Welcome! 

Register :: Login
Manufacturers Index - Nichols & Shepard Co.
History
Last Modified: Oct 4 2016 8:50PM by joelr4
If you have information to add to this entry, please contact the Site Historian.

      Nichols, Shepard & Company was organized in 1848 by John Nichols and David Shepard in the city of Battle Creek, the former being a practical moulder and the latter a machinist. The business has grown from its insignificant beginning into an institution that now manufactures about one-tenth of the threshing machinery used in the United States. The total floor space of the factory approximates forty acres. The company employ about 500 workmen with a pay roll amounting to nearly $250,000 annually. The successful and progressive growth of the institution has been gradual without any seeming cessation. The product of the institution at present consists of traction engines, threshers and their attachments, including stackers, self-feeders, grain weighers, etc.

      The principal sales of the company is in the grain growing states, although a large portion of its product is sold in the Canadian Northwest, with considerable export business to Mexico and South American countries. One peculiar feature of this institution is that nearly every foreman and industrious, loyal employee is a stockholder in the company. The success of the institution has largely been the result of the effort directed by its present president and general manager, Mr. Edwin C. Nichols, who has been with the institution from boyhood.

      They were known to have been a manufacturer of steam traction engines, the Red River Special thresher, rice threshers, alfalfa and small seed threshers, mounted water tanks, low down tank pumps, and all-steel frame horse powers.

      Nichols, Shepard & Co. became Nichols & Shepard Co. ca, 1895-1898. In 1929, it became part of the Oliver Farm Equipment Company. At one point the Oliver Corp. became part of the White Motor Company of Cleveland, Ohio. It appears that the White Motor Co. became defunct in 1980. The assets were bought by Allied Products, which sold the White tractor business to AGCO

in 1991.

Information Sources:

  • Encyclopedia of American Steam Traction Engines by Jack Norbeck, 1975 page 161
  • Nichols & Shepard Co. Catalogue 1919
  • Michigan Bureau of Labor & Industrial Statistics, Volume 22, 1904 page 366
  • The Steam Tractor Encyclopedia by John F. Spalding & Robert T. Rhode, 2011 pages 258-260