The LEGO® Ferguson Tractor

The LEGO® Ferguson Tractor

In the fall of 1951, the LEGO Group launched a small-scale Ferguson tractor made of plastic. The tractor, which is marketed both as a kit and as a finished model, is a huge success. This success is one of the main reasons why sales of the LEGO Group's plastic products surpassed those of their wooden counterparts in 1952.
Red LEGO Ferguson tractor
The Ferguson tractor is sold in two colors, gray and red. © Niels Åge Skovbo, Fokus Photo


Introduction of the Ferguson Tractor


For a five-year period from 1948, Denmark receives monetary and resource aid from the United States under the European recovery program designed to rebuild European economies. The program is the Marshall Plan, named after US Secretary of State George Marshall. Thanks to the financial support, struggling Danish farmers can buy new and better equipment, and in the post-war years, Danish agriculture is being thoroughly modernized. The compact Ferguson tractor is particularly appreciated by Danish farmers, who are quickly exchanging their horses and oxen for the reliable Fergie tractor.

The LEGO® Ferguson Tractor

The change is reflected in the Danish toy market. A look at the LEGO Group's many wooden and plastic products from the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s clearly shows that these products were inspired by social change and technological progress. It was therefore a logical step in the early 1950s for the LEGO Group to start the production of a Ferguson tractor in plastic. If Mom and Dad have a Ferguson, their kids playing in the yard will want one too! There is also a range of attachments available for the new toy tractor, including a cultivator and plough, to be attached to the rear of the tractor. These tools not only fit the plastic Ferguson tractor, but also the wooden tractors that were also part of the LEGO® products at the time.


LEGO Ferguson tractor packaging


Two versions of the Ferguson tractor are being made: a finished model and a building set (pictured) that children can assemble themselves
Expensive model
Developing the Ferguson tractor is a difficult task and it takes more than a year to produce the first model. The production costs of the technical drawings and molds required to manufacture the tractor mean that the first LEGO tractor to roll off the production line in 1951 cost DKK 30,000. For comparison, a real 1952 Ferguson tractor costs DKK 9,180. The new product is under pressure to deliver – and at a retail price of DKK 13 per piece, the product must sell well to recoup the LEGO Group's investment. Fortunately, the LEGO Ferguson tractor was a huge and immediate success after its launch in 1951. The tractor, which was on the market until 1959, became one of the most popular LEGO products on the market and was the first major success for the group's LEGO Plastic Molding Division. The department was founded in the late 1940s after Ole Kirk Kristiansen purchased a plastic molding machine in 1946 and began experimenting with plastic.

The LEGO® Ferguson Tractor

Drawings of the LEGO Ferguson tractor
Drawing of the LEGO Ferguson tractor, by Knud Møller, the designer who later invented the LEGO wheel


Success breeds success


In 1952, the LEGO Group's plastic products outsold their wooden counterparts. The enormous success of the LEGO Ferguson tractor is a major contributor to the success of the company's plastic products. Approximately 100,000 copies were sold from its launch in 1951 to the fall of 1954. A success like the Ferguson tractor also has implications for other LEGO Group products. One of the items that caught the kids' attention is Automatic Binding Bricks, a precursor to the construction toys the world would later know as... LEGO bricks.


A box of automatic binding stones


Automatic Binding Bricks is launched in 1949
When the Automatic Binding Bricks were launched in 1949, they added little to the company's profits for the first few years. But the picture began to change in the early/mid 1950s, when plastic bricks – renamed from Automatic Binding Bricks to LEGO Mursten in 1953 – became increasingly popular. The rising popularity is partly due to improvements in the quality of the brick. The LEGO Group is plowing back some of the profits from the Ferguson tractor and other popular products to improve product development.

The LEGO® Ferguson Tractor

One of the results is better quality brick and the development of new elements. In 1954, the plastic series was expanded with new doors and windows as separate building elements and in 1955 the company introduced the LEGO System in Play. With the introduction of the LEGO System in Play, the product is developed into a toy system, meaning that all elements fit together from this point on, regardless of when they are produced. The system idea is one of the most important milestones in the history of the product that will later be developed into the LEGO brick as we know it today, and one of the keys to the product's success.
a LEGO Ferguson tractor made of clear plastic
The LEGO Group is also producing a limited number of the Ferguson tractor in clear plastic, which is used as a display

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