A pair of tractors issued by the Lions Pin Trading Club of Iowa.

1917 Waterloo Boy logo.
1917 "Waterloo Boy" kerosene-fueled tractor.

The Waterloo Gasoline Engine Company was the first company to manufacture and sell gasoline powered farm tractors. Based in Waterloo, Iowa, the company was created by John Froelich and a group of Iowa businessmen in 1893, and was originally named the Waterloo Gasoline Traction Engine Company. In 1892, Froelich built a successful gasoline-powered tractor, and the new company was given the opportunity to manufacture and sell the tractor Froelich designed. The tractor was not successful commercially, and of the four tractors built by the company only two were purchased, and these were later returned to the company by unsatisfied customers. In 1895, the company was sold to John W. Miller and renamed the Waterloo Gasoline Engine Company. Miller decided to stop producing tractors and instead focus on building plain gasoline engines.















The 1918 Case 9-18 was a pioneering "cross-motor" tractor produced by the J.I. Case Threshing Machine Co. featuring an engine positioned sideways across the frame. Produced between 1916 and 1920 (with a "Type B" introduced in 1918), this lightweight kerosene tractor replaced horse farming and featured the belt pulley on one end of the crankshaft.


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