Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,649 pages of information and 247,065 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Marshall, Sons and Co

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Marshall, Sons & Co. was a British machinery and Traction Engine manufacturer. Their company was at the Britannia Iron Works, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire.

Marshall's produced large numbers of steam traction engines, steam rollers and agricultural machinery of all types. Later production included diesel tractors such as the Field Marshall and Track Marshall.

  • 1876 First traction engine produced

Marshall, Sons and Co. built the boiler for the Fairbarn steam crane which stands on the dockside in Bristol. The maker's plate reads "Marshall Sons & Co. Ltd., Engineers, Gainsboro, England, No.92766".

Tractors

  • Marshall, Sons and Co. had taken a Lenz tractor and then produced their own version. It was called the Model E and had a single-cylinder two-stroke, diesel engine and featured three forward and one reverse gear,
  • In the mid 1930s a more economical version was produced to compete with the Fordson tractor.
  • The Model E was modified shortly before World War II and became the Model M.
  • In 1945 the Model M was modified and renamed Marshall Series I. Two years later Series II was produced and finally a series III.
  • The tractor could not keep up with the competition and Marshall, Sons and Co. decided to develop a new tractor, however, instead of starting completely at the beginning they decided to purchase an engine off the shelf and build their own tractor around it.
  • The result was the model MP6 which was first introduced in 1954. It had a six-cylinder, water cooled, Leyland diesel engine.
  • The tractor would have been more suited to the United States market. It was too large and expensive for the British farmer and 197 were produced in total with all but ten being exported.
  • Marshall, Sons & Co. then concentrated on their crawler production until the 1980s when they bought the Leyland Tractor business. The machines were re-badged and the colour changed. Production ceased in 1991.


Sources of Information

  • The Complete Encylopedia of Tractors by Mirco de Cet published in 2006 by Rebo International ISBN 978-90-366-1893-9