Farm Collector – March 2019

(Ron) #1

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  1. W.P Adams, founder of Fairview Farm.

  2. Hay and livestock barn.
    3.Fairview Farm near Odebolt, Iowa. The W.P. Adam’s Ranch and residence:
    4. Plowing with mules on Fairview Farm.
    5. Bringing in wagons of corn.
    6.Fairview Farm. Bedrooms were upstairs. Mess hall and sleeping quarters at
    Note corn wagons in foreground.


supervisor there. Ross started work-
ing at the ranch when W.P. Adams was still alive. “Every mule had a name and
I think my dad knew at least 199 of
them,” Roger says. “I recall him telling me that he couldn’t put Betty to work
with Suzie because they didn’t work well
together, and when they were out in the field being handled by a driver, you had
to have mules that were compatible
with each other.”In a small office in the mule barn, a
glass plate hung on one wall. Behind it was listed the stall number and name of
every mule in the barn. “You could walk
up and check to see that the number 12 stall held Suzie,” Roger says, “and that
Henry was in number 19.”
Handling teams
When it was time to break a new
team, the “green” team was hitched to a wagon in the mule barn with a broke
team hitched in front of them. Two
drivers drove the wagon. One held the lines and the other held a whip. After
the mules were driven around a section, the new team was considered “broke.”
Most of the mules were turned out on
the harvested fields during the winter to graze. When 200 mules were rounded
up and herded to the mule barn to be
readied for spring planting, it was a sure sign of spring.
In that era, mules and horses were
commonly neglected after they were retired. Some farmers left the retired
animals outside in all weather, while working animals were sheltered. On oc-
casion, some were allowed to starve to
death. Late in his life, Adams nearly sold a
few retired mules to a slaughterhouse.
Terms of the agreement called for a ranch foreman to accompany the mules
to the facility, to ensure they were killed
humanely. “Every one of those mules is a friend of mine,” Adams is reported to
have said. “They helped me get where I am now.” After that, Adams had his re-
tired mules euthanized on the farm to
ensure they wouldn’t be abused.
Plowing with 18 gangplows
and 220 feet long, and had enough The mule barn measured 90 feet wide
space to house at least 200 mules. Stor-
age space for hay and machinery was on the second floor, reached by a ramp at
the back of the building. Adams bought

his mules in Missouri, many from the
Kansas City stockyards. At first Adams traveled to Kansas City to buy them,
but later bought them from buyers who
shipped them to the ranch.Plowing was done with 18 gangplows
and 17 single plows. Mules pulling 140
sections of 4-foot harrows moving to-gether could cover 62 acres. One vintage
photo shows nine binders cutting oats
with each binder pulled by four mules. Corn was picked by hand until the
late 1920’s or early 30’s, at which time McCormick-Deering tractors and
single-row corn pickers came into use.
However, the tractors were only used to pick corn and were stored with the
pickers the rest of the year. An old ranch
photo shows 15 tractors in a row with 15 pickers.
Adams raised sheep from 1900 to


  1. A 1906 photograph shows a herd of thousands. Local residents remember
    seeing a herd of sheep as wide as the street and two blocks long being herded
    to stockyards at the railroad in Odebolt
    to be shipped to market.The fields were farmed, for the most
    part, in mile-square sections. Rows of
    corn were a mile long, and oats were grown in an entire section. In 1943,
    The Des Moines Register reported that the
    ranch had 2,850 acres planted in corn, 1,800 acres to oats, 310 acres to flax, 220
    acres to timothy, 800 acres to red clover
    and 300 acres to permanent pasture. Ad-ams planted an acre of soybeans on an
    experimental basis. Henry Ford report-edly wanted Adams to grow soybeans
    commercially, but that never happened.
    Managing a staff of 150
    A ranch manager ran daily opera-
    tions; 10-12 foremen on horseback su-pervised laborers. Adams met daily with
    the manager, foremen and bookkeeper
    to discuss the day’s progress and give in-structions for the following day’s work.
    The men worked six days a week, Mon-
    day through Saturday.Hiring and managing a workforce of
    approximately 150 men from spring through fall and 45 during the winter
    was a fascinating enterprise. An agent
    in Chicago hired men and sent them by train to Odebolt. Hoboes who hitched
    a train to Odebolt provided another
    source of labor.Food for the men was bought whole-
    sale, and two steers were slaughtered on

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