Lester F. Larsen Tractor Museum
Established | 1980 |
---|---|
Location | 3310 Holdrege Street Lincoln, Nebraska |
Type | Agriculture museum |
Website | tractormuseum.unl.edu |
The Lester F. Larsen Tractor Test and Power Museum is a museum dedicated to preserving and documenting the history of Nebraska's tractor test law, operated by the University of Nebraska–Lincoln (NU) in Lincoln, Nebraska, United States. The Nebraska Tractor Test Law, passed in 1919 and administered by the university, requires performance testing on every tractor with forty horsepower or more sold in the state. The facility, initially established as the Nebraska Tractor Test Laboratory, was renamed for longtime chief engineer Lester F. Larsen when it was converted into a museum in 1998.[1] It is the only tractor testing museum and the only complete tractor test laboratory in the world.
History
[edit]The Nebraska tractor testing law can trace its roots to 1919 when Wilmot Crozier, a farmer and state representative from Osceola, bought a Ford 8-16 tractor.[2] Crozier quickly noted the 8-16 did not perform as advertised; the tractor could pull only one plow despite claims it could pull three simultaneously. After seeking an explanation from the manufacturer, Crozier discovered the 8-16 was not made by the Ford Motor Company, but rather by the Ford Tractor Company, an unaffiliated company using an employee with the Ford surname to promote its tractors. Crozier soon drafted a bill requiring the validation of claims made by tractor manufacturers, later stating that "after operating, or attempting to operate, two excuses for tractors, I finally invested my money in a machine that would really do what the company said it would. Then I began wondering if there wasn't some way to induce all tractor companies to tell the truth."[2]
With the backing of Crozier and state senator Charles Warner, the Nebraska Tractor Test Law was passed in 1919, House Roll 85. The legislature established the Nebraska Tractor Test Laboratory on the Farm Campus (now East Campus) of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, the first tractor testing facility in the world. Construction was completed at the corner of 35th St and Fair St; the Waterloo Boy Model N became the first tractor to successfully complete the testing process in 1920.[2] The facility was expanded in 1948.
In 1980, tractor testing was moved to an adjacent building and the original facility was declared a historical landmark by the American Society of Agricultural Engineers (now the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers). It was converted into a museum in 1998 and dedicated as the Lester F. Larsen Tractor Test and Power Museum in honor of Lester Larsen, who served as the laboratory's chief engineer from 1946 to 1975. Funding for the establishment and continued operation of the museum is primarily driven through private funding. The museum is part of the University of Nebraska State Museum system.
The University of Nebraska–Lincoln continues to test tractors to ensure reliability standards to this day. The test track is located directly west of the museum and the testing facility is to the northwest. It has two 800-foot straightaways, though only 500 feet are used during testing, which are used to validate the tractor's drawbar horsepower. Inside the test laboratory, a dynamometer is used to determine the "belt horsepower" of the tractor. The laboratory's original Sprague dynamometer is housed in the museum.
Collection
[edit]The museum's collection consists of forty antique and unique tractors, including the Heider Model C, Moline Universal Model D, Fordson 1920, Allis-Chalmers Model G, Ford 8N, and John Deere 820. The museum is also home to the Waterloo Model N (the first tractor to pass the test), and the Ford 8-16 (the unreliable tractor which led to the creation of Nebraska's tractor law).
References
[edit]- ^ "The Story of the Larsen Tractor Museum". Lester F. Larsen Tractor Test and Power Museum. University of Nebraska- Lincoln. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
- ^ a b c "Wilmot F. Crozier and Tractor Testing in Nebraska". History Nebraska. Retrieved 18 October 2022.