A JPRT in Love country

Spring found us making a JPRT (Jeep Part Retrieval Trip) to southern Michigan. Barry had needed a front weight for an upcoming project and Bob V. had a spare. Bob was also located just 90 minutes or so north of Eau Claire, home of Jabez Love.

Jabez Love patented the first “Jeep Approved” hydraulic lift for the new civilian jeep. You can read the story here. After writing the article, Barry became more intrigued by Mr. Love and continues to search for more information about him. Specifically, Barry wants to know how Love ended up designing the lift for Willys.

The first time Barry had visited Eau Claire, he wasn’t prepared. He had a single copy of a Love Tractor ad to show people. This time he had a number of ads and business cards and made his first stop the Fruit Exchange.

The Eau Claire Fruit Exchange has its own history. A very young Jabez Love had designed his first tractor to serve the needs of local farmers heading to this place to sell their fruit. We are working with the fine folks at the Exchange and will be reporting about what we learn there in the near future.

We also left materials with the local historical society. Again we will be reporting more on this later. We are making great strides in learning about Love pre and post Willys, just not the critical question of how Love come to be the designer of the first lift.

In the mean time, back to the weight

We headed north to meet up with Bob. With the aid of one of Bob’s many antique tractors, we quickly loaded the weight and still had time for a look around. Barry told Bob about his Love research and Bob showed him his Love tractor awaiting restoration. In addition Bob has shared his Love literature.

From there we went into the workshop to see Bob’s Newgren lift that is undergoing refurbishment along with the rest of the Jeep. These JPRTs often result in more than an exchange of parts. We plan to stay in touch with Bob.

Farm Jeep Friends

For 17 years and counting, we have been lucky enough to meet so many wonderful people, who but for our shared love for Jeeps, would never have been a part of our lives.

As we reviewed our writings and posts in preparation for building a new site, the same names kept reappearing.  These individuals have freely shared their work and expertise with us.  Farm Jeep would simply not be the same without their contributions.

We have invited our friends to share their own Jeep stories and their friends Jeep stories too. These will be added over time. We will begin with our own stories about these great people who have given so much to us.

While the list is not complete we wanted to start saying thanks now. You can see the list here. Harry Sheets has the honor of being the first person we met and of being the first person to give us his story. Thank you Harry.

On Guard While Making Hay


We have written about the role the Farm Jeep had in making hay. While doing some research on another topic, we were reminded of another hay making story. At one of our first shows, we heard a story about raking hay with a Farm Jeep. The story teller’s father had managed a dairy farm and had asked his young son (he was 10 or 11) to help with the hay making by using the Jeep to rake the grass into windrows. The father was careful to tell his son to not drive over the windrows. He didn’t explain why, but the son was just too excited to get to drive the Jeep to worry about the warning.

Forgetting his father’s instruction, he drove the Jeep all over the hay field. Suddenly, the Jeep began to slow, no matter how much gas he gave it. It finally rolled to a stop. When he got out of the Jeep and looked underneath, grass was wrapped around both drive shafts. It was so tight that it had stopped the shafts from turning and the driver spent a long period with a pocket knife freeing the shafts. Needless to say, after that experience, he listened to his father.

We recalled this story while reading through some very early Service Bulletins. In June of 1946, Willys announced the introduction of a “Propeller Shaft Guards” kit. Ten days later, they sent out another bulletin urging dealers to install the new shields as soon as possible. What happened?

While we may never know for sure, it is possible that farmers, treating the newly introduced Jeep as they had their tractors, were encountering the same problems as the boy above. Wording in the Special Equipment description would indicate the possibility of damage to bearings and even possible fires from grass or straw wrapped around the shafts.

These service bulletins certainly give us clues to how the first Farm Jeeps were being used. Given the short period of time between the bulletins, this must have been a common and serious issue. Along with the PTO shield, these guards seem to be among the hardest to find Farm Jeep accessories. Perhaps it is because when service on the shafts was needed, the shields were removed and not re-installed. Tossed in a corner they became another forgotten item.

Always hopeful, we keep looking for a set of guards. We doubt that we will be able to purchase them for the original $11.15 price.

