IN THE BEGINNING...
David Brown's involvement in farm machinery began in 1936 when the company,
then a subsidiary of the local family firm David Brown and Sons (Huddersfield) Ltd.,
collaborated with Harry Ferguson in the manufacture of the legendary Ferguson-Brown
Tractor. Built initially in the corner of the David Brown gear factory, the Ferguson-Brown
model was the world's first production tractor to be equipped with hydraulic lift and
converging 3-point linkage; a revolutionary concept which soon became a fundamental
part of farm tractor design the world over.
Approximately 1,350 Ferguson-Brown tractors were built - the last twenty or so at the
Meltham factory - before Ferguson and Brown parted; the former to join Henry Ford in the USA and the latter
to make tractors of his own design. The first David Brown model, the VAK1, was exhibited at the 1939
Royal Show, it was widely acclaimed. Before quantity production could begin, the Second World War broke out and the Meltham factory's resources were directly mainly towards gear manufacture, for which the name David Brown - then as now - was renowned. The Meltham plant was able to maintain and develop its tractor manufacturing expertise by producing small quantities of aircraft towing and recovery vehicles. This facilitated the switch over to peacetime production of tractors in 1946. Despite the company's comparatively late entry into the highly competitive farm tractor industry, Meltham built machines quickly earned a world reputation for quality and inventive design.