of kāwanatanga between Māori
and the crown. Crown had thought they were receiving sovereignty over New Zealand from the
Māori chiefs, on the other hand Māori thought they were only giving part of their mana to the
Crown. Moreover, the chiefs implied that only partial control will be under the British but the land
will still be owned by the Māori (Adams 1977:235, Fenton & Moon 2002:34). Further on, Hapū
(sub–tribe) felt kāwanatanga was disobeyed. This was because Crown let go of the promises that
Māori believed were made to them in terms of rights and authority. Along the passing decades, it
was seen that the Crown went on requesting complete authority over Aotearoa with this form of
"kāwanatanga", overcoming the tino rangatiratanga of Māori" Māori had no power in the native
courts (Adams 1977:235, Fenton & Moon 2002:37). Further empowerment of British procedures,
initiated the Māori challenge against kāwanatanga.
At this time Māori were facing difficult situations as they were exposed to harmful infectious
diseases, which only started when Europeans arrived. Māori were trying to cope with new
settlements along with new
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How Did John Deere Make The Cast-Iron Plows
The first real practicable plow was invented by Charles Newbold, and his cast–iron version of the
plow was patented in 1797. It was disliked by many farmers in the area because they believed it
allowed the weeds to flourish. As other inventors built new ideas of the plows, these farmers got rid
of their former views and began using the plow. The cast–iron plows were good for the light, sandy
soils of the East Coast, but they were very sluggish in the thick soil of Illinois ("Just"). John Deere
introduced a tool of agriculture, the self–scouring plow, that would become a booming
manufacturing business for many years to come. John Deere was born in Vermont in 1804 to
William and Sarah Deere. His father had left for England and never returned ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
They not only built plows, but began to build and market the Seymour grain drill. Another addition
in 1863, the Hawkeye riding cultivator, was the second non–plow implement produced. This new
cultivator was the first implement to ride on. Other improvements were made to the plows in the
years to come such as wheels on the plows, an additional moldboard mounted to the frame, and 300
other small improvements. Joseph Fawkes, the producer of a steam–powered plow, joined John
Deere and was able to implement his ideas into their
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Blue Collar Workers In The 19th Century
What contributed to modern labor and farming techniques? Life was much harder prior to the
nineteenth century laborers left rural farming areas to work in search of work at factories in the city.
Through various inventions, modernization of techniques. The transformations that occurred paved
the way for society to have a higher quality of life and grow. Technological advances that occurred
prior to nineteenth century have allowed farmers and laborers to work more efficiently. Thus
providing blue collar workers of today reasonable hours and less physically demanding labor. In
agriculture, farmers spent long days performing tedious tasks just to provide for their families and
domestic needs. This would include prehistoric methods like hand ... Show more content on
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Old industries expanded and many new ones, including petroleum refining, steel manufacturing, and
electrical power, emerged. Railroads expanded significantly, bringing even remote parts of the
country into a national market economy. Industrial growth transformed American society. It
produced a new class of wealthy industrialists and a prosperous middle class. It also produced a
vastly expanded blue collar working class. The labor force that made industrialization possible was
made up of millions of newly arrived immigrants and even larger numbers of migrants from rural
areas. American society became more diverse than ever before. Not everyone shared in the
economic prosperity of this period. Many workers were typically unemployed at least part of the
year, and their wages were relatively low when they did work. This situation led many workers to
support and join labor unions. Meanwhile, farmers also faced hard times as technology and
increasing production led to more competition and falling prices for farm products. Hard times on
farms led many young people to move to the city in search of better job opportunities. Americans
who were born in the 1840s and 1850s would experience enormous changes in their lifetimes. Some
of these changes resulted from a sweeping technological revolution. Their major source of light, for
example, would change from candles, to kerosene lamps, and then to electric light bulbs. They
would see their transportation evolve from walking and horse power to steam–powered locomotives,
to electric trolley cars, to gasoline–powered automobiles. Born into a society in which the vast
majority of people were involved in agriculture, they experienced an industrial revolution that
radically changed the ways millions of people worked and where they lived. They would experience
the migration of millions of people from rural America to the nation's rapidly growing cities. The
decline of child labor
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Personality Sketch Of John Deere
John Deere Biography
Name
Course
Date
John Deere Biography
Character and personality John Deere
In appearance Mr. Deere was strongly built, large, and was blessed with unlimited ability to endure
unlimitedly. He had a frank, open, and his hearty, bespeaking, genial, and noble social character. He
had feelings that were visible from the surface and was sensitive to pathos both of joy and sorrow.
He had sympathy and would quickly respond to calls of misfortune and trouble and rejoiced in
prosperity. Though absorbed in business, had little interest in public or office trusts, he was always
sympathetic about public interests, giving liberally to advance the public interests. He was a republic
and an active member of the Congregational Church being a generous contributor to the local and
foreign acts of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He managed to shod the oxen and hoist them above in the ox–frame, and still in the process fasten
their hoofs. In addition he could make the ox 'shoes and the nails. He could make the iron parts for
the carriages, stagecoaches and wagons and could possibly make any parts that were iron wrought.
Assessment: others' opinions
According to Ultimate John Deere By Ralph W. Sanders (), John Deere was as considered by many
more of an adapter of technology an imaginative marketer rather than an innovator. He was a keen
on seeing value in new ideas and adapted them to his products so that they could better serve his
customers4. In addition his desire for quality transposed to become the family tradition transforming
the on–man plough making shop to the largest farm equipments making company in the world.
The author believes that he had reasoned rule for life and said that it was a great consolation that he
did not willfully wrong anyone nor put to the market an imperfectly made
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How Did John Deere Create A Steel Plow?
"In 1837 John Deere moved to the small northern Illinois town of Grand Detour where he became
aware of the iron plow's inability to penetrate the clay soil (Deere, 2006)." The iron plow did not
work. A change had to happen (Deere, 2006) (Deere, 1998) (Steel Plow, 1999) (Deere, 1999).
"Fashioning a plow from a discarded steel circular saw blade, he was able to successfully plow a
dozen rows nonstop (Deere, 2006)." John Deere created agricultural tools, used persisting to
overcome the challenges of the plains area, and illuminated the world by playing one of the major
roles in the transformation of plains lands into fertile, agriculturally productive farmlands (Deere,
1999) John Deere created the steel plow to help with the challenges of the plains area (Deere, 2006)
(Deere, 1998) (Steel Plow, 1999) (Deere, 1999). It was the only steel plow that could break through
the plains mud. There was many good and different ways that the plow worked. It could
successfully plow many rows non stop and the blade was curved to one side so you did not need to
push the dirt to one side (Deere, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
When John Deere created the steel plow, the field of farming could work faster. The new work was
also more efficient (Deere, 2006). Another reason about how he illuminated the world is that he was
one of the first to design agricultural tools and machines to meet the specific needs of midwestern
farmers (Deere, 1998). His change was big. "He made a change by playing one of the major roles in
the transformation of America's wild lands into fertile, agriculturally productive farmlands (Deere,
1999)." "He enabled the settling of America, and brought to all of America a first wave of farmers
who populated and settled the wilderness of the undeveloped lands of the United States, with the
help of his plow (Deere, 1999). John Deere helped the field of agriculture in a very big
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Heaney's Poem Follower Essay
Heaney's Poem "Follower" Follower is a poem about the poets love and admiration for his father. It
is also about the changes that occur between father and children as children move out from their
parent's shadow. In the first half of the poem the poet draws a vivid portrait of his father as he
ploughs a field. The poet, as a young boy, follows his father as he goes about his work and, like
most boys, he idolises his father and admires his great skill, 'An expert. He would set the wing and
fit the bright steel – pointed sock'. In the poem, Heaney looks up to his father in a physical sense,
because he is so much smaller than his father, but he also looks up to him in a metaphorical sense.
This is made clear by the poet's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It is as though at this moment the boy has become aware of himself. He wants to be like his father
but thinks of himself as clumsy and a "nuisance". His fathers strength and power are also very
effectively brought out in the simply, but effective simile, 'His shoulders globed like a full sail
strung between the shafts and the furrow.' The comparison here suggests a man who spends much of
his time out of doors, a man who is part of nature. The word 'globed' also suggests great strength and
gives the impression that the father was the whole world to the young boy. It is important to note
that his father is not simply strong; his tender love and care for his son are emphasised by the fact
that he 'rode me on his back dipping and rising to his pod'. The sound and rhythm of these lines
covey the pleasure young Heaney had in the ride. The words 'yapping' make us think of the boy as
being like a young and excited puppy – enjoying playing at ploughing, but of no practical help. In
fact, he was a hindrance to a busy farmer, but his father tolerates him. The poem has several
developed metaphors, such as the child following in his father's footsteps and wanting to be like
him. The father is sturdy while the child falls – his feet is not big enough for him to be steady on the
uneven land. In the closing lines of the poem shifts again, this time the "I" voice of the poet is
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To Kill A Mockingbird Alternate Ending Essay
Walter Cunningham's freckled face flushed radish red as he saw us.
"Good afternoon Walter, is your father in the house?" Atticus asked.
"Ahh yessir, Mr. Finch," Walter murmured, "he's out yonder in the kitchen."
"Scout stay here will you while I talk to Mr. Cunningham," ordered Atticus.
Walter looked completely different from usual. His shoes were torn, his overalls were soaked in
sweat and dirt was muddled in his dishevelled hair. He'd been digging up potatoes with an old potato
plough with a rusty old wheel and two well–worn handles.
He muttered, "Scout why's Atticus havin' a talk with my Papa?"
"Atticus is just here to settle Mr. Cunningham's entailments," I reassured him, "Want a hand with the
choppin' Walter'?" I asked
"All right, suppose ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"Wait. Walter, what's with all the coins?" I queried.
"Ah...umm...don't know," he anxiously said as he quickly shoved them back into the toolbox.
"C'mon Walter tell me the truth?" I begged.
"Oh fine, well a few days back, my Papa asked me to bring a crokersack full of turnip greens to Mr
Johnson's house. It was a long an' miserable walk an' rain started pouring heavily. I open the door to
the house to find that no one was home an' placed the crockersack down inside. Then I notice a pile
of coins oddly lying on the table so I..."
"Walter! You stole those?"
"I know, I know I never should a done it but I feel so worthless an' poor compared to all the other
folks in this town. I was astounded when I saw them coins, I never seen anything as fine as that in
years..."
