Rare Books
The reaper
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Buckeye Mower & Reaper
Visual Materials
Image of an advertisement for Buckeye Mower & Reaper Company of Akron, Ohio; a man drives a team of horses down a dirt road past a deer in a forest and a pair of Native American Indians; harvest in progress on a farm with agricultural machinery, workers, and horses with farmhouse and lake landscape in background.
priJLC_AGR_001788

Excelsior Mower and Reaper
Visual Materials
Image of farmers working in fields with horses pulling farming machinery in an advertisement for Excelsior Mower and Reaper; farmhouse and mountains in background.
priJLC_AGR_001778
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Whitely's reaper pictorial
Visual Materials
The Jay T. Last collection of agriculture prints and ephemera contains roughly 2,115 items from approximately 1818 to 1924, with the majority of material dating from 1850 to 1900. The collection consists mainly of advertising prints and ephemera related to crop, hay, livestock, and dairy farming, including the tools, equipment, supplies, and structures used for cultivating soil; raising, harvesting, and storing crops; irrigating land; growing grasses for animal fodder; marking territory lines or separating fields and pastures; and boarding, breeding, feeding, rearing, tending, and selling farm animals. Agricultural machinery and implement companies dominate. Manufacturers and dealers of fertilizer, windmills, and fencing supplies are also represented, as are veterinary medicine, items used to collect or make dairy products, and items used on horses such as blankets, halters, harnesses, horseshoes, nails, saddles, and riding whips. Certificates issued by or pertaining to agricultural societies and organizations are also found here. The collection's prints and ephemera are primarily promotional in nature and provide information about American farming and agriculture-related industries, as well as the evolution of advertising strategies employed by these businesses in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Materials in this collection also provide a perspective on American membership and participation in various agricultural societies and organizations. As graphic materials, the items offer evidence of printmaking techniques and trends, as well as information about the artists, engravers, lithographers, printers, and publishers involved in the creative process.
priJLC_AGR_003410