Home
E-News Sign Up
Inventors Blog
Favorite Invention
Famous Inventors
Ancient Inventions
By Decade
By Century
By Groups
By Industry
Japanese Inv.
Visitor Survey
Absurd Inventions
Nolo Books
Contact
 

Agricultural Inventions

Farming is one of the oldest and most important professions that is in existence. Although most of us that are outside of the agricultural profession don't tend to think about it very often, where would we be without it. That is why some of the most famous ideas have come about in the way of agricultural inventions. Some of these inventions are simply far too ancient for us to understand the true history behind them but there are plenty of agriculture interventions that have taken place within the past several centuries which almost any school age child would be able to tell you about.

Possibly the most popular of these come in the form of an agricultural revolution inventions. After all, who of us is not heard about Eli Whitney and his cotton gin? This cotton gin help to separate the fibrous cotton from the seed pod, an act which was previously taken care of by humans. Not only did this make it easier for those that were harvesting cotton in the South, this was one of the agricultural inventions that gave birth to the entire concept of mass production. Eli Whitney continued to invent things throughout his lifetime although he stopped patenting most of his inventions after his cotton gin patent was allowed to expire in 1807.

Believe it or not, one of the more important agriculture inventions was simply the plow. Although a form of plow had been used for thousands of years in order to turn the soil, a man by the name of John Deere revolutionized the way the plow was made in the 19th century. Not only did his agricultural inventions earned him a name, it earned him a name that became synonymous with farming in many parts of the world. After all, who of us has not heard about John Deere tractors and when somebody mentions the color John Deere green, all of us know what is being spoken about.

Another of the agricultural revolution inventions that has been improved on throughout the years is the mechanical reaper. A man by the name of Cyrus Hall McCormick patented his mechanical reaper in 1834. By cutting down on the amount of manpower needed to bring in the harvest, the mechanical reaper was able to double the amount of crops that can be harvested on an annual basis. Although this type of machinery is commonplace in today's agricultural marketplace, they owe it all to this man and his idea.

Most of us credit George Washington Carver with the invention of peanut butter but very few of us realize that he was not actually the man responsible for this food that so many of us enjoy. What he was responsible for, however, were several different agricultural inventions that came in the way of crop rotation and different uses for some of the crops that he was familiar with. Most importantly, he devised a way to rotate legumes, such as the peanut, with cotton crops so that the soil would not be depleted of its nutrients.

There are many more agricultural inventions that we can discuss but these give you the basis of some of the more important that took place within the past several centuries. From the agricultural revolution inventions down to some of the more simple inventions that have taken place in recent years, it all helps to put food on our table.