COMPANY HISTORY
When
Bob, Jim, and Chuck McFarlane decided at the end of
World War II “to come home and help Dad,”
they had no idea of how their combined efforts would
develop the family business into a multi-faceted operation
that they would turn over to their sons. Their father,
Earl, started the Wisconsin Tractor company in 1917,
when he designed and built the tractor named after
his home state Wisconsin (considered modern for its
day). Since that time, the business has diversified
and expanded so that now there are multiple businesses
under one roof.
It
is an 86-year old success story, although, as Bob
McFarlane once noted in a 1992 newspaper interview,
”not all a bed of roses.” Earl was a creative
and inventive genius who was a tenacious old rascal
who would do anything to keep house, home and family
together during the tough times of farm recessions
and the Great Depression. Earl made 500 Wisconsin
tractors over 7 ½ years. But the business ended
abruptly in 1925 after he shipped a large number of
tractors to wheat country in the West, but never got
paid when a crop failure put farmers out of business
and out of cash to make any payments.
This
forced Earl to sell farm machinery instead. Earl didn’t
like the model of the harrow he sold and so he designed
and built his own, after borrowing a few ideas from
competition and incorporating many of his own improved
features. Fortunately his ideas were readily accepted
by farmers throughout the Midwest and especially out
west where wheat growers tied sections of the harrow
together to make a monster implement 70-feet wide.
The sales of McFarlanes’ innovative spike-tooth
harrows brought an industry to Earl and to Sauk City.
When Earl’s three sons took the reigns of the
company they also did so with their own innovations.
Bob introduced tractor leasing for farmers and the
canning industry which was met with strong response
in Wisconsin and northern Illinois area. Chuck spearheaded
further diversification with the building of a full
farm supply line and a store to sell it from. Later
the boys went into steel fabricating by acquiring
machinery from the Kuepfer Foundry in Madison to form
steel used in construction of commercial and farm
buildings. Jim led this area of the company as well
as the harrows manufacturing area for many years before
retiring.
Now Earl’s grandsons run the company with the
same commitment to treating customers “as best
we can,” that their fathers and grandfather
had. John, eldest son of Bob, is President and manages
the store and business offices. Dick, another of Bob’s
sons, manages the equipment sales department. Stan,
Jim’s son, manages the manufacturing and structural
steel departments . Lastly Tom, Chuck’s son,
manages the Service and tire departments (we still
do house-calls to repair and service car, truck and
tractor tires, don’t cha know) The family tradition
continues today as it has since 1917 – Service!
|