Cradle Scythe, circa 1830
Add to SetSummary
Nineteenth-century farmers needed to harvest grain quickly before time or weather could destroy it. Harvesters would swing the cradle scythe's blade through ripened fields. The cut grain would fall onto the wooden fingers -- the cradle -- where it would be dumped in neat rows ready for gathering. Skilled cradlers could harvest more grain than those using traditional sickles.
Nineteenth-century farmers needed to harvest grain quickly before time or weather could destroy it. Harvesters would swing the cradle scythe's blade through ripened fields. The cut grain would fall onto the wooden fingers -- the cradle -- where it would be dumped in neat rows ready for gathering. Skilled cradlers could harvest more grain than those using traditional sickles.
Artifact
Cradle scythe
Date Made
circa 1830
Location
Not on exhibit to the public.
Object ID
00.65.728
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Material
Wood (Plant Material)
Metal
Dimensions
Height: 55 in
Width: 22.5 in
Length: 43 in
Length: 41 in (Blade length)
Width: 1.75 in (Blade width)
Length: 39.25 in (Finger length)