New “Ask Farm Jeep” section

Over the years, whether via email or at shows, we have gotten lots of questions about Farm Jeeps. We try to answer these question and decided we should share the questions and our answers in a new section. So far, we have listed a few of the questions that we have answered in posts or have answered a number of times in emails or in person.

We have been reviewing archived emails containing questions while developing the new site. In some cases, we have found that we couldn’t give an answer or flat-out gave wrong answers. We will correct those situations in future posts.

For now, we invite you to check out “Ask Farm Jeep” and keep asking those questions.

Old Stuff New Stuff

It has been almost a month since we launched the new version of the site. In the process we have rediscovered some old stuff. We have reorganized material from the old site and placed items under one heading. For example, any post dealing with the Newgren lift is now in a single location – Parts>Hydraulic Implement Lifts>Newgren Lift.

We have added new items too. There is now a section for “Other Hydraulic Lifts” that includes information on three lifts that didn’t make the “Jeep Approved” list. There is a “1947 Equipment Book” available now under Parts>Implements and Accessories.

More new material will be coming soon. We plan to do more regular posts and will continue our efforts to find and fix lost links. If you do find a broken link, please let us know.

Breaking News – Orphan & Oddball Tractors to be Featured!

We just received the Farm Collector Show Directory 2019. While marking the calendar for the shows we regularly attend, we noticed some exciting news. These shows normally feature one of the major tractor manufactures. These tractors get the best display locations and therefore receive the most traffic. Since at many (most) shows we are the only “Jeep” brand tractor we have assumed that we would never be granted “featured” status.

Until this year. Two, that’s right two, of the shows we normally attend are featuring, in one case, “Ford, Orphans & Oddball” tractors and “Lesser Known Classics…” in the second case. We prefer the term “Lesser Known Classics” to “Orphan” or “Oddball”, but we won’t complain (actually we will, but not until we have secured a prime spot). We will be sure to report on this development this summer.

Edit – Shortly after posting this, Bill Norris sent me the following show ad. As far as I know this is the only show of 2019 featuring Farm Jeeps!

Now back to your regularly scheduled program.

Speaking of programming, we are working hard to complete the transformation of farmjeep.com. We have added new sections including Stories, Shows and Ask Farm Jeep. We have also added history sections for each of the “Approved” lifts. Based on suggestions, we have added a section on equipment and options and will, in the future, be adding information on other hydraulic lifts made for the Jeep .

Please continue to help make farmjeep.com better. Help us find errors and fix broken links. We look forward to hearing from you.

New (&Old) Farm Jeep site!

We are happy to announce the launch of the new www.farmjeep.com site  It is still a work-in-progress, but this update is long overdue.  We have saved the old site at oldfarmjeep.com just in case you might wish to access it.  Everything has been moved over to the new site, except for broken items.

We have several goals for the new site.  The first is to keep it up to date, eliminating broken links and adding new resource material.  The second is to make it easy to find the Farm Jeep information you need.  We are making sure all the information we have posted on a subject, the Newgren lift for example, is located in one place.

The third goal is to increase the amount of historic material available from our own research and from others.  We will be making articles and resource materials available from our own collection in addition to linking to other sites.  We are aware of important farm jeep related sites that have disappeared and hope to bring them back.

The final goal is to continue to tell farm jeep stories and most importantly to have fun sharing them with you.

Big Changes to FarmJeep.com!

Over the next few weeks, we will transform the 16+ years of posts and stories to make the site easier to maintain and more importantly easier to use. We will add more history and some new sections to help tell the Farm Jeep story.

As always, we look forward to hearing from you. Let us know if you find a problem or if we can do a better job of organization.

Barry & Evan

New Year, Old Project, New Start

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year to all.  Here at FarmJeep.com we are starting the New Year off right with an old project and hoping for a year of old fashion fun.  We started our journey in August 2002 with the purchase of a 1947 CJ2a we call “Old Yeller.”  We knew that a body transplant was in our future even back then.
By March of 2003, we had acquired a “parts” machine and here is a quote from back then-
The warm spring sunlight shown unflatteringly on the rusted remains of “Old Yeller’s” rear quarter-panels; there’s some sort of barnacle growing on the hood and nothing but sheer force of habit is holding the passenger side front fender in place: We’ve got body issues! Our friend Dottie, whom no one would confuse with a Jeep person, summed the situation when she asked “what doesn’t need to be replaced?”

