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The farm proved difficult for the family to manage. In 1857, William
Wallace Marsh began to experiment with grain bundling methods. Marsh discovered he could bind grain while another was being cut if the cutting apparatus could move. His brother, Charles W., joined the effort the next day. For the
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was founded in 1858. William Marsh was the inventor of the company while his brother
Charles handled the financial aspects. Marsh's inventions were responsible for thirty-five approved patents, expanding the company line with products such as corn huskers, wire stretchers, and plows. The first
158:, who invested in the company. Originally capable of producing 100 harvesters in a year, Steward's capital allowed the company to expand to 10,000 per year. The produced their goods essentially unrivaled until 1871.
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next few years, the brothers worked together to perfect their harvester. In 1859, the Marsh brothers unveiled the completed product during a reaping contest north of
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131:. The success of the Marsh's design was owed to the fact that anyone could use the implement—during demonstration, the Marshes had young girls and
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Marsh operated the
Sycamore division until his retirement in 1906. He died there on May 12, 1918. His 1873 house in Sycamore was listed on the
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operate the machine with ease. The Marsh design was deemed the most effective reaper, and the brothers set to manufacture the product.
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Marsh married M. J. Smith on
January 8, 1871. Marsh, Steward & Company moved to
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when he was eight and attended St. Andrews School. Two years later he enrolled at
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234:. Vol. II. Chicago, IL: Pioneer Publishing Company. pp. 330–333.
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of
Sycamore that year, a position he held for decades. Two years later,
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55:, Marsh developed an early harvester prototype on the family farm in
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99:, captured and jailed for five months. Samuel became a follower of
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on April 15, 1835 to Samuel and Tamar Marsh. Samuel Marsh was a
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Emigrants from pre-Confederation
Ontario to the United States
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from 1873 until his death, serving as a longtime alderman.
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purchased the company and moved most of its operations to
247:The Farmer's Last Frontier: Agriculture, 1860-1897
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142:Woodcut of an early Marsh Brothers harvester
232:Past and Present of DeKalb County, Illinois
103:and left his family to await the predicted
297:People from Northumberland County, Ontario
27:Canadian-American inventor and businessman
117:Clinton Township, DeKalb County, Illinois
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107:. W. W. Marsh moved with his mother to
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40:(April 15, 1835 – May 12, 1918) was a
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198:National Register of Historic Places
187:McCormick Harvesting Machine Company
83:William Wallace Marsh was born near
165:Marsh's house in Sycamore, Illinois
154:, where they met prominent settler
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51:with his brother Charles. Born in
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47:and businessman who co-founded
292:People from Sycamore, Illinois
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150:company factory was opened in
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63:. With help from businessman
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49:Marsh, Steward & Company
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173:in 1873. Marsh was elected
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245:Shannon, Fred A. (1989).
230:Gross, Lewis M. (1907).
191:International Harvester
69:International Harvester
57:DeKalb County, Illinois
204:on December 22, 1978.
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202:National Park Service
185:. It merged with the
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38:William Wallace Marsh
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249:. M. E. Sharpe Inc.
287:American inventors
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97:Rebellions of 1837
73:Sycamore, Illinois
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71:. Marsh lived in
42:Canadian American
16:(Redirected from
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189:in 1902 to form
113:Victoria College
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18:William W. Marsh
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105:Second Coming
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89:Lower Canada
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282:1918 deaths
277:1835 births
271:Categories
208:References
101:Millerism
79:Biography
175:alderman
171:Sycamore
93:Patriote
45:inventor
200:by the
109:Cobourg
95:in the
85:Trenton
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133:hoboes
129:DeKalb
152:Plano
119:near
251:ISBN
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