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by HAROLD GIBSON
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THE FAMILY HOUSE AT GROWELL (G.M.) |
On the 4th November, 1884 Mary
Ferguson presented her husband James with a son, Henry George.
The family home, Lake House at Growell near Dromore is where
the young boy grew up with his 3 sisters and 7 brothers. His
father was a farmer and unlike many farmers of his day he
owned the 100 acres that he earned his living from and
provided work and food for the family.
James and Mary Ferguson were devout religious people being
members of Growell Gospel Hall. Family life was characterised
by allegiance to the Bible and so young Harry (as he was
called) grew up under this influence. It was an influence that
was to have the opposite effect to that which his parents
would have desired. Harry left school at the age of 14 and
started work on the farm. The hard work of farming and the
light stature of Harry
together with the pressures being brought to bear on him by
his parents made him think of leaving home. He seriously
considered emigrating to Canada and had the necessary papers
in his possession ready to head for foreign shores when his
older brother Joe made him an offer of a job in Belfast.
Joe had got an apprenticeship as a maintenance mechanic
with the firm of Combe Barbour, Linen Spinners, in 1895. He
then set up in business on his own in the Autumn of 1901 on
the Shankill Road as a car and cycle repair shop. Harry joined
his brother as an apprentice and together with their love of
things mechanical they established what was described by many
as the best business of it's kind in Belfast and they
developed into a financially sound business. Just a few years
earlier the bank had refused to lend them any money because
"the automotive industry had no future"!
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Plaque on Harry
Ferguson's
birth place
(G.M.) |
Many people came to Joe's garage to have their cars tuned
and serviced and it was here that Harry met some people who
would have an input to his life at a later date. One such
person was T. McGregor Greer, a wealthy landowner from
Tullylagen, Co. Tyrone. Greer had a passion for cars and Harry
became a frequent visitor to the estate to repair his various
cars.
Harry had a love for racing and he became known as the "mad
mechanic" because of the many stunts he attempted. Racing was
not enough to keep him on the ground and he became interested
in aviation. He attempted many times to get airborne and spent
some time at Newcastle trying to get in the air with the hopes
of landing on the beach. Huge crowds gathered on many
occasions but they all ended in failure and for many people he
became something of a maverick. However, Harry did not give up and he
successfully got airborne from Dundrum Bay. This was in 1909
and the first flight over Ireland to be recorded.
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Harry Ferguson with Henry Ford and the tractor in America
in 1939. (courtesy of Ulster Folk and Transport Museum). |
Back at the business however signs of strain between the
brothers were starting to emerge. It was not over any
particular piece of mechanical engineering but rather over a
special young lady whom Harry had started to keep company with
and it being the same lady upon whom Joe also had designs that
caused the friction. She was Maureen Watson, the daughter of a
Dromore grocer and it was Harry who won the day. Despite
strong objections from Maureen's parents who were members of
the Brethren as well and knew the Ferguson family they felt
that the "mad mechanic" was not the man for their daughter.
Harry had by this time declared himself to be agnostic and
this was a further reason as to why Harry should not marry
Maureen. The wedding nevertheless did take place at Newry
Registry Office.
Harry then set up in business backed by his good friend
McGregor Greer and he opened the May Street Motor Co in
Belfast.
Joe would not allow him to open up under the name of
Ferguson. Within a year the name of the firm was known as
Harry Ferguson Motors. He became the distributor for Austin
Cars in Northern Ireland and the business later moved to
Donegall Square East in Belfast, at the side of the City Hall.
Being from an agricultural background and with his
mechanical ability Harry had taken an interest in the many
attempts to bring mechanisation to farming. He studied the
many pieces of machinery that were emerging from various
manufacturers and whilst regarding them as innovative he felt
that they lacked a system that would make the tractor more
effective and labour saving to the farming community. He had
an idea to introduce a hydraulic system that would enable
implements to be attached to the tractor from a single hitch
point. Harry brought together a design team to put his ideas
onto paper and eventually into production. At the same time
Henry Ford was making tractors in America. Harry felt that
they could conquer the industry together and after contacting
Ford he eventually visited America to show Ford his ideas and
plans. Ford and Ferguson went into partnership in 1938 by the
way of a "gentleman's fitted agreement" and soon production of
the Fordson tractor with the Ferguson hydraulic system was
rolling off the line and being sold on both sides of the
Atlantic. Ferguson realised that if the tractor was to be
successful then its virtues had to be shown to the farming
community at large. He had a flair for marketing and so he
organised various demonstrations around the Ulster countryside
so that farmers could come and see for themselves the wonders
of this mechanised horse! Many came to laugh and to pour scorn
on Harry but he was not put off as he continued to give shows
all over the country Harry Ferguson knew that what he had
developed would prove to be a winner all over the agricultural
world.
