Internal combustion tractors By 1895, the Case Company had begun to produce gasoline engines. By 1899, the Case Company entered the Russian market. In 1904, Case introduced the first all-steel thresher machine. Case sold their first gasoline
tractor that year, and established a continuous presence in Europe when the company won the first place in a
plowing contest held in the so-called "old continent". Case at this time developed a wide line of products: threshers, binders, graders, water tanks, plows, buggies, and even automobiles. The advent of oil engines by the start of the 20th century, suggested a change on the horizon. From
Froelich's first tractors to
Hart-Parr products, oil tractors seemed the way ahead. Case hired
Joe Jagersberger, and he tested a motor by racing in the
1911 Indianapolis 500. Case began production of the 30-60 oil engine in 1912. Case also produced kerosene tractors in the teen years, similar to the Rumely oil pulls. During World War I, Case's sales and demand grew dramatically in Europe. These increases were directly connected to the war; as many farm laborers became soldiers, each remaining farmer needed to become more productive, and machinery was the way to make this happen. In 1919,
John Deere entered the harvester business, and International Harvester's reply to their new competition was to purchase
P&O Plowing of Canton, Illinois, and the
Chattanooga Plowing company of Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Henry Ford also entered the tractor business with his
Fordson Tractor produced at the massive
Rouge River plant. An economic downturn during the early 1920s dampened tractor sales; price-cutting to stimulate demand sparked a
price war in the tractor industry (called the
tractor war). Ford, with a massive advantage in manufacturing capacity and distribution, had the upper hand, producing an estimated 73 percent of all American tractors, with IHC in a far away second place at nine percent, and several other companies sharing the rest of the percentages. In 1923, the IHC
Farmall entered the agricultural industry, and Ford's stranglehold began to slip. That same year also, the 100,000th thresher machine produced by Case made its way out of the assembly line, marking an important milestone for the Case company. In 1927 the J. I. Case Company ceased building its legendary steam engines. Case steam engines, of which 35,838 were produced, were painted in black with green machinery, while the gas tractors were painted grey. In 1939, Case changed its color scheme to Flambeau Red, with the excavators being a ruddy yellow. By 1929, Case had expanded to Australia, Mexico, Sweden, and other countries. Also that year, the J. I. Case Company produced its first crawler tractor. S and V tractors were introduced in 1940.
Automobile production Automobiles produced by Case during the period 1911-1925/1927 include: the Case Jay-Eye-See Brougham (named for
Case's horse) and Case Touring-Y.
Work in the Second World War Case evolved as World War II arrived by becoming involved in the manufacturing of shells for the United States and allied forces military, as well as airplane parts for the
Martin B-26 Marauder, bombs, and doors for the
Sherman Tank. Three new plants were opened across the United States during that year, and, in 1942, the company produced its first self-propelled combine. That same year, Case released the company's first
cotton picker, which is currently preserved by the
Smithsonian society. A protracted 440-day strike in Wisconsin of the Case factory weakened the company. For the next 31 years, the company went through more globalization, becoming a well-known company in the agricultural markets of Australia, Japan, and other places. Many other companies joined Case during this period.
Modern mergers In 1957, Case bought out the
American Tractor Corporation (ATC). ATC was founded in 1950 and was a producer of small crawler tractors. Their production of dozers (marketed as Terradozers) and development of an integrated backhoe was of particular interest to Case. Case dropped the ATC name in 1959 only retaining the Terratrac name for the drive trains. This led to a hybrid tractor being rolled out of the
Burlington Plant in 1957. This model, the 320 Construction King, would become synonymous in the United States to the name
backhoe loader. Since then Case has released other models such as the T-Series which includes the 580T, 580ST, 590ST and 695ST. In 1998, a jury awarded a construction worker over $17million in damages after a defect in the design of the 580 backhoe led to him being crushed and being paralyzed from the waist down while operating the machine. In 1961, Case Corporation signed a deal with RyCSA and Metalúrgica Tandil (in Buenos Aires), to make Case tractors and agricultural implements under licence in Argentina. The models built were the 830 and the 831, made until 1964 when RyCSA closed down. 1964 brought the acquisition of
Colt Garden Tractors. This was the first garden tractor powered by 'Hy-Drive", a form of hydraulic propulsion that allowed for various heavy duty attachments and eliminated the need for transaxle drive belts. The Kern County Land Company, using oil money, bought the Case Company. In turn Kern County sold Case to Tenneco Company of Texas. In 1972, Case bought the British tractor builder
David Brown Ltd. In 1974, Case acquired most of the French construction equipment firm,
Poclain. In 1983, during purchase of International Harvester assets, Case sold its garden tractor division to
Ingersoll Power Equipment. Ingersoll tractors would continue to carry the Case brand name until 1987. In 1984, Case parent
Tenneco bought selected assets of the
International Harvester agriculture division and merged it with J. I. Case. All agriculture products are first labeled
Case International and later
Case IH. They used the 94 Series Case Utility, two- and four wheel drives for Case IH's first tractor together as a company. The first tractor developed by the new corporation was the Magnum. Introduced in 1987, the Magnum began production and the 94 series line was dropped. When Case IH bought out
Steiger in 1986 they also continued the Steiger branding, and still do today. In 1996, Austrian tractor builder
Steyr Tractor was purchased. circa 2006. The Case Corporation joined with New Holland N.V. to become CNH (Case-New Holland), now
CNH Industrial, in November 1999. Because of the merger, CNH was
forced to release its production plants in
Doncaster, England and
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The Doncaster site was bought by the ARGO-group, owner of tractor builder
Landini, and brought back the
McCormick brand. The plant in Winnipeg was taken over by the Buhler family to start Buhler Tractors. In Europe the merger with New Holland (including the former
Fordson and
Fiat tractor lines) was the success Case IH expected. In 2006, Case IH came with a plan to bring back the "International" feel to their products. They brought back the old International Harvester logo, and made more technical difference between the two brands. Montgomery Design International redid the industrial design and styling of the MAGNUM and several other new Case IH products as well as the New Holland "Cat's Eye" styling on all New Holland tractors and the revised Steyr tractor styling. These styling themes continue to this day. ==See also==