Clearly something needed to be done.  But as the story goes, that parts Jeep turned out to be a 3a that would become “Ole Blue” and it has consumed all our time and money for the past 15 plus years.  Meanwhile, other than developing a smoking habit, Yeller has been our faithful working Farm Jeep.  Over a year ago, our friend Craig (finder of Newgren plows) found a great deal on a complete reproduction body kit.  We purchased the kit and immediately placed it in the barn.

This time will be different

Blue was a “down to the frame” restoration.  This time we will concentrate on building a work Jeep, not a road worthy “show” Jeep.  Plans over the next couple of months include removing the motor and the old body.  We will have the engine overhauled while we will prep and paint the body.  Blue had a professional paint job.  As our friend John Ittel says, it will be a 20 foot job – looks great from 20 feet away.

With the body off, we will clean and paint the frame and correct any major issue.  Since we replaced all the brake hardware, we will just do maintenance work.  We do plan to install a new clutch while the engine is out (makes it a simple process).

Hunting gathering

Since acquiring the body kit,  we have collected a new wiring harness. We need to gather all the other bits and pieces needed to install the body (nuts, botls, etc.).  We will make a decision on gauge replacements on a case by case basis.  Some gauges have been replaced over the years.  Others, like the speedometer have been ignored.  

We will also be gathering information on installing the tub.  Blue had a professionally prepared tub, requiring minimal body work.  Based on the experience of others, as described on CJ forums, we will need to learn new metal working skills.

Step 1.  Remove…. 

The picture above shows that the first step has been taken.  We removed the hood, the tailgate and tailgate chains.  While we are confident we can have a working Jeep in a few months, we will take our time and most importantly have some fun.  We hope to share that fun here.  Stay tuned.



Telling the Farm Jeep Story

Since 2002, Evan and I have shared this site for our own pleasure and hope that others enjoy it too.  A series of events has caused me to take a different direction from all play and no work.  I have become more concerned with preserving the Farm Jeep history.  And a recently published article has me asking another question – who should tell these stories?
The December 2018 issue of Farm Collector magazine contains an article titled “The Farm Jeep– Low-cost alternative to the tractor couldn’t cut it on the farm” by Darrel Wrider.  Even before reading the article, I was offended by the title. How could anyone say such negative things about our beloved Farm Jeep?  How could the author have made so many mistakes?  How could the editor allow this to happen?  I lost sleep trying to figure out how to correct this injustice.
I contacted the author at the provided email address, trying my best to appear to be a calm rational being.  I asked him for his Jeep story, the one that had led him to write the article.  He replied that he didn’t really have a Jeep story and in fact had never seen a Farm Jeep.  He just thought it would be a fun article to write and gathered his information from the Web.  He hadn’t found farmjeep.com in his searches.
How could this happen?  Don’t we of the Willys community have exclusive rights to these stories?  After more fuming, a letter to the editor and more lost sleep, it finally occurred to me that the answer is simple.  In this day and age there are no such niceties as staying in your own lane.  Mr. Wrider has every right to publish what he wishes for fun or profit and is not beholding to anyone.  The Web is where we get our information, factual or otherwise.  Like it or not, Mr. Wrider beat me to the punch with his story.  I am saddened that the article readers will have a very incomplete introduction to the Farm Jeep.  But the article is also an unbiased assessment based on the data Mr. Wrider had in front of him.
So. who should tell the Farm Jeep stories?  I know for certain that we are blessed with members of the Jeep community who have worked to preserve history.  While researching the four companies that produced the Farm Jeep lifts, certain names kept appearing.  We have authors and publishers.  We have a wealth of knowledge that needs to be preserved and shared.
What is to be done?  My wish for the New Year is that the keepers of the Farm Jeep history will continue to share the told and untold stories through whatever means they have.  In the forums, in articles or on the Web.  We should tell the story and soon.  There is already a segment of the public whose impression of the Farm Jeep is that it was a short-lived failure.   Say it ain’t so….

Barry