"Say not a chance that I would have thought of you, Walter Cunningham as to someone who would
steal," I said in a disgusted tone. "Scout I'm sick of havin' to keep the Cunningham reputation and
following all the right rules an' for what is the point anymore. We have nothing. Nothing good
happens in our lives an' nothing ever will," he exclaimed in a desperate tone. "We only get a whole
heap a pain an' misery,
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Summary Of Pieter Bruegel's Landscape With The Fall Of Icarus
When one looks at Pieter Bruegel's "Landscape With the Fall of Icarus", it is impossible for the
mind not to jump to the myth of Daedalus and Icarus. Many of the myth's elements are incorporated
into the painting such as the farmer ploughing his fields, the shepherd looking up into the sky, and
Icarus himself drowning. Even though there are many similarities between the painting and the
myth, there are also many instances where the painting and the myth differ significantly. When the
viewer interprets the changes made, they can see that these changes were made intentionally by
Bruegel as a method for him to demonstrate his beliefs regarding money and the problems it caused.
The first major change from the myth to the painting is the time period where the story is taking
place. One of the major indicators of the change in time period is the city that is located in the upper
left–hand side of the painting. The image features a city filled with buildings that would have fit in
with those seen by Bruegel during his life. The architecture appears to be what would be found in
the Netherlands, with the tall buildings with sharp points where the two sections of roof intersect
and the buildings packed tightly together as if to stay warm throughout the harsh winters. On the
peninsula farther from the audience there is a small church which can be identified by its tower
rising above the town, another architectural staple of Bruegel's time. Additionally, the roofs are
painted a red color. This color also serves to set the painting in Bruegel's time as the red roofs would
remind a viewer of Renaissance Italy and not Ancient Greece. The red roofs also demonstrates that
Bruegel wanted the audience's eyes to go to this spot on the painting as the red color contrasts with
the surrounding white and blue. With the city, Bruegel effectively sets the painting in his own time
and demonstrates through his color choices that he wants the audience to know this. Setting the
painting in his time is significant as it demonstrates to the viewer that the message which is being
delivered is a modern message.
Another major change made by Bruegel is the behavior of the characters. In the myth, all of them
stop everything that they are doing
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1257, Life as a Villein Essay
1257, Life as a Villein
My name is Katie Longhair. I am twenty–one years old and I am a villein, that's with an 'e' not an 'a',
I'm no criminal you know. I live as a tenant on Lord Richard's land. That means that I have to pay
him rent to live there. However, I can not pay him in pennies because I haven't got enough, instead I
pay him with whatever I can spare off the farm.
I can see you're not from round these parts so let me tell you how life goes in this village. Villein is
just another word for peasant, and peasant life really is tough. All we seem to do is work. Us
peasants are an important part of feudalism. The King gave Lord Richard a share of his land and in
return Lord Richard ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Next year the crops will all move round one field. The Lord keeps most of the land for himself but
all the villagers are allowed some strips of land in each field. They are spread around the field so
that we get a share of the best and the poorest land.
There's John the priest, He's a kind, caring man if ever there were one. He helps the sick or needy if
he can, not like some priests you hear of who drink too much and ignore their duties. We have to
give the priest a tithe that's what the barn over there is for. It can be hard having to give the priest
one tenth of all our crops each year, but I know he's not a selfish man so I don't mind.
That's my husband Alf, he hardly has the time to look after our own land and grow food for our
family. William Reeve has just told him to plough half an acre of the Lord's fields this week. As well
as that he has his week work, to hoe weeds every Monday, but I think we're going to get little Alfie
doing that soon, he's nearly six now and it's about time he started pitching in. Alf's boon work was
three days in June hay making, and three times a year he has to cart grain to another Manor and the
Lord can make him do as much extra work as he wants at seed–sowing time and harvest time. All
we get for all this work is our cottage and just 6 strips of land in the fields and if we annoy the Lord
in any way we could loose it all and
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Paul Harvey's Speech 'So God Made A Farmer'
The Man of Steel On his talk show Paul Harvey had one famous speech "So God made a Farmer."
In the speech he describes a farmer as firm but caring, He says, ". . . It had to be somebody who'd
plow deep and straight and not cut corners; somebody to seed, weed, feed, breed and rake and disc
and plow...So God made a Farmer." John Deere has helped farmers accomplished many of those
things he listed seeding, weeding, and plowing. Plowing might be last on the list for Paul Harvey,
but it is the first accomplishment of John Deere which turned into to a big and outstanding company.
John Deere created the first steel plow in a little blacksmith shop in Illinois. Farmers had a great
deal of problems when it came to plowing. The plow would try to get through the dark and rich dirt.
Then in a matter of moments, the plow would be full of dirt that farmers would have to quit plowing
and scrape off the dirt (OH, DEERE). The black soil is what caused the plow to get full of wet dense
dirt which that called Gumbo (John Deere, That's Who). John Deere decided he wants to enhance
the plow (OH, DEERE). John Deere fiddled with the steel blades off of a sawmill, he thought that
the curved and shiny might go through the gumbo (John Deere, That's Who). To get started, John
Deere first used a saw blade, then he modified it by cutting the teeth off. That creates a ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Approximately 1,600 plows were made in the year of 1850 (John Deere). John Deere also started
making many different tools to help improve the steel plow for farmers. With the changing of
technology in the farming industry there is an abundance different tools to help farmers. "Since
1837, John Deere has delivered innovative products of superior quality built on a tradition of
integrity," says the John Deere
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The Impact of John Deere Essay
The Impact of John Deere Nowadays more and more people are unaware of where their food comes
from. Mankind now lives in an age where technology is the main focus and the rural way of life is
becoming a thing of the past. The ability to produce food is so efficient and effective that some
people do not even realize how their food gets to their plate. But that was not the case in the 19th
century. In 1837, a man named John Deere changed farming forever. In the coarse of human
existence, civilizations have made farming their primary source for food. As long as farming has
been around, agricultural implements have been used to farm the land. Scientists believe that the
first plows that were used, date back to 4,000 B.C. These plows were ... Show more content on
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Data has proven that he was correct about the exponential growth (Blackwell–Tompkins, Danley,
Egan, Saffron, Silsby 4). So how has the human race been able to produce enough food? Obviously
something happened that increased crop production, and made growing food more efficient. By the
19th century, American frontiersmen were moving west. The farmers experienced much heavier and
stickier soils than they had been accustomed to in the east. The soil would stick to the moldboard
and a man would have to stop and scrape it off every few steps. (Anderson) "A strong man using a
modern spade still took an estimated ninety–six hours to till an acre of land" (Drache 2). The cast
iron plows with a wooden moldboard had worked great in the light, sandy soils of New England, but
something different was needed in the west. This is where John Deere had to step in. John Deere
was born in Rutland, Vermont on February 7, 1804. When John was 17 he apprenticed himself to a
black smith for 4 years. After that he immediately went into the blacksmithing business. John
borrowed money to build his own blacksmith shop. Tragically, his shop was destroyed by fire not
only once, but two times. John could not pay off his debt and facing bankruptcy, he made the
decision to head west where he could find work, and be able to pay off his debt (Nortrax). He found
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Follower and Digging by Seamus Heaney Essay
Follower and Digging by Seamus Heaney In his poems 'Follower and Digging' Heaney is thinking
about his father. How do these two poems give you different ideas about his relationship with his
father?
In the two poems, 'Digging' and 'Follower', Seamus Heaney writes about growing up on his father's
farm, in County Derry, in Ireland. I am going to compare and contrast, remembered and present day,
feelings Heaney has about his relationship with his father. The poem 'Follower' tells us about
Heaney's admiration for his father and how he wants to grow up to plough just like him. He
observes how his father tends to the farm, but how ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Another example of Heaney's admiration for his father is how he is in control, 'the horses strained at
his clicking tongue.' This tells the reader how the big horses worked harder at the father's command,
and did what he wanted. 'With a single pluck,' this tells the reader that even though the father used
minimum effort to direct the horses, he was always in control. This also expresses that Heaney
views his father as, 'an expert.' The emphasis of this short sentence simply shows how much the poet
admires his father's competence as a farmer. The way the father skilfully cuts the bottom of the
furrow and turns the soil, 'set the wing, and fit the bright steel –pointed sock.' This tells the reader
how he ploughs in exactly the right position as if it should fit there. Also the use of the technical
terms for the plough shows that the father was a specialist.
The metaphor 'mapping the furrow exactly,' describes the father as a perfectionist. This tells the
reader how he plans and lines up the plough precisely, and knows how to plough a furrow correctly.
He is not actually mapping out the furrows but the metaphor describes how perfectly the father
ploughs. This is also shown by, at the headrig, with a single pluck,' which tells the reader how the
father knows how to position the plough exactly so
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Different Tylage Methods for Treflan Herhicide Controlling...
In order to analyze the effect of different tillage methods on the amounts of treflan herbicide
controlling weed in experimental seeding canola farms a test in the form of the factorial experiment
was done as Randomized complete Block design in 4 frequencies and 9 treatments in DEZFUL
Agriculture and industry Martyr Beheshti in farming year 2007–2008.
Results of the test showed that ratings of herbicide treflan on sevevel weed of Berseem– clover has
been meaningful at a level of 5 percent and hasn't been meaningful on several Bullwort weed, wild
carrot, total weeds, dried weight of weeds, canola height, overall numbers of canola branches,
harvest index, length of sheath, sheath seed number, weight of thousand graings, yield. different
tillage methods on several Berseem clover and several weed of Bullwort , dried weight of weeds,
yield and has been meaningful at a level of 1 percent and has been meaningful at a level of 5 percent
of total weeds and hasn't been meaningful on several weed wild carrot, weight of thousand grains,
sheath numbers in canola plant, Length of sheath, overall numbers of canola branches and harvest
index.
IN mutual effect of treflan herbicides and tillage methods on several of Berseem clover and several
Bullwort weed, total weeds, dried weight of weeds, yield has beer meaningful at 1 percent level and
hasn't been meaningful on several wild carrot , weight of thousand grains, sheath numbers in canola
plant, sheath length in canola plant, total numbers
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Contributions Of John Deere
John Deere 's invention of the plow revolutionized farming, and the design has steadily improved
over time. John Deere was a farmer in the western part of the US. He needed a replacement for the
wood plows that kept breaking in the different soil. The wood plows were built and designed for
farming in the eastern states. Ever since he made the invention and founded the company, it has
been upgraded and rethought to extravagant levels. The biggest achievements of John Deere will be
explained in this paper.
