It was one special tractor that inspired the Field Marshall Club, now known as the Marshall Club.
The tractor was bought by a mother for her two boys after their father died.
Brothers, Ross and Peter Anderson sadly lost their father Fred when Ross was 14 months old and Peter was still two months off being born.
Their uncle Ted Pullen, who moved next door and played a prominent role in their lives growing up, later encouraged their interest in tractors and steam engines.
On one fateful day when Ross was nine and Paul eight, he took them see a Field Marshall Series II that was for sale.
The boys were enraptured. “Mum (Jean Anderson) bought her for us for £35 and she came to us on November the 9th 1968,” remembers Ross. “We got her delivered on the train and then drove her the rest of the way home, and then stored her on the farm next door.”
“She was only 20 years old when we bought her, but we still rubbed her down all by hand with a wire brush, repaired a frayed decompression cable and a broken clutch cable. She was hand painted by my uncle Harry Pullen who was a coach painter. She’s still got that paint – you can’t even see the brush strokes.
“Mum encouraged us a lot, and we took the Field Marshall to rallies and shows all over the country. I was into it, but Peter became a real fountain of knowledge about it.”
Inspired by their Field Marshall, Peter and his friend Wally Hawkins, later founded the Field Marshall Club in 1988.
“We thought it would just get 50 members, but it grew to over 500,” says Ross. “So the most important thing about our tractor is that it led to the foundation of the club.”
Peter even befriended Henry Marshall himself, who became a great supporter of the club, says Ross.
As part of the club, Peter wrote a newsletter, but he really struggled with his writing and spelling, and so eventually went back to night school. He improved so much that he went on to write two books about Field Marshalls, says Ross.
“Peter was told he would never amount to anything, but this tractor changed everything,” says Ross. “Without her we could have become football hooligans or something, but instead we spent our time repairing and recycling with her.
“She’s a very special tractor and she means a lot to us. I’ve had people come round and try to buy her, and one guy who even slammed down a blank cheque. I tore it up and said ‘you’ve not got enough money to buy this tractor’.”
‘Bub’ as she’s affectionately named now, after Ross’s nickname for Peter, who died five years ago, will hopefully be making an appearance at the Newark Vintage Tractor and Heritage Show on November 5-6.
“It’s the 75 year anniversary of the Field Marshall Series II, so I’m planning to rub her down and take her out,” says Ross. “It feels fitting that I’m there to represent Peter, too.”
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