John F. Steward Papers, 1833-1913


Summary Information
Title: John F. Steward Papers
Inclusive Dates: 1833-1913

Creator:
  • Steward, John F. (John Fletcher), 1841-1915
Call Number: McCormick Mss BJ

Quantity: 0.8 c.f. (2 archives boxes)

Repository:
Archival Locations:
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)

Abstract:
Papers of John F. Steward, superintendent and supervisor of patents for the Deering Harvester Company and the International Harvester Company, chiefly concerning the history of the agricultural machinery industry. The collection documents the development of the twine binder; the accomplishments of several inventors in the agricultural machinery industry; and the efforts of Steward and others to dispute the importance of Cyrus Hall McCormick as an inventor.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mcc000bj
 ↑ Bookmark this ↑

Biography/History

John Fletcher Steward was born in Little Rock Township, Kendall County, Illinois on June 23, 1841. In 1861 he enlisted in Company F, 127th Illinois Volunteers. He suffered from exposure at the siege of Vicksburg in 1863 and was discharged for medical reasons. He later rejoined the Union army as part of the Veteran Reserve Corps and was finally discharged on July 4, 1865 at Detroit. Here he met and married Sarah Louise Chandler.

The couple moved to Plano, Illinois, where Steward took up employment as a workman at an agricultural machinery factory owned by the Gammon and Deering Company. He rose to foreman before one of the partners, William Deering, moved the factory to Chicago under the name William Deering Company. Steward went with Deering and became factory superintendent.

In March 1871 Steward left the Deering Company to join Major John Wesley Powell's second Colorado Canyon expedition as an assistant geologist. By November, however, he had become too ill to spend the winter in the canyon. He left the expedition on November 11 and hobbled painfully through miles of wilderness before finding transportation.

He returned to his position with the William Deering Company and took charge of the company's patent matters. In the late 1890s, he began to compile notes and reminiscences concerning the history of the agricultural machinery industry. He planned to write a book. His primary motivation was to dispute the importance of Cyrus Hall McCormick. McCormick had been the founder and president of Deering's chief competitor, the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company. At the time Cyrus McCormick was widely hailed as one of the great inventors of the age, and the McCormick Company used his image as a kind of advertising logo.

Steward hoped to show that many other inventors contributed far more to the development of agricultural machinery than Cyrus McCormick. In fact, Steward argued that Cyrus McCormick was not even the true inventor of the reaper. In the course of his research he corresponded with many of the pioneers in the field. Each in turn submitted their own account of their accomplishments.

In 1902, the Deering Harvester Company merged with the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, the Plano Manufacturing Company, the Milwaukee Harvester Company and Warder, Bushnell and Glessner to become the International Harvester Company. The Deering and McCormick families jointly managed the new company, and Steward became supervisor of patents.

With the merger, the old rivalry between the McCormicks and Deerings began to fade and Steward seems to have abandoned his book. At any rate he did not publish it during his lifetime. He remained as supervisor of patents for the International Harvester Company until his death in 1915. In 1931 his manuscript was posthumously published as The Reaper: A History of the Efforts of Those Who Justly May Be Said to Have Made Bread Cheap (New York: Greenberg, 1931).

After the merger, Steward appears to have turned his energies to other historical research including the history of the Native Americans in Kendall County, Illinois and his farm in that same county.

Scope and Content Note

The collection includes patent applications of and correspondence with John F. Appleby, James Deering, William Deering, Elijah Gammon, C. W. Marsh, George Rugg, Cyrenus Wheeler, various agricultural equipment companies, and several pioneering inventors in the field. Correspondence and genealogical research about Obed Hussey are scattered throughout. Also included are notes, clippings, and drafts for a book that was posthumously published as The Reaper: A History of the Efforts of Those Who Justly May Be Said to Have Made Bread Cheap (New York: Greenberg, 1931). Also included are correspondence and magazine articles documenting Steward's 1896 organizing effort to stop a Bureau of Engraving and Printing plan to mint a ten dollar silver certificate with Cyrus McCormick's image on it; correspondence regarding several competitions among agricultural equipment manufacturers, including the Paris Exposition of 1900 (in French and English) and the 1900 Siamese Royal Commission Louisiana Purchase Exposition; correspondence related to Steward's historical research and publications including, Lost Maramech and earliest Chicago; a history of the Foxes and of their downfall near the great village of Maramech; original investigations and discoveries by John F. Steward ... (Chicago: F.H. Revell Co, 1903); and correspondence and invoices related to the purchase and improvements of a farm Steward purchased, managed by several nephews and a son, in Fox, Kendall County, Illinois (1903-1920).

Contents List
Box   1
Folder   1
1883-1892
Box   1
Folder   2
1893-1896
Box   1
Folder   3
1897 January
Box   1
Folder   4
1897 February-March
Box   1
Folder   5
1897 April
Box   1
Folder   6
1897 May-December, undated
Box   1
Folder   7
1898 January-1900 June
Box   2
Folder   1
1900 July-December
Box   2
Folder   2
1901-1902
Box   2
Folder   3
1903-1904
Box   2
Folder   4
1905-1906
Box   2
Folder   5
1907-1913
Box   2
Folder   6
Undated
Box   2
Folder   7
Photographs and engravings, 1848-1880