John Deere was born in Rutland, Vermont but his family moved a year later to Middlebury, Vermont
for his father to work. His father later died presumably in the ocean on a voyage. Deere's mother
was widowed and forced to provide for him ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
After half a century of company development and growth, John Deere makes a power move in the
agricultural world. After years of looking into and exploring tractor production, Deere buys out
Waterloo Boy Tractors and begins production. They are not very popular the first year and John
Deere only sells 5,634 tractors, compared to the 34,000 tractors that Ford sells.(Timeline and
Inventions, 2017) This model of tractor was marketed as the basic product of the company in the
years to follow.
1956 and 1966 were years of growth and development worth mentioning as well. In '56, John Deere
made a huge leap in the business by taking the company to a global production level, this expansion
also opened up the minds of developers to new kinds and designs of tractors to accommodate new
clientele and new industries such as logging. A decade further in time, and John Deere exhibits an
integral attitude on their newly patented safety roll cage. This was a brand new aspect to the industry
and was brilliant. The integrity comes in when John Deere releases the patent to everyone in the
industry free of charge. The roll cages saved many lives.
One of the biggest and most fascinating inventions by John Deere ever has been recently made in
2015. A brand new technology was introduced called ExactEmerge along with MaxEmerge. These
are planters designed with a new type of seed delivery system and sensor. The old
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Modern Day Lawn Mower Research Paper
The Evolutions of the Modern Day Lawn Mower Before the time of the lawn mower, there was
grass and sheep, and the sheep ate the grass. The grass was short, but the process wasn't very
efficient. For places, such as Utah, this was fine, but in more settled areas this lack of a lawn mower
caused a problem for landowners. Then, Edwin Budding observed a cutter used in cloth factories for
removing the nap from fabric. Budding's brainstorm was around 1830, when gardeners typically
used scythes to trim turf. For the best results, the job had to be done when the ground was wet with
dew–early in the morning or late at night. A less–than–careful effort might leave telltale, unattractive
marks from the scythe. When Budding's idea became a reality, it freed the workers to cut turf at
more convenient hours. Budding and his partner received a patent for his lawn mower. The machine
was obnoxious for modern standards. It was difficult to use–in many cases, two persons were
needed: one to push, one to pull. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Power mowers were only as effective as the strength and stamina of the person or animal pulling or
pushing the machine. That began to change in the 1890s, as inventors and manufacturers looked at
ways to bring engine power to mowing. A steam–powered mower was introduced in the 1890s, but
it was heavy, noisy and hard to control and maneuver. Just after the turn of the century, gasoline–
powered machines became available and unlocked the door to productivity. Engine power made
rotary blades more feasible on mowers. Engines could provide the power to spin the rotary blade
fast enough to cut the turf effectively. Rotaries became more popular after World War II, as engines
became cheaper and more powerful for residents in Utah, and the accelerating migration to the
suburbs meant more people had larger lawns to maintain. Rotary machines were cheaper to make
and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
John Deere Research Paper
John Deere: The Start of an Empire Founded in 1837 by blacksmith and inventor John Deere, this
now international multibillion dollar corporation had humble beginnings. John Deere started his
company in Grand Detour, Illinois, making polished steel plows to allow pioneer farmers to cut
furrows in the gummy Mid–Western soil. In the company's first year of business John Deere
blacksmith evolves into John Deere manufacturing completing ten plows , in 1842 retail is added to
the business . Over the next ten years, John Deere moves is company to its current global
headquarters, in Moline, Illinois due to the locations water and transportation advantages. He also
acquires two business partners, Leonard Andrus and Robert N. Tate, he later ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
John Deere believed that without the trust and loyalty of his customers his company would not
survive, a belief his successors still hold true to this day. He also believed in helping those who were
in need not just his customers but his employees. Deere and Company have survived the Panic of
1852, The Great Depression, and several employee strikes, by knowing how people should be
treating and listening to what their employees wanted. Some examples how this vision was shared
are, in 1938 during the Great Depression although the company's sales slump and it is losing money,
the decision is made to carry debtor farmers as long as necessary. Today Deere and Company
sponsors a several charitable events and organizations to help support under resourced areas, such as
the John Deere Classic, a PGA event that raised more than sixty two million dollars for local
charities. There is also the Citizen program, this philanthropy and volunteer program focuses on
helping under resourced agricultural communities , build a more sustainable food source
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
 

How Do Plows Affect Society

  • 1. How Do Plows Affect Society "Heavy plough accounts for more than 10% of the increase in population density and urbanization during the high middle ages"(Anderson). Plows are a large farming implement with multiple blades used to cut rows of any type of soil. It can be pulled by a tractor or animals for the purpose to prepare for planting seeds the coming seasons. In the beginning, plows were never here, people use to have one making plenty of holes going through the same process. First they would find a strong stick with a point on it, push it into the ground, drop a seed into the hole, and cover with loose dirt and water. Although plows have helped society with better time, efficiency, plows makes more of a negative impact on society because less farmland, multiple machines for one job, and a maximum capacity increase. Having less farmland it makes a negative impact on society. Farming less pushes a negative pressure on people to tear down wooden environments. "3.5 billion to 7 billion trees are cut down per year"(Rainforest Action Network). Which limits the amount of oxygen that is supplied to humans, without this would causes many health issue, even death. With ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The world has hit maximum capacity two separate times for hundreds of years. It says from "200 AD to 500 AD"(McGaughey). This shows that before we really started mass producing crops on farms the world hit its maximum capacity for our species but them we started to produce more crops. Also it say "1200 to 1300 AD"(McGaughey)that we hit our maximum capacity again. Then we started to make plows that we strapped to animals and made them pull it. This pulls all three of they reason together with the maximum capacity to go up it cause their to be less farming cause of all the people expanding outward and taking all of the farmland to live on. In which that is causing all the people to cut down all the trees for people to live and farm on in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 3. Informative Essay On John Deere Tractors I'm going to be telling about how people found out about John Deere Tractors. Everyone that has a yard to mow or ever drove past a farm knows what a John Deere tractor looks like. You don't have to be a farmer to recognize the green tractor with the yellow lettering as a John Deere. These tractors are so well built and designed that television commercials say "Nothing runs like a Deere". However, few of us may know the life story behind the man John Deere who invented the design of the simple farm plow and in doing so started a company that would create farm products used and recognized throughout the globe. I'm going to be telling how John Deere Lived. John Deere was born on February 4, 1804 in Vermont. His parents William and Sarah Deere. They were tailors that had immigrated to Vermont from England. Life was hard for the Deere family when their blacksmith business slowed in 1808. John's dad took a trip back to his home country in hopes of finding a better life for his family. Unfortunately, Mr. Deere did not return from England and no one ever found out what happened to him. John was only four years old . As a young boy, John spent a lot of time outside a blacksmith shop in his hometown dreaming that he would one day become a blacksmith. At the age ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Farmers across the Midwest raved about John's new plow. His plow helped farmers throughout the Midwest be successful at farming. In 1838, John sent word his business had grown so much that he had to relocate the John Deere Company to Moline, Illinois. As usual, John's curious mind made him experiment with other farm tools such as the steam plow, cultivators, planters, and a grain drill. (Just like his re–designed steel plow these additional tools became important to farmers.) On each of the tools, the name John Deere stood out boldly. Through hard work and imagination, the company being the name John Deere became a leading manufacturer of equipment used by ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 5. History And Background Of John Deere History and Background of John Deere John Deere (also known as Deere and Company) began when founder John Deere, a blacksmith and a repair man, began to grow tired with the traditional way of making plows. "Plows in the nineteenth century were made to order and usually made from wood or iron. In 1837, John Deere created a plow using a steel saw blade. The smooth –sided plow was much easier and faster to clean than traditional plows" (Wikipedia). John Deere decided that he would manufacture the plows and then put them up for sale. This allowed customers to actually see what they were buying beforehand. His business started to gain popularity. "In 1912, the company began to expand into the tractor business. In 1918 Deere and Company purchased ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 7. Simkin Haymaking Forks Serf farmers farmed the land (Bennett 77). They used a variety of tools to do this. One of the tools was a scythe. Scythes were used to mow fields (Bennett 82). They also allowed farmers to cut corn while they were standing (Simkin). Medieval farmers used axes to kill animals and cut down trees (Simkin). They used flails to separate grain from harvested sheaves (Simkin). A "flail was two pieces of wood joined together" (Simkin). The longer piece of wood was the handle, and the shorter piece was called the striker (Simkin). They used winnowing baskets to separate corn kernels from the outer husks or chaffs of the corn (Simkin). The serf farmers also used harrows to break up soil and cover seeds (Simkin). Harrows were made of four to six wooden beams called bulls, which were set into wood or iron teeth, and joined together by wooden cross beams (Simkin). ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Rakes were also used during haymaking to spread and collect grass (Simkin). They also had shears to cut wool off sheeps, and sickles to cut corn (Simkin). One of the most important tools incorporated in medieval farming was the moulboard plough. "The plows were made of wood and had iron blades that cut through the soil (Cels 12). They were used to turn the earth and make a deep trench for seeds to be planted (Cels 12). They used the three field system for farming (Cels 10). In this system one field was planted with rye and wheat in early winter, another was planted with oats, beans, peas, and barley in early spring, and the third field was left empty (Cels 10). Each year a different field was left unplanted so that the soil remained fertile (Cels 10). Serf farmers used an array of different tools, and the three field farming technique to farm as efficiently as they could at the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 9. Technological Improvements and Their Impact in America Essay Improvements in agriculture, transportation, and communication between 1790 and 1860 were the stepping stones for a greater America. From the cotton gin, to the steamboat, to the telegraph, new innovations were appearing all over. America had finally begun to spread its wings and fly. Due to the fact that cotton had to be separated by hand, it was costly commodity. One person could barely separate a pound by hand over the course of a day. It was not until 1793, when Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin that production of cotton soared. A worker on a plantation could now produce fifty pounds of cotton a day, instead of just one. With the increase in cotton production, came the increase in slave labor, which was used to harvest the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... After fiddling with his horse–drawn machine for almost a decade, he was ready to market it. His product sold so fast, that in 1847, he relocated to Chicago and built a manufacturing plant for his reapers and mowers. He had sold thousands of machines within a few years, positively altering the scale of agriculture. ?Using a hand–held sickle, a farmer could harvest half an acre of wheat a day, with a McCormick reaper two people could work twelve acres