Enjoy Your Antique John Deere Tractors Collection

Currently on display at the John Deere Collectors Center is the antique John Deere tractors that was made in 1918. The antique John Deere tractors are one of the original one hundred built by Deere and believed to be the only one found in complete condition. The very fact that there is a place like this that puts on display this antique John Deere tractors and many more of differing ages, shows man’s continuing interest in the his past and the development of

Antique John Deere Tractors

Antique John Deere Tractors

technology. This center pays tribute to the tractor models and their ongoing changes that John Deere brought to the American farmers. For example, a new model, that was unveiled at the center a mere two years ago, shows their continuing advancements in technology for use in modern tractors. This one had All-Wheel-Drive.

People have an attachment to the John Deere Company and all they’ve been able to do for farmers. They treasure the old tractors. There are websites, books and magazines devoted to the antique John Deere tractor. People collect them the same way they would baseball cards or Model Ts. If you are considering adding antique John Deere tractors to your collection there are many available for you to

Antique John Deere Tractrors

Antique John Deere Tractors

purchase. This restoration work can be done yourself or any one of the many companies that still do that for a living. Not only that but you’d be surprised at the places that you can by old original parts from.  Including if you looking to restore the most popular model of John Deere tractors the Model A that was originally produced in 1934.

One question often asked is If I owned any antique John Deere tractors, would it have the famous yellow and green colors. The answer would be that it depends on what year your old tractor was from. There are illustrations from a catalog dated 1905 that show those colors

Antique John Deere Tractors

Antique John Deere Tractors

on a John Deere plow. The question that follows is why those colors? Although this seems to be something that will never be confirmed, John Deere having died in 1886, the story goes that the green is for the stalks and the yellow for the ears of corn that grew on them. Long live the antique John Deere tractors.

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