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A red Massey Ferguson 135 ploughing a field at a ploughing match, seen from behind with a mounted plough, other classic tractors working in the distance Photo by Michael Spiller from Bradford, UK / CC BY-SA 2.0
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Classic and vintage tractors: Britain's great farm machines

The most important idea in the history of the farm tractor was British: Harry Ferguson's three-point linkage, which the whole world adopted. The machines it spawned, from the little grey Fergie to the half-million-strong Massey Ferguson 135, are now collected and shown like any classic car, and they are among the cheapest ways into the hobby.

The marque file
Values
from £500
Model guides
6
6 guides

The tractors

The flagship A red Massey Ferguson 135 tractor, front three-quarter view, the 135 badge and grey skid unit clearly visible, parked on grass
Massey Ferguson 135
1964-1979 from £500

The Massey Ferguson 135 is the most recognisable classic tractor in Britain, over 400,000 built at Coventry from 1964, simple, tough, and still working farms and shows today. Its history, the Perkins and Continental engines, the Multi-Power transmission, what to check when buying, and what a good one is worth.

Read the full Massey Ferguson 135 guide

Why British tractors matter

The single most important idea in the history of the farm tractor was British. Harry Ferguson’s three-point hydraulic linkage, the system that lets an implement be carried by the tractor and have its depth and draft controlled automatically, was developed in Northern Ireland and England and first reached the world in large numbers on the Ferguson TE20 from 1946. The “Ferguson System”, as it was called, was so obviously right that it became the international standard, and almost every tractor built since carries a version of it. That is a rare thing: a piece of British engineering that the entire world simply adopted.

Around that idea grew a real industry. The Ferguson tractor and its Massey Ferguson successors were built in Coventry in vast numbers. Ford built the rugged Fordson Major at Dagenham, a tractor that did the heavy work on British farms through the 1950s. And David Brown built well-engineered tractors at Meltham in Yorkshire, the same company that, almost as a side venture, owned Aston Martin and gave the DB in DB5 its initials. The Massey Ferguson 135 that followed sold by the hundred thousand and became the tractor a whole generation of farmers learned on.

A grey Ferguson TE-A20 tractor, registration CCF 927, at a vintage rally
The little grey [Ferguson TE20](/ferguson/te20/), the machine that carried Harry Ferguson's three-point system to ordinary farms from 1946. More than any other tractor, it is where the modern tractor begins.Photo by Calreyn88 / CC BY-SA 4.0

The tractors worth knowing

The Ferguson TE20, the “little grey Fergie”, is where the modern tractor really begins. Over half a million were built in Coventry between 1946 and 1956, most of them exported, and it brought the Ferguson System to ordinary farms at a price they could afford. More than any other single machine, it is the one that mechanised the small British farm.

The Massey Ferguson 135 is the tractor most people picture when they picture a tractor. Launched in 1964 and built into the late 1970s, with over four hundred thousand made at Coventry, it was simple, tough, and almost impossible to wear out, which is exactly why so many are still working today and why it is the classic tractor most often bought to restore.

The Fordson Major is the heavyweight of the group: a big, simple, immensely strong Ford built at Dagenham, first as the post-war E27N and then as the diesel New Major, Power Major, and Super Major. It was the tractor that did the ploughing on the larger British farm, and a good one is still a genuinely useful machine.

David Brown is the connoisseur’s choice: a Yorkshire firm of gear-makers that built consistently well-engineered tractors from the 1936 Ferguson-Brown through the Cropmaster, the Implematic, and the handsome Selectamatic range, before the brand passed to Case in 1972 and ended in 1988.

Two more marques no account of the British tractor can leave out, and they are really one story. The orange Nuffield was built by the Morris car empire under Lord Nuffield himself, a distinctive machine with a car-and-lorry engine and, on the later models, the first ten-speed gearbox on a British tractor. In 1969 the Nuffield became the blue Leyland, the same tractor in British Leyland’s corporate colours, built at Bathgate in Scotland until 1982. Between them they run from post-war optimism to the troubled end of British Leyland, and both are among the most affordable ways into the hobby today.

A blue and orange Fordson Super Major, registration 847 EBM, on a show field
The [Fordson Major](/fordson/major/), the heavyweight of the British farm, here in its final Super Major form. Ford built it at Dagenham alongside the Fergusons, Nuffields and David Browns that fill these pages.Photo by kitmasterbloke / CC BY 2.0

Why the survivors are collected now

Tractors were tools, used hard and scrapped without ceremony when they wore out, which is exactly why good originals are valued now. A vintage tractor is a direct link to the way the country fed itself, and the people who restore them often grew up with the same model on a family farm. The vintage-tractor world is large and active: ploughing matches, working days, road runs, and the tractor lines at county shows and events like the Great Dorset Steam Fair draw enormous crowds.

They are also approachable classics. Most are mechanically simple, parts for the popular models are still made, and the same forty-year principle that defines a historic vehicle in Britain applies to tractors as much as to cars. A Massey Ferguson 135 or a little grey Fergie can be bought for the price of a modest used car, worked on at home with ordinary tools, and used at shows for years, which makes them one of the most rewarding ways into the classic world.

For the practical side of running an older machine, see owning and running a classic tractor. And for the wider story these tractors belong to, the same post-war decades that produced them produced Britain’s classic cars as well.

An orange Nuffield 465 tractor at the Great Dorset Steam Fair, a rider aboard
Orange, grey, blue and red, the tractor lines at events like the Great Dorset Steam Fair draw enormous crowds. A vintage tractor is a direct link to the way the country fed itself.Photo by Geni / CC BY-SA 4.0

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Quick answers

Frequently asked questions

What is the most famous British classic tractor?
The Massey Ferguson 135, with over four hundred thousand built at Coventry, is the tractor most people picture. The Ferguson TE20, the little grey Fergie, is the more historically important one: it brought the Ferguson System to ordinary farms from 1946.
What was the Ferguson System?
Harry Ferguson's three-point hydraulic linkage, which lets a tractor carry its implement and control its depth and draft automatically. It was so obviously right that it became the international standard, and almost every tractor built since uses a version of it.
Are classic tractors tax and MOT exempt?
Yes. The same rolling forty-year rule that defines a historic vehicle in Britain applies to tractors as much as to cars, so an old tractor can sit in the historic tax class like any other classic.
Why are classic tractors collected now?
They were tools, used hard and scrapped without ceremony, so good originals are scarce and valued. The vintage-tractor world is large and active, with ploughing matches, road runs and big tractor lines at county shows and events like the Great Dorset Steam Fair.
How much does a classic tractor cost?
Many are very approachable. A Massey Ferguson 135 or a little grey Fergie can be bought for the price of a modest used car, worked on at home with ordinary tools, and used at shows for years, which makes them one of the cheapest ways into the classic world.