a day.? (Tindall, 420) Transportation also saw some advancements just as agriculture did. In 1795, the Wilderness Road was opened to wagon and stagecoach traffic. The introduction of this road eased the journey through the Cumberland Gap into Kentucky and along the Walton roads into Tennessee. After completion of the Philadelphia–Lancaster Turnpike in 1794, a movement for graded and paved roads in the northeast gathered momentum. By 1831, around four thousand miles of turnpikes had been completed, mostly connecting the eastern cities. At the same time, new developments in water transportation were made that included the river steamboat and the canal barge, which carried people and commodities for a lower price than the wagons on the National Road. The Clermont, sent up the Hudson River to Albany by Robert Fulton and Robert R. Livingston, was the first commercially successful steamboat. Thereafter, steamboat usage spread rapidly to other eastern rivers as well as to the Ohio ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 11. Importance of Identity in Anglo J. M. Synge is one of the most prominent Irish writers of the twentieth century; his writing characterizes a broad, multifaceted range of political, social and religious anxieties shaping Ireland for the duration of its most remarkable period of change, which transformed the place from a relatively peaceful country to a more political and aggressive location. The picture Synge creates shows us that the question of identity relating to Ireland is problematic; however it has produced and provoked some of the greatest literature of the century. As G. J. Watson has asserted: "However painful the question of identity may be for the Irish in real life, it has functioned, deeply embedded as it is in the Irish political and literary ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Ronan McDonald states: "Enter the playboy Christy Mahon. Christy's poetry, like the cultural flowering of the Ascendancy, is based on a dirty deed that is aestheticized as a gallous story. In the course of the action it is exposed and then transcended. Christy comes to the Mayoites carrying a mark of culpability which, in the course of the play, he is privileged to purge. Culture confronts and expiates its violent origins in the controlled laboratory of the stage. The play comically, but unnervingly, explores the process by which violence is glorified and aestheticized. Yet it also, by a theatrical slight of hand, reveals the violence as chimerical, and allows Christy to pass through and survive the implications of his supposed atrocity." Ireland is shown for what it is; Synge offers us a critique which is almost satirical. There is a mystical quality to Ireland which is emphasised by its storytelling and folklore (Shanaitue), in which the Irish are a `nation of heroes'; a notion which is explored through the figure of Christy – who is himself a `Christ–like' figure – as he almost brings his father back from the dead in a sense. There is a sub–textual reference to the New Testament in this father– son relationship; Christy is in conflict with his father – and in a certain respect – he is `sacrificed' when he is burnt because he did not live up to the expectations people had of him. Synge treats the conflict between the relations with irony, and it is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 13. Run With The Horsemen Essay Little Porter Osborne, Jr. grew up on a farm in Georgia where the people own the land and the land, in turn, owns the people. In the novel, Run with the Horsemen, Porter fights his way through adolescence and the depression, learning more about life every day from the big boys under the tree at lunch. Ferrol Sams is able to portray a realistic account of life on a farm during the depression by using humor, dialect, and vivid imagery. Humor is used throughout the book to keep the reader interested in what would otherwise be a boring story of hard work and hard times. The boring and tedious act of plowing is turned into a dangerous, yet humorous, occurrence when a release of methane gas from the mule was met ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Although the members of the Osborne family speak properly, the farm hands (who were, up until a short time before the novel, slaves), speak in a southern dialect which portrays them as uneducated. A good example of this is when Buddy pleads with Porter to, "Keep yo head down, Sambo! For God's sake, keep yo head down an be stiller'n you ever been in yo life befo!" The same words are used as would be used by an educated person, only they are shortened or run together. The vivid imagery used throughout the novel allows the reader to have a better idea of what life was like. The summer plowing is said to have a rhythm that is "almost musical," The stride of a man "matched that of a mule in a one–plane dance down a cotton row with ears of the mule plunging forward then backward in unison with the pull of the forelegs, now the hind legs, as the heavy plow was dragged smoothly through the whispering earth." This passage allows the reader to imagine the rhythm of the plowing, which makes it seem more real than just saying that the mule plowed up and down the row. All this plowing happened as, "Over and above and beyond and around could be heard bird song." The imagery of a man plowing in the heat with birds ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 15. Analysis Of Speed The Plough 'No doubt they'll soon get well; the shock and the strain / have caused their stammering, disconnected talk,' writes Siegfried Sassoon in the poem Survivors (1917). Sassoon's irony in these lines condense a prevalent view of non–combatants during the First World War that the soldiers would recover from their physical injuries and mental illness after the phase of shock had concluded. In the short story Speed the Plough (1923), Mary Butts articulates scepticism towards the idea that Shell Shock will simply pass. Instead of employing the habitual indicators of war, the story showcases Butts's fixation in avoiding them. Modernist writers, such as Butts, were interested in innovation and experimentation with language to create new forms of expression. The following analysis will explore how the modernist aesthetics shape this passage in order to express the experience of war but avoid recurring to the same language that explicitly evokes it. The third– person, omniscient narrative voice in this passage of Speed the Plough gives Butts's freedom to reveal the interiority of the character, to describe the images that are particular to the subject's mind. This narrative voice is in command of the times present, past and future of the soldier. It tells the reader that the soldier would 'always be lame' and that he afflicted with these images 'for years'. But the use of the third–person in this passage has the effect of compromising its assumed objectivity. The interiority of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 17. Who Is John Deere Innovator John Deere, he was the farming innovator. John Deere was the first man to solve most of the major plow issues. The first man to set up a major corporation, and it lasted a lifetime even lasted to this day. John Deere's company has made so many technological advances over the hundreds of years that his company has been open. John Deere was an innovator and a very smart man. John Deere always had a good idea of how to make his original designs better. John Deere was born in Rutland, Vermont on February 7, 1804 (John Deere Leader Biography). He was the son of William Rinold Deere and Sarah Yates Deere. In 1805, William Deere moved to Middlebury, Vermont (The Man Behind The Company). The rest of the Deere family followed behind and moved when ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... John Deere said it was a good deal. Deere kept his end of the bargain and kept sending all of his manufactured goods down the Mississippi River to St. Louis and that is where all of John Deeres goods caught the train and headed for the western parts of the United States. After Deere signed another contract with the train company in 1871, he decided to have them ship a few of his technology and manufactured goods down south to Texas and clear over to California to see how much money he would make at that place. John Deere had a range in expertise from the train to farming equipment. John Deere helped invent the mechanical reaper for wheat in the 1859 (John Deere Facts). In the eyes of the farmers that farmed in the Great Plains this machine saved some time and it made everyone else happy to, because more they got planted. The more they got cut. The more the people had to eat, Which really was a win for everybody. The farmers were able to produce so much of their own crop that they had quite a bit left over, so they could feed their families, and they still could sell it for some money if ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 19. Plough: Tillage and Soil The plough is a tool used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or planting. It has been a basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major advances in agriculture. The primary purpose of ploughing is to turn over the upper layer of the soil, bringing fresh nutrients to the surface, while burying weeds and the remains of previous crops, allowing them to break down. It also aerates the soil, and allows it to hold moisture better. In modern use, a ploughed field is typically left to dry out, and is then harrowed before planting.The plough is a tool used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or planting. It has been a basic instrument for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It has been a basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major advances in agriculture. The primary purpose of ploughing is to turn over the upper layer of the soil, bringing fresh nutrients to the surface, while burying weeds and the remains of previous crops, allowing them to break down. It also aerates the soil, and allows it to hold moisture better. In modern use, a ploughed field is typically left to dry out, and is then harrowed before planting.The plough is a tool used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or planting. It has been a basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major advances in agriculture. The primary purpose of ploughing is to turn over the upper layer of the soil, bringing fresh nutrients to the surface, while burying weeds and the remains of previous crops, allowing them to break down. It also aerates the soil, and allows it to hold moisture better. In modern use, a ploughed field is typically left to dry out, and is then harrowed before planting.The plough is a tool used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or planting. It has been a basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major advances ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 21. Analysis Of ' The Abbey Theatre ' Production Of The Plough... In the Abbey Theatre's production of The Plough and the Stars, there is a sparseness that fills the stage and leaves gaps that the audience can fill in for themselves. The production paints a stark, modernish–period mashup that puts a spotlight on the struggles of the average folks in tenement– dwelling Ireland during the Easter Rising of 1916. The play's strident use of visual effects, sound, and lighting elements, for me, really helped immerse me in the world of the play and provided social, political, and emotional relevance that allowed me access to the material. Social Relevance This production truly highlighted the relationships between the characters and the importance of the social bond when lives and survival is on the line. All of the people living in the tenement house rely on each other for their existence. Though this reliance is not always based on friendship, there are the basic human needs that must be met. The most powerful of these, I thought, was Bessie Borgess. The actress' portrayal of the drunken, British–sympathizer really captivated me in her constant rants to Mrs. Gogan and her disdain for Nora and all of her fancy clothes. In truth, we really only see Nora in fairly plain clothes, a very plain dress, and a white t–shirt that clearly looks like she's wearing Jack's undershirt in the last scene, as she waits in her delusion for him to return. What Nora did appear to be in this production was clean; and I think that was intentional. Until she ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 23. The Importance Of Agriculture In Iowa Before the European settlement of Iowa, the state was a land covered in tall prairie grasses, wetlands, and small forests. The Native Americans thrived on these lands by using pockets of the fertile soil for agriculture and hunting the abundance of wildlife that roamed these plains. By the late 1800s however, the prairie had become farmland and the Europeans had begun their new lives along Iowa's waterways and railroads. Within a century Iowa's landscape had changed rapidly due to human activity. As settlers began to enter Iowa they would encounter woodland areas in the extreme southeastern corner of the state, and then move on the grasslands that covered most of the state. Iowa served as a transition zone from the wooded East Coast to the Great Plains of the west. In Central Iowa the grass the prairie grass would measure from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Every year the Wildlife Bureau of the DNR purchases land for public use and wildlife habitats. The restoration of Iowa's prairie land is considered important because it can restore the natural ecosystem, benefit water quality, and reduces soil erosion caused by runoff. Other farming practices such as having