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The Rural Voice, 1988-09, Page 10F GREAT IDEAS Perth County's Progress through History or 35 years, Stratford has been renowned for its Shakespearean Festival. Hundreds of internationally acclaimed actors, directors, and backstage people have drawn audiences to this creative and artistic mecca. But apart from these celebrated annual rites, outsiders may know little about everyday Perth and the historic influences that have shaped the county. Perth County was an early leader in providing quality farm machinery across the Dominion. The St. Marys Journal of June 2, 1898 reported the annual sale at the David Maxwell & Sons implement factory as "one of the forest and largest processions of farmer's wagons laden with binders and mowers that was ever seen in Canada." Built in 1888, the Maxwell factory was the largest manufacturing concern of its time in Perth. The St. Marys op- eration, employing 100 men, opened a branch office in Winnipeg in 1901 in an effort to capture a corner of the booming new Western trade. The town of Mitchell boasted a similar operation. Its turn of the century Deering implement factory likewise featured special equipment sale days which attracted hundreds of farmers. Almost 30 years earlier, though, the Thomson & Williams Company in Mitchell had been the largest single industry in Perth. As Dean Robinson, author of Mitchell: A Reflection, notes, "In the early 1870s Thomson & Williams was the largest manufacturer in the County. In 1875 Stratford resi- dents approved a $10,000 bonus to woo the firm from Mitchell to their town. The offer was accepted and the move was considered a major blow to Mitchell's industrial fortunes." Perth implement manufacturers were recognized throughout North 8 PERTH COUNTY SPECIAL EDITION Some things stay the same: haying on a Mennonite farm, 1988. Sign of the Yeandle Plow. America for providing equipment second to none. Periodically, recog- nition was bestowed upon individuals such as Stratford's Thomas Yeandle, whose Beaver Plow won international acclaim during the mid -1870s. Indeed, the existence of assorted wood, metalwork, and manufacturing concerns attests to the diverse talents and skills of the entrepreneur and artist alike in early Perth. From planing mill and plowshare to cooper- age and crokinole, innovative thinkers have put their county on the map. The discovery of brine wells near Dublin in the late 1860s motivated Joseph Kidd to establish one of the largest salt -refining operations in the Dominion. Wells originally sunk near the town proved to contain insufficient concentrations of salt, so new wells were opened five miles west. The early wooden pipeline that Kidd installed proved unable to withstand the well pressure and salt friction, so in 1878 new iron tubing was installed at a cost of $1,000 per mile. Kidd recouped these costs, how- ever: the above -ground pipeline of metal would heat the briney flow during the summer months, meaning that less firewood had to be used in the evaporation process at the Dublin location. By 1879, the salt works were yielding 200 barrels a day. A great handicap stifling the progress of many towns and villages in 19th -century Ontario was the lack of transportation. The primitive road systems separating farm produce from markets discouraged many new farm- ers from producing more than their family needed. The railways, though, were destined to change that. In 1856, not one, but two railway lines ended commercial isolation as the first train arrived in Stratford on September 3. The two competitive lines operated by the Grand Trunk Railway and the