In "Yellow Steel", the first overarching history of
the earthmoving equipment industry, William Haycraft
examines the tremendous increase in the scope of mining
and construction projects, from the Suez Canal through
the interstate highway system, made possible by
innovations in earthmoving machinery. Led by Cyrus
McCormick's invention in 1831 of a practical mechanical
reaper, many of the builders of today's massive
earthmoving machines began as makers of reapers, plows,
threshers, and combines. Haycraft traces the efforts of
manufacturers such as Caterpillar, Allis-Chalmers,
International Harvester, J.I. Case, Deere, and
Massey-Ferguson to diversify from farm equipment to
specialized earthmoving equipment and the important
contributions of LeTourneau, Euclid, and others in
meeting the needs of the construction and mining
industries. He shows how postwar economic and political
events, especially the creation of the interstate
highway system, spurred the development of more powerful
and more agile machines. He also relates the precipitous
fall of several major American earthmoving machine
companies and the rise of Japanese competitors in the
early 1980s. Extensively illustrated and packed with
detailed information on both manufacturers and machines,
"Yellow Steel" knits together the diverse stories of the
many companies that created the earthmoving equipment
industry - how they began, expanded, retooled, merged,
succeeded, and sometimes failed. Their history, a
step-by-step linking of need and invention, provides the
foundation for virtually all modern transportation,
construction, commerce, and industry.
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