C. AULTMAN & CO.
Among the largest and most useful manufacturing establishments in Ohio, is C. Aultman & Co., of Canton, who were incorporated in 1865, with a capital stock of $100,000, for the purpose of manufacturing the Buckeye Mower and Reaper and Sweepstakes Thresher.
A private firm, bearing same time, and out of which the present organization grew, was started as early as 1853, on a very small scale. The works now cover twenty acres of ground, and give constant employment to five hundred hands—the amount paid out in salaries alone amounting to $20,000 monthly. The foundry covers an area of seventy-five by two hundred feet, in which is cast sixteen tons of iron daily— there being one thousand and forty-five different patterns for castings, used in the various sizes of reapers, and in keeping up the repairs of old ones; and the threshers require between five and six hundred castings for this department.
They have a stock of over eight hundred tons of pig iron on hand. The blacksmith shop is furnished with seventeen fires, steam-hammers, dies, punches, trip-hammers, and a steam tire-setter, doing away entirely with the old process of heating. The wood-working department is a perfect wonder of discipline, and covers three hundred and eighty-eight feet front, by sixty feet deep—a fine continuous four-story brick building, the machinery in which is propelled by a fine eighty horse-power engine, they having a separate engine of one hundred and twenty horse-power for the iron department.
More attention has been paid, probably, to the development of machinery for facilitating and economizing farm labor than any one branch of industry; more particularly is this applicable to reaping and mowing machines. For twenty years past the genius of invention has been tasked to produce a combined mower and reaper, and perfection was finally attained—if such a thing is possible—by the world-renowned "Buckeye."
The last invention, which has perfected this machine and out rivaled all others, is a self rake, which owes its grand success to Mr. Lewis Miller, who is the good genius of the "Buckeye." In his fertile mechanical brain was conceived the plan of a light turntable rake, to supersede the heavy reel-rake, heretofore used in sweeping the platform of the reaper.
The company, whose officers are Lewis Miller, President; H. C. Fogle, Secretary and Treasurer; Jacob Miller, Superintendent; Geo. Cook, Assistant Superintendent, have a surplus of one-half million of dollars, and are at present adding to their immense building capacity. The immense capital employed, and the business standing of the Company, individually and collectively, give a reputation, of which the State might well feel proud.
The C. Aultman & Co. was founded in 1851 by Cornelius Aultman. This company made agricultural equipment. Ohio records show that the name "C. Aultman & Co." was registered on 28 September 1865. Those same records seem to say the company had ceased doing business under that name by 27 August 1914. The firm was reorganized as the Aultman & Taylor Machinery Co., which was in business until about 1924 being bought out by the Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co.
An 1891 catalog of "C. Aultman & Co. Threshers and Engines" says that they had been in business since 1831. It states, "Eighteen hundred and ninety-one is the sixty-first year of our thresher business. John Miller (C. Aultman’s step-father) of Greentown, Stark County, Ohio, was the first maker and user of threshing machines in this part of the United States, in 1831. His son, Hon. Lewis Miller, is the present president of this company. His grandson, Mr. Robert A. Miller, is its general manager.
The Aultman-Taylor Machinery
Co. was well known in the late 19th century for its steam engines,
threshing machines and other equipment. It could trace its roots back to
the C. Aultman Co. which was founded in 1859 by Cornelius Aultman. It was
not until 1910 or 1911 that Aultman-Taylor began to produce tractors
though, and it entered the market with the legendary 30-60 model. Early
models had a square radiator, but this was soon replaced by the more
familiar tubular one. The range of tractors was expanded over the next few
years, the smallest of which was the 15-30 of 1918 with a completely
enclosed bonnet. Unfortunately the company experienced financial problems
and in 1924 it was taken over by Advance-Rumely, who subsequently
advertised Aultman-Taylor tractors alongside their own products until the
remaining stock was exhausted.
(Click on images below to enlarge)
Aultman-Taylor 30-60 (serial no. 876) at the Best Show on Tracks,
Woodland, California, USA in 2008.
Aultman-Taylor 30-60 (serial no. 1088) at the Heidrick Ag History
Center, Woodland, California, USA in 2005.
Aultman-Taylor
30-60 (serial no. 1738) at the Dome Valley Museum, Yuma, Arizona, USA in
2005.
Aultman-Taylor 30-60 (serial no. 2044) at the Stuhr Museum of the
Prairie Pioneer, Grand Island, Nebraska, USA in 2011.
Aultman-Taylor 30-60 (serial no. 3794) at Pioneer Village, Minden,
Nebraska, USA in 2011.
Aultman-Taylor 30-60 (serial no. 4122) at the Steam Threshing
Jamboree, Prairie Village, Madison, South Dakota, USA in 2011.
Aultman-Taylor 30-60 (serial no. 4340) at the Vooroorlogse Tractorshow
Bergeijk, Netherlands in 2008.
Aultman-Taylor 30-60 at WMSTR, Rollag, Minnesota, USA in 2004.
Aultman-Taylor 30-60 at the Antique Gas & Steam Engine Museum,
Vista, California, USA in 2008.
Aultman-Taylor 22-45 (serial no. 3965) at the Vooroorlogse Tractorshow
Bergeijk, Netherlands in 2011.
Aultman-Taylor 22-45 at WMSTR, Rollag, Minnesota, USA in 2004.
Aultman-Taylor 22-45 at the Steam Threshing Jamboree, Prairie Village,
Madison, South Dakota, USA in 2011.