Trouble lay ahead for Ferguson and Ford and soon their
partnership was to come to an end not in an agreeable way but
by the means of the Law Courts. A dispute arose between the
two men that resulted in the longest law suit in history to
take place. The hearing lasted from 1948 until 1956 and Harry
Ferguson won the case and was awarded several million pounds
in damages.
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Demonstrating the tractor to Winston Churchill and
Christopher Soames at Chartwell.
(Ulster Folk and Transport
Museum) |
Ferguson of course was a wealthy man before this case but
now he was considerably wealthier though his outlet for the
tractor was gone. After some time he became involved with the
Massey Engineering Company and this eventually led to the
formation of the Massey Ferguson Company, a name that is well
remembered to this day for its production of red tractors.
Time for Harry Ferguson was passing on and he and his wife
bought a large estate near Coventry called Abbotswood. It was
near to his design centre though the house had a large study
which Ferguson used as a base to work from. Often as he would
be driven through the countryside he would watch out for one
of his tractors at work in the fields. He would ask his
chauffeur to pull up and he would often get out and speak to
the farmer or help him if he was experiencing any mechanical
difficulties with the machine. In most cases the farmer would
have had no idea who this man was that had helped him.
When he was back in Ulster he usually called with the late
Joe Martin who lived in Mount Street, Dromore and who had been
one of his close mechanical companions during those early days
of aviation and in the garage in Belfast. Ferguson's influence
was far and wide and while he had friends from lowly places he
had friends in high places. A frequent visitor to Abbotswood
was Christopher Soames son in law of Winston Churchill.
Ferguson had the privelege of demonstrating the tractor to
Winston and he sought to get Churchill to adopt a price
reduction policy after the war to get the country going again.
Churchill did not buy the idea and of course he lost the next
election. Had he taken Ferguson's idea on board things may
have proved different and a Dromore man may have been credited
with keeping Churchill in power.
He was not an easy man to work for or to work with. Some of
the staff at Abbottswood will recall how he ran the place with
military precision. Meals would always be on time and great
attention to detail would be given. He liked to see an even
overhang of the sheets on the bed and his shoe laces must
always have an equal length of lace for tying! This was just a
development of the attention that he paid to all areas of his
life. He loved to see things neat and tidy. On one occasion he
had a meeting with his dealers and Ferguson appeared on the
rostrum looking somewhat scruffy and with oily marks on his
face. The audience started to talk amongst themselves when
Ferguson spoke loudly and said that if their business premises
looked scruffy and dirty people would not pay any attention to
them. He had proved his point and after cleaning up he
returned and gave his dealers an address on selling.
He was always pleased to hear of new advances that his
tractor was making in different parts of the world and he
received many letters including some from Africa. In parts of
the world today the tractor is called the Fergie more often
than it is called tractor.
Harry Ferguson and his wife continued to live at their
country home. It was the first time that they could call this
place their home. So much time had been spent living in
America and in other places in England. He would often be seen
out on the fields working with the tractor. He spent a lot of
his time in correspondence to the Government, to the press and
to many others.
Every morning at precisely 8.30 he came down and joined his
wife at breakfast. One morning in October 1960, the 25th, he
did not appear at the usual time and after the alarm was
raised a member of staff found his body in the bath. Harry
Ferguson was dead. Yet the memory of this great man lives on.
So many years earlier he knew that if man was to survive he
needed food and that meant cultivation of the earth. His life
was dedicated to pioneering a system that would make this
easier for the farmer and give to the world an instrument that
would help nations cultivate their land and feed their people.
Harry Ferguson is a man that should be remembered for time
immemorial because his inventions and pioneering spirit
contribute so much to life today. The tractor, the aircraft
and the four wheel drive system that he developed are all
modes of transport that are taken for granted in this modern
mechanised age. Plaques on the building at Donegall Square
East, the Promenade at Newcastle and on the house at Growell
all pay tribute to Harry Ferguson, Inventor and Pioneer.
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