buffer strips near streams and cover crops have helped manage the soil erosion in Iowa, but since 1850 we have lost nearly 14 inches in topsoil depth and growing. Iowa has changed rapidly from the vast prairie lands it used to be, but many of these lands are being slowly reclaimed and restored to their once natural splendor. The most rapid change in Iowa's landscape occurred during the Industrial Revolution, and when large scale farming became a possibility. This has left serious consequences on Iowa's landscape with erosion, but is being combatted by more productive farming practices. Iowa as the "middle lands" is continuously changing, for the better or the worse, alongside the people who call it ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 25. John Deere Tractors I researched a John Deere. A John Deere helps farmers to plow up the land easier than doing it by hand or horses. John Deere tractors can help with just about anything on the farm, such as planting,harvesting, and mowing. It's not as back breaking as it would be by doing it by hand. John Deere has technology that can help plowing be more efficient and straighter rows then doing it with animals are yourself. The plow was invented in 1837 by John Deere. He knew how excruciating the pain was by doing it by hand and the toll it took on the animals. So one day he envisioned the soil sliding easier and more efficient. So he took one of his broken steel saw blades and started making the first plow invented. In 1837 the first plow was made by John Deere it was pulled by animals. In 1892 in Northeast Iowa, John Froelich invented the first ever gas powered tractor. It was the first tractor that could backup and go forward. He used this tractor to separate the wheat from the plant easier then by hand. In 1954 the first combine was made it was a 2 row corn head that could do 20 acres of corn in a single operation. In 1957 the first baler was invented the 14T baler produced good shaped bales that it could then transfer the bales onto the hay rack without them getting off the rack to pick them up. The baler took less ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It was used for cutting yards,Golf courses, baseball fields, football fields, and other different sporting events. Thanks to its variable speed drive it was a big seller all across the world. Fast forward to know lawn mowers these days are far better than they were back then, they can do more things now then they could back then because today's mowers are more efficient at cutting the grass. There are different attachments to the mowers now then there was back then like a handle to move the deck up and down, and adjusting the deck to a certain height for the right cut of what you want your grass to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 27. How Did John Deere Impact Society John Deere is a man who has changed the life of an Illinois farmer. His success in that lead to even more success like his very own company. John Deere innovated plows and made an impact on society by helping over one thousand farmers succeed in their jobs with his improved plow while showing people that persisting can lead to a solution. John just had recently moved to Illinois and started selling old plows that worked with the soil at his birthplace in Vermont. His business was a success until there was a huge problem with the plows that he sold. "Customers complained that their wood or iron plows proved ineffective in turning the prairie sod, which stuck to the implant's surface." (Publication: Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History Document: Steel Plow) This was because the soil had a very thick covering that would clog up the moldboards of the plow if you ever tried to plow it. This made customers angry at John's service, so he had to fix the plow to be back in business. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Deere tried covering the moldboard and cutting a plowshare from salvaged steel. Steel surfaces tended to shed the thick soil and were burnished by the abrasive action of the soil." (Publication: Encyclopedia of World Biography Document: John Deere) It was a success because soon afterwards his new steel plows were being used and farmers were coming to him for their needs again. The customers did not come to him fast, of course it took time for customers to come back and find about his steel plow. There was a problem that John could not find enough of steel, but it worked out when he negotiated with a couple of people and made over 1000 steel plows with the steel he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 29. What Is The Impact Of Technology On The Great Plains Frontier The Impact of Technology Emerging technologies affected lives of many people on the Great Plains frontier, ones that were already living there, and others that would eventually migrate there. Technology increased the Plains goods being produced, made life easier, and brought our country closer together. Although there are some disagreements, I believe that commercialization and technology was a benefit for most westerner in the late nineteenth century. Before technological advancements were brought to the Great Plains frontier farmers would over look the land, because it had a very little amount of trees and the ground was hard, and go towards the Oregon area. But after the technology evolved, it made it possible to actually farm, and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The herds of bison almost became desolate, the farmers were also plowing the natural gross for their crops, and the cattle business became more important because the railroad could transport them easier. The lives of the native Americans that had already been living on the Great Plains frontier had been affected drastically. Most people really only hear about battles like Custer's last stand, and geronimo. What we don't read in our textbooks is how they were treated. They had been pushed out of their land and were mostly confined to reservations, mostly areas that the white didn't feel were very good. They also were given rations on the reservation, that Americans only had to do in hard times such as war. Emerging technologies affected lives of many people on the Great Plains frontier, But not only theirs, but mine also. If we had not had little technology advancements we would not be where we are at today. The technology in the late nineteenth century increased goods being produced, made life more comfortable, and connected our country. The benefits of these things not only benefitted them but evolved into better things now. I am grateful for the effect it has played on our nation and and will continue to centuries to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 31. The History of Mr. John Deere The History of Mr. John Deere "I will never put my name on a product that does not have the best that is in me." This is arguably the most famous quote made by Deere and that has stuck with the company for the last 175 years. Deere was the man who kick started modern farming by inventing the first ever cast steel plow, as opposed to the much heavier cast iron plow that worked alright in the sandy soil but the fertile heavy soil of the plains would just stick too. This is how john Deere's steel plow became known as "The Plow That Broke the Plains." Mr. John Deere was born in Rutland Vermont in 1804, and grew up in nearby Middlebury. Deere was just four years old when his father, William, was lost at sea and never returned leaving his mother, Sarah Deere, to raise him. Deere was not an only child, living with five brothers and sisters in a moderately poor family so there was no leftover money for education. John very rarely attended school and focused his time on work to make money to support his family. He worked for a few different people, such as farmers and shop keepers but did not stay with a job for more than a few months at a time. until age 17 when he got an offer for an apprenticeship working for a blacksmith in a town about 50 miles from home, with his mothers permission he left home to go to work learning the trade of blacksmithing. Deere was naturally gifted at working with metal or doing anything with his hands. Eventually Deere set up ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 33. Symbolism In The Nebraska Landscape Cather The three main symbols used in this work include the Nebraska landscape, the plough, and Jim. The most crucial of the three is the Nebraska landscape. Cather poetically praises the setting, going as far as to make it the most outstanding and unique part of the novel. The Nebraska landscape is used by Cather to show their society as a whole and how they live their lives. It parallels Jim's feelings and his relationships with the people and culture of Nebraska. In his memory, this landscape is the main physical symbol from his childhood. "The only thing very noticeable about Nebraska was that it was still, all day long, Nebraska." As stated in book 1 The Shimerdas. The plough is symbolic of the people's effort to live off of the land. It is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 35. Gabriel's Point Of View Gabriel's Point of view : My alarm went off and that's when I knew that it was time for me to go to work. My job was not the best thing in the world but even though I did not like it I had to work because i had a family to send money to Mexico. I headed out the door with my cotton sack when I got to the fields of cotton I saw panchito, Roberto and his dad they both had there cotton sack in one hand and a water bottle and the other as soon I got closer to them i said good morning and so they did. After a while of getting ready to start picking the cotton the contratista came and started to yell for everyone to start working. As we started to work I could already feel the hot sun and by this I new it was going to be a hard long day Panchitos ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When we got to empty field he said "put this around your waist and furrow them" I looked at him a frown. A couple minutes passed and he said "what are waiting for" I told him that in my country oxen pull plows and he said well we are not in your country idiot. I got so mad because he had called me an idiot so i told him in a loud tone that I would not do it. He told that I would regret this. The next day non of the workers showed up to work we did this because since the contratista does not want to show us respect then we wont get his work done. I new this was a good but bad idea at the same time because how are we going to get money. A couple days went by and the cantratista was begging people to come back to work. Everyone agreed that it was time to go back to work . When we got to work the contratista told us to get in a circle so he could say some words. Contratista point of view – I know i have been really unfair with some of you so i have decided that it is time to have respect towards you my workers and also pay you guys more. Workers point of view– when those words came out his mouth everyone started cheering and since that day we knew that our job was going to great again and that we still going to be able to send money to our families in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 37. John Deere Company The John Deere Company was started by one man in 1837. John Deere was a blacksmith and an inventor who strove to ease the job of the local farmers. That effort, with his original core values still intact, grew into worldwide company. Along with those core values Deere and Company has developed and maintained a reputation for their business ethics. They have a solid organization structure built up by exceptional human resources division. With all of this, John Deere's name and brand are known around the world. Headquartered in Moline, IL, Deere and Company, as it is officially known, is one of the oldest industrial companies in the United States. (Cripple, 2010) The company has grown and become a recognized symbol of Americana like apple pie ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The bottom line, to every company, however, is the financial one. In the past ten years Deere and Company had only one year that one could call challenging; they made it through and have since seen a steady increase toward a strong financial standing along with a steady reduction in the number of outstanding common shares. The net income more than doubled in that same ten years. At the end of 2014, the net income was $3,161.7 million versus the $1,446.8 million at the end of 2005. In the same ten years, stockholders have enjoyed watching their holdings increase by more than double from the end of the fourth quarter of 2005 to the same period in 2014. The Deere and Company financials remain strong in spite of the current common (DE) stock price was closing at $91.25 on 7/27/2014, which was down from the opening price of $91.82. (Deere and Company Stock Data page, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Mechanical Reapers In The 1800s The reaping machine commonly referred to as the mechanical reaper was invented by Cyrus McCormick and Obed Hussey in 1833 and 1834. It followed a major pattern for its uses in the harvesting of wheat and other small grains as well as grasses. The invention of the mechanical reaper drastically changed the lives and yields of grain farmers. In regards to the eventual success and large effect of the reaping machine, the historians usually ask themselves why the machines take too long to be accepted despite its invention in 1833. The first machines that Obed Hussey invented were adopted in the mid–1850's. Why wasn't a machine which could substantially increase productivity immediately adopted? Wouldn't it have increased farmer's profits during ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The model assumes that the farmers maximized their profits, the reapers could not be shared, the farm acre increased with time and the productivity of the acre did not depend on the farm size . This model is made to compare two distinct production techniques. It works from the statement that given the competitive markets, the individual producers will choose the technique that gives comparatively greater cost saving. It is what applied to the adoption of the mechanical reaper. During the 1830s–1840s, farmers opted to use animals and human hands because they engaged in small farming. The cost of purchasing the mechanical reaper was higher than using animals and human hands. There was also no sharing of cost among the farmers. Nevertheless, during the 1850s the demand for labor increased as farmers started large–scale farming. There was a need for cooperative sharing of the cost of the reaper as it was expensive to use animals for harvesting small grains. So, the only option for these farmers was to adopt the mechanization of the reaper. Drawing from Clarke (2002), the "threshold model" offers the conceptual platform for examining the cost determinant of technological diffusion. Indeed, through the assumptions of fairness asserted by Olmstead and Rhode, people maximize their profits through the budgetary constraints . It is what justify and support their claim about the adoption of the reaper. If these farmers could have adopted the reaper during the 1830s–1840s, they could not maximize their profits because it would have increased their budget. The cost of the machine was high, and they maximized profits independently. The best time for the adoption of the reaper was the 1850s because the demand for labor was high and the farmers had increased their acreage for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. The Role Of Apolitical Characters In 'The Plough Of The... The characters in The Plough of the Stars can be divided into two groups; apolitical and political. However, the extent to which the apolitical characters are 'warm and human' and the political characters are 'cold and fanatical' can be debated. In relation to the apolitical character of Nora, it can be argued that she is 'warm and human' when able to refuse the entry of the political into her marriage. Mrs Gogan, as an apolitical character, attempts to present herself as 'warm and human', but this is undercut by her juxtaposing actions. While the political characters can be categorised as 'cold', Bessie's human empathy challenges the characteristic capabilities of political characters. Finally, it can be claimed that the political characters cannot be confined to a group, due to the vast amount of political ideologies presented in the play. The claim that the apolitical characters of The Plough are 'warm and human' can be argued through the initial presentation of Nora. However, this is disrupted when she is no longer able to refuse the political context from her marriage. Nora illustrates her personal distance from the political sphere in her statement, 'I won't go, Jack; you can go if you wish.' Her refusal to attend a political meeting with her husband conveys her opposition towards the political context of the play. Despite this, Nora is depicted as tolerant of other characters' political involvement. This is illustrated in her encouragement towards Peter to go to the meeting, as she says, Therefore, Nora's 'warm and human' character is initially presented as accepting of the political. However, her character becomes desperate and hysterical in her exclamation 'don't mind him, don't mind, Jack. Don't break our happiness... Pretend we're not in. Let us forget everything tonight but our two selves!' (O'Casey, 28). The diction of 'pretend' and 'forget' are emphasised, reflecting Nora's deliberate opposition against politics entering her marital life (O'Casey, 28). The domestic setting in which this action unfolds supports the idea that Nora wishes to refuse the political. This is evident in the description of the home as 'furnished in a way that suggests an attempt towards a finer expression of domestic ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Growth And Development Of Modern Agriculture : The... Looking back at the history of agriculture, there have been many changes to the methods we farm. In every aspect of farming, there has been growth and development of new ideas and ways of doing everyday work. The advancement of machinery has assisted farmers in improving the way they do things by leaps and bounds. Comparing modern machinery to when everything was done by hand shows how far agriculture has really advanced in that aspect alone. One of the earliest advancements was the plow. While it may seem like a simple machine, the plow is possibly one of the most important pieces of equipment in the field. It helped start the mechanization of agriculture as we know it and may be the best–known invention when it comes to people's knowledge of farming. The first and most important thing to know is what a plow is and how it works. A plow is an implement that breaks up the soil and prepares it to be seeded. The plow also assists in breaking up what's left of the previous growing season's crop and circulating it back into the ground to use as organic matter for the new crop. If done at the right time, plowing can be used as weed control. If the farmer plowed the weeds before the seeds were mature enough to reproduce, those weeds would be taken care of and prevented from multiplying. All of this made the soil more suitable to plant seeds for whatever crop the farmer was growing. Plowing turned over the topsoil to make it easier for farmers to plant seeds deeper in the ground. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. John Deere Scott Hedrick March 19, 2012 1. History of John Deere "Deere & Company began when John Deere, born in Rutland, Vermont, USA on February 7, 1804, moved to Grand Detour, Illinois in 1836 in order to escape bankruptcy in Vermont. Already an established blacksmith, Deere opened a 1,378 square feet shop in Grand Detour in 1837 which allowed him to serve as a general repairman in the village, as well as a manufacturer of small tools such as pitchforks and shovels. What was more successful than these small tools was Deere's cast–steel plow, which was pioneered in 1837. Prior to Deere's introduction of the steel plow, most farmers used iron or wooden plows which stuck to the rich Midwestern soil and had to be cleaned very frequently. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... John Deere bought out Tate and Gould's interests in the company in 1853, the same year that he was joined in the business by his son Charles Deere. The business continued to expand until 1857, when the company's production totals reached almost 1,120 implements per month. Then, in 1858 a nationwide financial recession took a toll on the company. In order to prevent bankruptcy, the company was reorganized and Deere sold his interests in the business to his son in law, Christopher Webber, and his son, Charles Deere, who would take on most of his father's managerial roles. The company was reorganized one final time in 1868, when it was incorporated as Deere & Company. The company's original stockholders were Charles Deere, Stephen Velie, George Vinton, and John Deere, who would serve as president of the company until 1886. Despite this, it was Charles who effectively ran the company. In 1869, Charles began to introduce marketing centers and independent retail dealers to advance the company's sales nationwide. John Deere died in 1886, and the presidency of Deere & Company passed to Charles Deere. By now the company was manufacturing a variety of farm equipment products in addition to plows, including wagons, corn planters, cultivators. The company even expanded into the bicycle business briefly during the 1890s, but the core focus of the company remained on agricultural implements. Increased competition during the early 1900s from ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. The Theory Of K Ā Wanatanga Since the early 18th century, Māori have challenged the theory of kāwanatanga (governance) which was introduced by the contradictory versions viewed in the Treaty of Waitangi. Māori, throughout history have fought to maintain their identity and save their settlements in many ways in Aotearoa. In this essay I will describe how kāwanatanga was first introduced in the Māori society and discuss the consequences of it such as Parihaka pacifist movement, along with challenges including land ownership. These disputes have been important as it signifies New Zealand's history and some of the events have played major roles in what New Zealand is today. Kāwanatanga caused disagreement and it first began from the translation in Article One of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Since the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, Māori gave authority to the Crown like giving small proportion of mana to rule the upcoming colonizers but being promised tino rangatiratanga (chieftainship) to remain with them as they had no intention to give it away (Adams 1977:235, Fenton & Moon 2002:25). However this was a misunderstanding of kāwanatanga between Māori and the crown. Crown had thought they were receiving sovereignty over New Zealand from the Māori chiefs, on the other hand Māori thought they were only giving part of their mana to the Crown. Moreover, the chiefs implied that only partial control will be under the British but the land will still be owned by the Māori (Adams 1977:235, Fenton & Moon 2002:34). Further on, Hapū (sub–tribe) felt kāwanatanga was disobeyed. This was because Crown let go of the promises that Māori believed were made to them in terms of rights and authority. Along the passing decades, it was seen that the Crown went on requesting complete authority over Aotearoa with this form of "kāwanatanga", overcoming the tino rangatiratanga of Māori" Māori had no power in the native courts (Adams 1977:235, Fenton & Moon 2002:37). Further empowerment of British procedures, initiated the Māori challenge against kāwanatanga. At this time Māori were facing difficult situations as they were exposed to harmful infectious diseases, which only started when Europeans arrived. Māori were trying to cope with new settlements along with new ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. How Did John Deere Make The Cast-Iron Plows The first real practicable plow was invented by Charles Newbold, and his cast–iron version of the plow was patented in 1797. It was disliked by many farmers in the area because they believed it allowed the weeds to flourish. As other inventors built new ideas of the plows, these farmers got rid of their former views and began using the plow. The cast–iron plows were good for the light, sandy soils of the East Coast, but they were very sluggish in the thick soil of Illinois ("Just"). John Deere introduced a tool of agriculture, the self–scouring plow, that would become a booming manufacturing business for many years to come. John Deere was born in Vermont in 1804 to William and Sarah Deere. His father had left for England and never returned ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They not only built plows, but began to build and market the Seymour grain drill. Another addition in 1863, the Hawkeye riding cultivator, was the second non–plow implement produced. This new cultivator was the first implement to ride on. Other improvements were made to the plows in the years to come such as wheels on the plows, an additional moldboard mounted to the frame, and 300 other small improvements. Joseph Fawkes, the producer of a steam–powered plow, joined John Deere and was able to implement his ideas into their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Blue Collar Workers In The 19th Century What contributed to modern labor and farming techniques? Life was much harder prior to the nineteenth century laborers left rural farming areas to work in search of work at factories in the city. Through various inventions, modernization of techniques. The transformations that occurred paved the way for society to have a higher quality of life and grow. Technological advances that occurred prior to nineteenth century have allowed farmers and laborers to work more efficiently. Thus providing blue collar workers of today reasonable hours and less physically demanding labor. In agriculture, farmers spent long days performing tedious tasks just to provide for their families and domestic needs. This would include prehistoric methods like hand ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Old industries expanded and many new ones, including petroleum refining, steel manufacturing, and electrical power, emerged. Railroads expanded significantly, bringing even remote parts of the country into a national market economy. Industrial growth transformed American society. It produced a new class of wealthy industrialists and a prosperous middle class. It also produced a vastly expanded blue collar working class. The labor force that made industrialization possible was made up of millions of newly arrived immigrants and even larger numbers of migrants from rural areas. American society became more diverse than ever before. Not everyone shared in the economic prosperity of this period. Many workers were typically unemployed at least part of the year, and their wages were relatively low when they did work. This situation led many workers to support and join labor unions. Meanwhile, farmers also faced hard times as technology and increasing production led to more competition and falling prices for farm products. Hard times on farms led many young people to move to the city in search of better job opportunities. Americans