The Stinson Tractor Company

The plant in Superior
The plant in Superior, Wisconsin.
Article Tools
Bookmark and Share

706 S. Illinois St., Conrad, Montana 59425

RELATED CONTENT

One of the most successful farm tractors of its time was the Stinson. It was first built in Minneapolis in 1917-The factory was located at Central Avenue and 16th Street.

Two of the seven Stinson brothers quit their jobs at the Advance steam engine factory, in southern Michigan, and started their own factory for a very modern tractor of their own design. They purchased the Beaver 36 HP motor, and made all the rest of it in their Minneapolis factory. The brothers were Boyd and Fred, and they kept the floor of their factory clean enough to eat on. All workers wore white coveralls, and if soiled, they changed into clean ones immediately.

The tractor produced in 1917 was the 18-36, and things were going very well until the factory ran out of materials because of the war. They were out of production in 1919, and lost their lease on the fine big factory building.

They relocated to Superior, Wisconsin in 1920, but ran into hard times and slow sales. The total count of tractor manufacturers at that time was 142. In small town America there was room for only about four to ten dealerships in each town and they were overstocked, and the Stinsons went bankrupt.

Central Ave. and 16th. One of the Largest Gas Traction Engine Factories in the West

For five or six years, two city blocks in Superior, Wisconsin were covered with new Stinson tractors, which were never sold to the public. How they were disposed of this writer doesn't know.

A nephew of those brothers also learned tractor repair at the Advance factory, and traveled the U.S. and Argentina as a specialist on steam engines. When Ernest L. Stinson was repairing steam engines around Great Falls, Montana in 1910, he got 'homesteaders disease' and filed on 320 acres 20 miles east of Brady. He also got married, and this James Stinson is his second son. Ernest Stinson soon formed a partnership with a man who had a steamer, but couldn't keep it going. Later he had engines of his own and ran a threshing business from High wood to Pendroy, 90 miles apart. He hated to stop evenings, and got the nickname of 'Moonlight Stinson'. One of his workers wrote:

I had a job once threshing wheat,
Worked 16 hours with hands and feet,
And when the moon was shining bright,
They kept me working day and night.

Ernest Stinson purchased a garage in 1923, and sold Hart Parr tractors, Atwater Kent Radios and Chevy cars and trucks. The Stinson tractor factory thing was always the big topic when any family came around.

There is a Stinson tractor in the museum in Milton, Ontario, also one at Reynolds Museum at Westaskiwin, Alberta, and one just north of Canandaigua, New York. In looking back I feel the Stinson of 1920 was more modern and trouble free than the Hart Parrs built in 1927.

Comments

Add Your Comment

You can use this comment form to enter your personal experiences or additional information and resources that you'd like to share with Farm Collector readers. Your helpful advice will be posted on this page.  E-mail addresses are never displayed on comments, but they are required to confirm your comments.

Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br> tags.

New to GAS ENGINE?
Sign up to share comments.
Asterisks(*) indicate required fields.
Name*
Your name appears next to your comment.

E-mail Address*
This will be your login ID.

City State Zip Code

Password*


Confirm Password*

Comments
(Offensive materials and/or spam will be removed, no HTML allowed)
Please Note: Your sign-up must be verified via e-mail before your comment is published.


SUBSCRIBE TO GAS ENGINE MAGAZINE TODAY!

First Name: *
Last Name: *
Address: *
City: *
State/Province: *
Zip/Postal Code:*
Country:
Email:*
(* indicates a required item)
Canadian subs: 1 year, (includes postage & GST). Foreign subs: 1 year, . U.S. funds.
Canadian Subscribers - Click Here
Non US and Canadian Subscribers - Click Here

GAS ENGINE MAGAZINE is your best source for tractor and stationary gas engine information.  Subscribe and connect with more than 23,000 other gas engine collectors and build your knowledge, share your passion and search for parts, in the publication written by and for gas engine enthusiasts! Every Month GAS ENGINE MAGAZINE brings you: restoration stories, company histories, and technical advice. Plus our Flywheel Forum column helps answer your engine inquiries!

Be sure to take advantage of the Square Deal Subscription Program.

  • No Missed Issues.

  • No Renewal Notices.

  • No Additional Cost.

The Square Deal Subscription Program is designed as a paperless transaction with automatic renewals at a preferred low rate.   With advanced electronic notification, a 100% satisfaction guarantee and an easy opt-out plan, the Square Deal Subscription Program is the best value, risk free, eco-friendliest way to subscribe.