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Charles Sherwood Noble

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burying them. Noble realized if he could apply a similar implement to the dry land back in Alberta thus leaving the crop stubble as "trash" on top to hold the soil and protect it from blowing the problem of soil erosion may be solved. He immediately fabricated a tillage implement patterned after the sugar beet harvesting tool. He called his invention the Noble blade. The next year he carried out all his summer fallow work using his invention. The results were so successful by 1937 he had fabricated 50 of the implements which he sold to friends and neighbors. By 1941 a factory was built within the village of Nobleford. Sales of the Noble blade occurred throughout the dry land farming areas of the world. The Noble blade is touted as one of the most important agricultural inventions of the 20th century. In 1982 the company that Noble had founded was sold to
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vital part in the development of what became known as “trash-cover” farming, where weeds were killed by their roots being cut but left in place to help control soil erosion and moisture loss. The idea of a sliding-blade type of cultivator occurred to several farmers, including Turner and Wobick. C.S. Noble, who also developed a blade, would in time get more recognition then Turner and Wobick, though theirs was invented first.
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Otto Wobick The photograph (not attached)shows Otto Wobick with an early wing blade cultivator that he helped design. Wobick was a Barons area farmer. Working with John Turner, another farmer in the Barons area, Otto made the first V-blade cultivator on the continent. The development of blades was a
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every other year, was subject to massive soil erosion. In 1935, while on a visit to California, Noble observed a sugar beet farmer using a straight blade tool to cut into the subsoil beneath the beets to loosen them for harvesting. He noticed that the blade was disturbing and killing weeds without
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By 1922 Noble had accumulated about 30,000 acres (120 km) of land but a series of poor crops, falling prices and too much debt meant he was unable to keep up the payments on the land. In the autumn of that year the Spokane Trust Company to whom he owed $ 600,000 foreclosed on the Noble estate
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area in what was then part of the Northwest Territories. The next year, he married Margaret Naomi Fraser. In the following years Noble purchased large tracts of land southeast of Claresholm. He constructed many of the area's first buildings and the hamlet of Noble (later renamed Nobleford) was
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called the Noble blade. The Noble blade (or Noble plow) cuts weed roots beneath the soil surface without turning the soil over, thus reducing topsoil loss due to wind erosion. The village of
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The land that Charles Noble farmed in southern Alberta sits in what is known as the dry-belt. During the period of drought known as the
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Other neighboring farmers have been proven to have invented this style of blade earlier than Noble. Lethbridge Historical Society
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By 1930 he had regained some of his holdings and was farming approximately 8,000 acres (32 km) of land.
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Stewart, Carlton R. (Summer 2016). "Charles S. Noble and the world's wheat title in 1916".
132: 83:, farmland within the dry-belt, cultivated with mold-board plow and/or double disc and 19: 155: 84: 31: 124: 78: 18: 30:(1873 – July 5, 1957) invented a minimum disturbance 177:Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada) 8: 7: 14: 172:People from Marshall County, Iowa 66:and he lost all his holdings. 23:Charles Sherwood Noble in 1918 1: 187:American emigrants to Canada 147:Alberta Online Encyclopedia 90:Versatile Manufacturing Ltd. 57:In 1902 Noble moved to the 203: 28:Charles Sherwood Noble 24: 62:established in 1909. 22: 38:is named after him. 59:Claresholm, Alberta 182:Canadian inventors 52:Knox, North Dakota 48:State Center, Iowa 46:Noble was born in 36:Nobleford, Alberta 25: 16:Canadian inventor 194: 136: 202: 201: 197: 196: 195: 193: 192: 191: 152: 151: 143: 113:Alberta History 110: 107: 105:Further reading 98: 85:summer fallowed 75: 44: 17: 12: 11: 5: 200: 198: 190: 189: 184: 179: 174: 169: 164: 154: 153: 150: 149: 142: 141:External links 139: 138: 137: 106: 103: 96: 80:dirty thirties 74: 71: 43: 40: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 199: 188: 185: 183: 180: 178: 175: 173: 170: 168: 165: 163: 160: 159: 157: 148: 145: 144: 140: 134: 130: 126: 122: 118: 114: 109: 108: 104: 102: 95: 92: 91: 86: 82: 81: 72: 70: 67: 63: 60: 55: 53: 49: 41: 39: 37: 33: 29: 21: 116: 112: 99: 93: 79: 76: 68: 64: 56: 45: 27: 26: 167:1957 deaths 162:1873 births 119:(3): 2–10. 73:Noble blade 156:Categories 133:A459349498 42:Early life 32:cultivator 125:0316-1552 131:  123:  129:Gale 121:ISSN 97:· 158:: 127:. 117:64 115:. 54:. 135:.

Index


cultivator
Nobleford, Alberta
State Center, Iowa
Knox, North Dakota
Claresholm, Alberta
dirty thirties
summer fallowed
Versatile Manufacturing Ltd.
ISSN
0316-1552
Gale
A459349498
Alberta Online Encyclopedia
Categories
1873 births
1957 deaths
People from Marshall County, Iowa
Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)
Canadian inventors
American emigrants to Canada

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