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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1983-09-07, Page 37..V I(, 424 BYe e, major Eluron County for acentury. dame liks 1988 book The, trent of Bursa County wait) that by 1850, wheat Wastat most popular crop with oats coming second. Some 15,400 acres of wheaat wg grown On Huron:;,soil,, gelding 214,739 bushel Ocovered 8,271 acres and brought in 199,141 bushels.: Scott wrote, "Previous to 1850 the annual yield of. wheat, according to the Thomas McQueen in The Journal of Transactions of the"Board of Agriculture in Ur Canada, was less than 000. bushels: By 1856, 100,00 bushels of wheat Ore from thelittle port of Bayfield alone. Incidentally, this marks the beginning of the only period in its history that Bayfield showed any signs of com- mercial success. For a few years a great deal of local wheat was taken by wagons to elevators down on "the flats" in Bayfield to be transported by water for sale elsewhere in the country or for export. Slowly this in- dustry fell off as more and more wheat was carried by rail to the port in Goderich. If a railway line had its lake terminal in Bayfield the story might have been dif- ferent, but another and larger centre once more took precedence and eventually Hayfield's role as a shipping point for wheat dwindled to nothing." With the steady increase of the wheat acreage, farmers began using new and im- proved cultivation and harvesting methods and by 1871, Scott wrote, there were 591 threshing machines in use, 6,295 fanning mills, 995 reapers and mowers. Much of this equipment was made locally. Scott wrote, "The final phase of the development of agriculture came with the advent of the threshing machine and steam engine. Now crews of men would move from farm to farm on a regular schedule, threshing the wheat. Threshing days became a tremendous community events and countinued to be until the combine came into general use. Today there are very few of the old type threshing outfits left in Huron County but for 50 years this was a prominent feature of farm life and the threshing machines were made in fou es r t in the county itself."- • vie wryest season was, as .JaS described a +�0 for men and women, boys and girls, to Join together to work and in fun. The Blyth, Standard lo its September 2, ..1964 issue reported, "To listen in on a conversation:. of the men who manned thesesmoking giants, in their working clays, one ',feels that a t� bee`wassomething they -0110,0 even if it was Work. : You 'hear discussed, 'We`used •to 'hear nt 3460 a.m. on a brisk Ocber #morning to fire the engines Sn-40-lean the flues, fell and Harliess the '"horses„ .`In the. farm kitchen savory smells: of home cured ham and eggs, bowls `of oatineal..porridge and buckets of coffee issued forth on the crisp morning air. To hear the rattling of a farm wagon miles down the gravel road as the sun was bursting into view in the east, flooding the trees with sunlight and in their autumn foliage they in turn projecting their magnificent colors for all to sea: To hear conversations such as these of the torn foolery that went on that times makes a younger person think that progress didi rob us of those days." Isaac Cranston of Ashfield Township owned one of the powerful threshing machines. The township. history book Frontier Ways to Modern Days recalls the work of the iron giant in the early 1900's. "Isaac owned a threshing machine and did barn threshing for years. At that time the sheaves were but in the barns and threshing wouldn't be finished until the first of November. The men who ran the threshing machine usually stayed all night at the place where they were working. Some of the places, the women didn't like their bedding all dirtied with threshing dirt. One night the men didn't have enought covers so they got up and put their clothes on and went back to bed. "Another place they were coaxed to stay all night but didn't known why until the next morning. The farmer had sold a team of horses they day before and had $400 in the house and didn't want to be alone. "It has been related that on February 14, 1934, Isaac shovelled out his lane, pulled the machine out and went to thre*.kr.4 farm a "large be fullu, of daoper44Oir 'v.:, ::h For womentoo, blrveating was a busy time as they prepared meals for more than, 'a, dozen, hungry, hard workingmen. In a July 1883 issue of the Clinton New Era a refreshing new drink recipe was published `'M. "Among the many cooling drinks recommended for the harvest field is the following: to one gallon of water a d one cup full of boiled cider. It is an agreeab a drink and without bad effects, provided that the water is pure." Threshing days were not without serious tragedies and accidents. One early newspaper item recounts, "A most terrible accident occurred on the farm of Malcolm Cameron, Stanley Township, which resulted in the death of a highly esteemed resident. Arthur Wanless was engaged in threshing for Mr. Cameron with his steam engine when an explosion took place and the engine was blown to atoms. The foot board was crushed and fell upon a man named Munn of Hay Township. He was badly scalded and terribly in- jured." jured." And there were years the crop prospects were equally as disastrous. In August 1883, The Clinton New Era reported, "As it is now a well -ascertained fact that the wheat crop is not one of the worst, ' but the very worst, in this section, in the memory of the oldest in habitants, considerable anxiety is being felt as to its affect upon the physical interests of the community; as it is the most .important crop of the farmer, the most money being obtained through it, and theme which he looks to for paying his store bills. If this crop alone was the only one which the farmer had to complain about the prospect might not be so gloomy, but there are others that will not yield very great returns." Still it is the memories of successful harvests, of neighborly good will and work that remain most prevelant in the minds of the old time farmers. These memories and the love of the big steam machines help to keep the enthusiasm and attendance high at events like the Pioneer Thresher Show in Blyth. Welcome Threshermen Reunion VISITORS. ...during your visit to Blyth stop at Yvonne's for... Homemade Hamburgers Milkshakes, Ice cream Cones, Take -Out Dinners (Also tablas Inside) Hours: Mon. to Friday 7:90 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Saturday 0 a.m. - 9 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m. - I p.m. Yvonne's Take -Out At the Sunoco Station. In the centre of Blyth, east side of Hwy. 4.../ A ifiieshingscejafroni dais gone by, (phot O eMthesy of Transportation comes in all shapes and sizes at the Blyth Thresher Reunion. These gentlemen were caught by the camera enjoying a drive through the community park grounds. They were all decked out for the fine, sunny weekend. The fellow on the left is wearing a traditional Stetson, while the driver is sporting a modern umbrella hat. (Blyth Standard photo) Welcome to the 22nd Annual THRESHER'S; REUNION -, t W is•► 121141124 Com. In and see us or give us a call and let us help look after your crop. */w�/��rrESENS 'CORM *BARLEY 1 *VEO GRAIN Hamm His Elevator Division Blyth. Ontario 91624 or 53-44