# 81883 - 1988 Cyrus MCCormick Cover
Â
Death Of Cyrus McCormickÂ
Cyrus Hall McCormick was born on February 15, 1809, in the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia. He was the oldest of eight children born to inventor Robert McCormick, Jr. Around the same time Cyrus was born, his father began working on a design for a mechanical reaper. He would spend 28 years working on the design but never managed to make it right. So Cyrus would go on to take up the project himself.
McCormick worked with Jo Anderson on the design. While some machines were designed to be pushed by horses, McCormick worked on a machine that would be pulled by horses and cut the grain on one side of the team. In 1831, McCormick held one of the first demonstrations of his new machine. He said he had developed the finalized version in 18 months. McCormick was then granted the patent for his reaper on June 21, 1834.
After suffering a stroke in 1880, McCormick died on May 13, 1884, in his home in Chicago. He received many honors during and after his life â the French named him an Officer of the Legion of Honor and he was elected to the French Academy of Sciences for âhaving done more for the cause of agriculture than any other living man.â Many credit McCormickâs reaper with reducing human labor on farms, increasing productivity, and being a driving force in the industrialization of agriculture in dozens of nations.
Â
Death Of Cyrus McCormickÂ
Cyrus Hall McCormick was born on February 15, 1809, in the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia. He was the oldest of eight children born to inventor Robert McCormick, Jr. Around the same time Cyrus was born, his father began working on a design for a mechanical reaper. He would spend 28 years working on the design but never managed to make it right. So Cyrus would go on to take up the project himself.
McCormick worked with Jo Anderson on the design. While some machines were designed to be pushed by horses, McCormick worked on a machine that would be pulled by horses and cut the grain on one side of the team. In 1831, McCormick held one of the first demonstrations of his new machine. He said he had developed the finalized version in 18 months. McCormick was then granted the patent for his reaper on June 21, 1834.
After suffering a stroke in 1880, McCormick died on May 13, 1884, in his home in Chicago. He received many honors during and after his life â the French named him an Officer of the Legion of Honor and he was elected to the French Academy of Sciences for âhaving done more for the cause of agriculture than any other living man.â Many credit McCormickâs reaper with reducing human labor on farms, increasing productivity, and being a driving force in the industrialization of agriculture in dozens of nations.