who were born in the 1840s and 1850s would experience enormous changes in their lifetimes. Some of these changes resulted from a sweeping technological revolution. Their major source of light, for example, would change from candles, to kerosene lamps, and then to electric light bulbs. They would see their transportation evolve from walking and horse power to steam–powered locomotives, to electric trolley cars, to gasoline–powered automobiles. Born into a society in which the vast majority of people were involved in agriculture, they experienced an industrial revolution that radically changed the ways millions of people worked and where they lived. They would experience the migration of millions of people from rural America to the nation's rapidly growing cities. The decline of child labor ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Personality Sketch Of John Deere John Deere Biography Name Course Date John Deere Biography Character and personality John Deere In appearance Mr. Deere was strongly built, large, and was blessed with unlimited ability to endure unlimitedly. He had a frank, open, and his hearty, bespeaking, genial, and noble social character. He had feelings that were visible from the surface and was sensitive to pathos both of joy and sorrow. He had sympathy and would quickly respond to calls of misfortune and trouble and rejoiced in prosperity. Though absorbed in business, had little interest in public or office trusts, he was always sympathetic about public interests, giving liberally to advance the public interests. He was a republic and an active member of the Congregational Church being a generous contributor to the local and foreign acts of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He managed to shod the oxen and hoist them above in the ox–frame, and still in the process fasten their hoofs. In addition he could make the ox 'shoes and the nails. He could make the iron parts for the carriages, stagecoaches and wagons and could possibly make any parts that were iron wrought. Assessment: others' opinions According to Ultimate John Deere By Ralph W. Sanders (), John Deere was as considered by many more of an adapter of technology an imaginative marketer rather than an innovator. He was a keen on seeing value in new ideas and adapted them to his products so that they could better serve his customers4. In addition his desire for quality transposed to become the family tradition transforming the on–man plough making shop to the largest farm equipments making company in the world. The author believes that he had reasoned rule for life and said that it was a great consolation that he did not willfully wrong anyone nor put to the market an imperfectly made ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. How Did John Deere Create A Steel Plow? "In 1837 John Deere moved to the small northern Illinois town of Grand Detour where he became aware of the iron plow's inability to penetrate the clay soil (Deere, 2006)." The iron plow did not work. A change had to happen (Deere, 2006) (Deere, 1998) (Steel Plow, 1999) (Deere, 1999). "Fashioning a plow from a discarded steel circular saw blade, he was able to successfully plow a dozen rows nonstop (Deere, 2006)." John Deere created agricultural tools, used persisting to overcome the challenges of the plains area, and illuminated the world by playing one of the major roles in the transformation of plains lands into fertile, agriculturally productive farmlands (Deere, 1999) John Deere created the steel plow to help with the challenges of the plains area (Deere, 2006) (Deere, 1998) (Steel Plow, 1999) (Deere, 1999). It was the only steel plow that could break through the plains mud. There was many good and different ways that the plow worked. It could successfully plow many rows non stop and the blade was curved to one side so you did not need to push the dirt to one side (Deere, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When John Deere created the steel plow, the field of farming could work faster. The new work was also more efficient (Deere, 2006). Another reason about how he illuminated the world is that he was one of the first to design agricultural tools and machines to meet the specific needs of midwestern farmers (Deere, 1998). His change was big. "He made a change by playing one of the major roles in the transformation of America's wild lands into fertile, agriculturally productive farmlands (Deere, 1999)." "He enabled the settling of America, and brought to all of America a first wave of farmers who populated and settled the wilderness of the undeveloped lands of the United States, with the help of his plow (Deere, 1999). John Deere helped the field of agriculture in a very big ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Heaney's Poem Follower Essay Heaney's Poem "Follower" Follower is a poem about the poets love and admiration for his father. It is also about the changes that occur between father and children as children move out from their parent's shadow. In the first half of the poem the poet draws a vivid portrait of his father as he ploughs a field. The poet, as a young boy, follows his father as he goes about his work and, like most boys, he idolises his father and admires his great skill, 'An expert. He would set the wing and fit the bright steel – pointed sock'. In the poem, Heaney looks up to his father in a physical sense, because he is so much smaller than his father, but he also looks up to him in a metaphorical sense. This is made clear by the poet's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is as though at this moment the boy has become aware of himself. He wants to be like his father but thinks of himself as clumsy and a "nuisance". His fathers strength and power are also very effectively brought out in the simply, but effective simile, 'His shoulders globed like a full sail strung between the shafts and the furrow.' The comparison here suggests a man who spends much of his time out of doors, a man who is part of nature. The word 'globed' also suggests great strength and gives the impression that the father was the whole world to the young boy. It is important to note that his father is not simply strong; his tender love and care for his son are emphasised by the fact that he 'rode me on his back dipping and rising to his pod'. The sound and rhythm of these lines covey the pleasure young Heaney had in the ride. The words 'yapping' make us think of the boy as being like a young and excited puppy – enjoying playing at ploughing, but of no practical help. In fact, he was a hindrance to a busy farmer, but his father tolerates him. The poem has several developed metaphors, such as the child following in his father's footsteps and wanting to be like him. The father is sturdy while the child falls – his feet is not big enough for him to be steady on the uneven land. In the closing lines of the poem shifts again, this time the "I" voice of the poet is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. To Kill A Mockingbird Alternate Ending Essay Walter Cunningham's freckled face flushed radish red as he saw us. "Good afternoon Walter, is your father in the house?" Atticus asked. "Ahh yessir, Mr. Finch," Walter murmured, "he's out yonder in the kitchen." "Scout stay here will you while I talk to Mr. Cunningham," ordered Atticus. Walter looked completely different from usual. His shoes were torn, his overalls were soaked in sweat and dirt was muddled in his dishevelled hair. He'd been digging up potatoes with an old potato plough with a rusty old wheel and two well–worn handles. He muttered, "Scout why's Atticus havin' a talk with my Papa?" "Atticus is just here to settle Mr. Cunningham's entailments," I reassured him, "Want a hand with the choppin' Walter'?" I asked "All right, suppose ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Wait. Walter, what's with all the coins?" I queried. "Ah...umm...don't know," he anxiously said as he quickly shoved them back into the toolbox. "C'mon Walter tell me the truth?" I begged. "Oh fine, well a few days back, my Papa asked me to bring a crokersack full of turnip greens to Mr Johnson's house. It was a long an' miserable walk an' rain started pouring heavily. I open the door to the house to find that no one was home an' placed the crockersack down inside. Then I notice a pile of coins oddly lying on the table so I..." "Walter! You stole those?" "I know, I know I never should a done it but I feel so worthless an' poor compared to all the other folks in this town. I was astounded when I saw them coins, I never seen anything as fine as that in years..." "Say not a chance that I would have thought of you, Walter Cunningham as to someone who would steal," I said in a disgusted tone. "Scout I'm sick of havin' to keep the Cunningham reputation and following all the right rules an' for what is the point anymore. We have nothing. Nothing good happens in our lives an' nothing ever will," he exclaimed in a desperate tone. "We only get a whole heap a pain an' misery, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Summary Of Pieter Bruegel's Landscape With The Fall Of Icarus When one looks at Pieter Bruegel's "Landscape With the Fall of Icarus", it is impossible for the mind not to jump to the myth of Daedalus and Icarus. Many of the myth's elements are incorporated into the painting such as the farmer ploughing his fields, the shepherd looking up into the sky, and Icarus himself drowning. Even though there are many similarities between the painting and the myth, there are also many instances where the painting and the myth differ significantly. When the viewer interprets the changes made, they can see that these changes were made intentionally by Bruegel as a method for him to demonstrate his beliefs regarding money and the problems it caused. The first major change from the myth to the painting is the time period where the story is taking place. One of the major indicators of the change in time period is the city that is located in the upper left–hand side of the painting. The image features a city filled with buildings that would have fit in with those seen by Bruegel during his life. The architecture appears to be what would be found in the Netherlands, with the tall buildings with sharp points where the two sections of roof intersect and the buildings packed tightly together as if to stay warm throughout the harsh winters. On the peninsula farther from the audience there is a small church which can be identified by its tower rising above the town, another architectural staple of Bruegel's time. Additionally, the roofs are painted a red color. This color also serves to set the painting in Bruegel's time as the red roofs would remind a viewer of Renaissance Italy and not Ancient Greece. The red roofs also demonstrates that Bruegel wanted the audience's eyes to go to this spot on the painting as the red color contrasts with the surrounding white and blue. With the city, Bruegel effectively sets the painting in his own time and demonstrates through his color choices that he wants the audience to know this. Setting the painting in his time is significant as it demonstrates to the viewer that the message which is being delivered is a modern message. Another major change made by Bruegel is the behavior of the characters. In the myth, all of them stop everything that they are doing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. 1257, Life as a Villein Essay 1257, Life as a Villein My name is Katie Longhair. I am twenty–one years old and I am a villein, that's with an 'e' not an 'a', I'm no criminal you know. I live as a tenant on Lord Richard's land. That means that I have to pay him rent to live there. However, I can not pay him in pennies because I haven't got enough, instead I pay him with whatever I can spare off the farm. I can see you're not from round these parts so let me tell you how life goes in this village. Villein is just another word for peasant, and peasant life really is tough. All we seem to do is work. Us peasants are an important part of feudalism. The King gave Lord Richard a share of his land and in return Lord Richard ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Next year the crops will all move round one field. The Lord keeps most of the land for himself but all the villagers are allowed some strips of land in each field. They are spread around the field so that we get a share of the best and the poorest land. There's John the priest, He's a kind, caring man if ever there were one. He helps the sick or needy if he can, not like some priests you hear of who drink too much and ignore their duties. We have to give the priest a tithe that's what the barn over there is for. It can be hard having to give the priest one tenth of all our crops each year, but I know he's not a selfish man so I don't mind. That's my husband Alf, he hardly has the time to look after our own land and grow food for our family. William Reeve has just told him to plough half an acre of the Lord's fields this week. As well as that he has his week work, to hoe weeds every Monday, but I think we're going to get little Alfie doing that soon, he's nearly six now and it's about time he started pitching in. Alf's boon work was three days in June hay making, and three times a year he has to cart grain to another Manor and the Lord can make him do as much extra work as he wants at seed–sowing time and harvest time. All we get for all this work is our cottage and just 6 strips of land in the fields and if we annoy the Lord in any way we could loose it all and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Paul Harvey's Speech 'So God Made A Farmer' The Man of Steel On his talk show Paul Harvey had one famous speech "So God made a Farmer." In the speech he describes a farmer as firm but caring, He