Lubbock's American Museum of Agriculture is seeking funding for a new building.
Agricultural historians and community activists have launched a capital campaign to raise $5 million to construct a building in Lubbock, Texas, in order to house the tractors and other farm implements in the collection of the American Museum of Agriculture.
Lacee Fraze, executive director of the museum - currently located in a leased building - said the organization has been working with an architecture firm on developing a master plan, according to the Avalanche Journal.
The museum is planning a fundraiser gala for spring 2010 to help raise the remainder of the funds. The museum already has received cash and pledges worth $1.5 million, according to the newspaper.
Alton Brazell, a former Lubbock County Commissioner for 36 years, started the museum by collecting antique tractors and other farm equipment that tell the story of this region's agricultural past. In 2002, a nonprofit organization formally opened the museum at its present location.
Today, the collection includes household items as well as restored tractors, a threshing machine, broadcast binder, combine, 71 pedal tractors, 300 die-cast toy tractors and approximately 300 other artifacts and pieces of smaller equipment.
In storage, the museum has horse-drawn equipment, field condition tractors, threshing machines, combines, grain binders, mowing machines, grain drills, hay rakes, hay balers, cotton strippers and cotton trailers.
John Deere loi MachineFinderin vuonna 1998. Siitä lähtien olemme palvelleet miljoonia kävijöitä ja välittäneet kymmeniätuhansia koneita ja yhdistäneet koko jälleenmyyjäverkostomme.
MachineFinder, John Deere ja niihin liittyvät tuotemerkit ovat Deere & Companyn omaisuutta ja vain yhtiön käytössä. Kaikki oikeudet pidätetään. 2008-2010.