says, ". . . It had to be somebody who'd plow deep and straight and not cut corners; somebody to seed, weed, feed, breed and rake and disc and plow...So God made a Farmer." John Deere has helped farmers accomplished many of those things he listed seeding, weeding, and plowing. Plowing might be last on the list for Paul Harvey, but it is the first accomplishment of John Deere which turned into to a big and outstanding company. John Deere created the first steel plow in a little blacksmith shop in Illinois. Farmers had a great deal of problems when it came to plowing. The plow would try to get through the dark and rich dirt. Then in a matter of moments, the plow would be full of dirt that farmers would have to quit plowing and scrape off the dirt (OH, DEERE). The black soil is what caused the plow to get full of wet dense dirt which that called Gumbo (John Deere, That's Who). John Deere decided he wants to enhance the plow (OH, DEERE). John Deere fiddled with the steel blades off of a sawmill, he thought that the curved and shiny might go through the gumbo (John Deere, That's Who). To get started, John Deere first used a saw blade, then he modified it by cutting the teeth off. That creates a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Approximately 1,600 plows were made in the year of 1850 (John Deere). John Deere also started making many different tools to help improve the steel plow for farmers. With the changing of technology in the farming industry there is an abundance different tools to help farmers. "Since 1837, John Deere has delivered innovative products of superior quality built on a tradition of integrity," says the John Deere ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. The Impact of John Deere Essay The Impact of John Deere Nowadays more and more people are unaware of where their food comes from. Mankind now lives in an age where technology is the main focus and the rural way of life is becoming a thing of the past. The ability to produce food is so efficient and effective that some people do not even realize how their food gets to their plate. But that was not the case in the 19th century. In 1837, a man named John Deere changed farming forever. In the coarse of human existence, civilizations have made farming their primary source for food. As long as farming has been around, agricultural implements have been used to farm the land. Scientists believe that the first plows that were used, date back to 4,000 B.C. These plows were ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Data has proven that he was correct about the exponential growth (Blackwell–Tompkins, Danley, Egan, Saffron, Silsby 4). So how has the human race been able to produce enough food? Obviously something happened that increased crop production, and made growing food more efficient. By the 19th century, American frontiersmen were moving west. The farmers experienced much heavier and stickier soils than they had been accustomed to in the east. The soil would stick to the moldboard and a man would have to stop and scrape it off every few steps. (Anderson) "A strong man using a modern spade still took an estimated ninety–six hours to till an acre of land" (Drache 2). The cast iron plows with a wooden moldboard had worked great in the light, sandy soils of New England, but something different was needed in the west. This is where John Deere had to step in. John Deere was born in Rutland, Vermont on February 7, 1804. When John was 17 he apprenticed himself to a black smith for 4 years. After that he immediately went into the blacksmithing business. John borrowed money to build his own blacksmith shop. Tragically, his shop was destroyed by fire not only once, but two times. John could not pay off his debt and facing bankruptcy, he made the decision to head west where he could find work, and be able to pay off his debt (Nortrax). He found ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. Follower and Digging by Seamus Heaney Essay Follower and Digging by Seamus Heaney In his poems 'Follower and Digging' Heaney is thinking about his father. How do these two poems give you different ideas about his relationship with his father? In the two poems, 'Digging' and 'Follower', Seamus Heaney writes about growing up on his father's farm, in County Derry, in Ireland. I am going to compare and contrast, remembered and present day, feelings Heaney has about his relationship with his father. The poem 'Follower' tells us about Heaney's admiration for his father and how he wants to grow up to plough just like him. He observes how his father tends to the farm, but how ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Another example of Heaney's admiration for his father is how he is in control, 'the horses strained at his clicking tongue.' This tells the reader how the big horses worked harder at the father's command, and did what he wanted. 'With a single pluck,' this tells the reader that even though the father used minimum effort to direct the horses, he was always in control. This also expresses that Heaney views his father as, 'an expert.' The emphasis of this short sentence simply shows how much the poet admires his father's competence as a farmer. The way the father skilfully cuts the bottom of the furrow and turns the soil, 'set the wing, and fit the bright steel –pointed sock.' This tells the reader how he ploughs in exactly the right position as if it should fit there. Also the use of the technical terms for the plough shows that the father was a specialist. The metaphor 'mapping the furrow exactly,' describes the father as a perfectionist. This tells the reader how he plans and lines up the plough precisely, and knows how to plough a furrow correctly. He is not actually mapping out the furrows but the metaphor describes how perfectly the father ploughs. This is also shown by, at the headrig, with a single pluck,' which tells the reader how the father knows how to position the plough exactly so ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Different Tylage Methods for Treflan Herhicide Controlling... In order to analyze the effect of different tillage methods on the amounts of treflan herbicide controlling weed in experimental seeding canola farms a test in the form of the factorial experiment was done as Randomized complete Block design in 4 frequencies and 9 treatments in DEZFUL Agriculture and industry Martyr Beheshti in farming year 2007–2008. Results of the test showed that ratings of herbicide treflan on sevevel weed of Berseem– clover has been meaningful at a level of 5 percent and hasn't been meaningful on several Bullwort weed, wild carrot, total weeds, dried weight of weeds, canola height, overall numbers of canola branches, harvest index, length of sheath, sheath seed number, weight of thousand graings, yield. different tillage methods on several Berseem clover and several weed of Bullwort , dried weight of weeds, yield and has been meaningful at a level of 1 percent and has been meaningful at a level of 5 percent of total weeds and hasn't been meaningful on several weed wild carrot, weight of thousand grains, sheath numbers in canola plant, Length of sheath, overall numbers of canola branches and harvest index. IN mutual effect of treflan herbicides and tillage methods on several of Berseem clover and several Bullwort weed, total weeds, dried weight of weeds, yield has beer meaningful at 1 percent level and hasn't been meaningful on several wild carrot , weight of thousand grains, sheath numbers in canola plant, sheath length in canola plant, total numbers ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 73. The Contributions Of John Deere John Deere 's invention of the plow revolutionized farming, and the design has steadily improved over time. John Deere was a farmer in the western part of the US. He needed a replacement for the wood plows that kept breaking in the different soil. The wood plows were built and designed for farming in the eastern states. Ever since he made the invention and founded the company, it has been upgraded and rethought to extravagant levels. The biggest achievements of John Deere will be explained in this paper. John Deere was born in Rutland, Vermont but his family moved a year later to Middlebury, Vermont for his father to work. His father later died presumably in the ocean on a voyage. Deere's mother was widowed and forced to provide for him ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... After half a century of company development and growth, John Deere makes a power move in the agricultural world. After years of looking into and exploring tractor production, Deere buys out Waterloo Boy Tractors and begins production. They are not very popular the first year and John Deere only sells 5,634 tractors, compared to the 34,000 tractors that Ford sells.(Timeline and Inventions, 2017) This model of tractor was marketed as the basic product of the company in the years to follow. 1956 and 1966 were years of growth and development worth mentioning as well. In '56, John Deere made a huge leap in the business by taking the company to a global production level, this expansion also opened up the minds of developers to new kinds and designs of tractors to accommodate new clientele and new industries such as logging. A decade further in time, and John Deere exhibits an integral attitude on their newly patented safety roll cage. This was a brand new aspect to the industry and was brilliant. The integrity comes in when John Deere releases the patent to everyone in the industry free of charge. The roll cages saved many lives. One of the biggest and most fascinating inventions by John Deere ever has been recently made in 2015. A brand new technology was introduced called ExactEmerge along with MaxEmerge. These are planters designed with a new type of seed delivery system and sensor. The old ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. Modern Day Lawn Mower Research Paper The Evolutions of the Modern Day Lawn Mower Before the time of the lawn mower, there was grass and sheep, and the sheep ate the grass. The grass was short, but the process wasn't very efficient. For places, such as Utah, this was fine, but in more settled areas this lack of a lawn mower caused a problem for landowners. Then, Edwin Budding observed a cutter used in cloth factories for removing the nap from fabric. Budding's brainstorm was around 1830, when gardeners typically used scythes to trim turf. For the best results, the job had to be done when the ground was wet with dew–early in the morning or late at night. A less–than–careful effort might leave telltale, unattractive marks from the scythe. When Budding's idea became a reality, it freed the workers to cut turf at more convenient hours. Budding and his partner received a patent for his lawn mower. The machine was obnoxious for modern standards. It was difficult to use–in many cases, two persons were needed: one to push, one to pull. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Power mowers were only as effective as the strength and stamina of the person or animal pulling or pushing the machine. That began to change in the 1890s, as inventors and manufacturers looked at ways to bring engine power to mowing. A steam–powered mower was introduced in the 1890s, but it was heavy, noisy and hard to control and maneuver. Just after the turn of the century, gasoline– powered machines became available and unlocked the door to productivity. Engine power made rotary blades more feasible on mowers. Engines could provide the power to spin the rotary blade fast enough to cut the turf effectively. Rotaries became more popular after World War II, as engines became cheaper and more powerful for residents in Utah, and the accelerating migration to the suburbs meant more people had larger lawns to maintain. Rotary machines were cheaper to make and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 77. John Deere Research Paper John Deere: The Start of an Empire Founded in 1837 by blacksmith and inventor John Deere, this now international multibillion dollar corporation had humble beginnings. John Deere started his company in Grand Detour, Illinois, making polished steel plows to allow pioneer farmers to cut furrows in the gummy Mid–Western soil. In the company's first year of business John Deere blacksmith evolves into John Deere manufacturing completing ten plows , in 1842 retail is added to the business . Over the next ten years, John Deere moves is company to its current global headquarters, in Moline, Illinois due to the locations water and transportation advantages. He also acquires two business partners, Leonard Andrus and Robert N. Tate, he later ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... John Deere believed that without the trust and loyalty of his customers his company would not survive, a belief his successors still hold true to this day. He also believed in helping those who were in need not just his customers but his employees. Deere and Company have survived the Panic of 1852, The Great Depression, and several employee strikes, by knowing how people should be treating and listening to what their employees wanted. Some examples how this vision was shared are, in 1938 during the Great Depression although the company's sales slump and it is losing money, the decision is made to carry debtor farmers as long as necessary. Today Deere and Company sponsors a several charitable events and organizations to help support under resourced areas, such as the John Deere Classic, a PGA event that raised more than sixty two million dollars for local charities. There is also the Citizen program, this philanthropy and volunteer program focuses on helping under resourced agricultural communities , build a more sustainable food source ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...