
Tommy Dishman
Wichita Falls, TX
2001 |
Tommy E. Dishman was nominated by Melvin (Doc) Eaker
& Wade Dishman, and recommended by Charles Krajca.
Tommy
E. Dishman of Wichita Falls, Texas, started harvesting
at a very young age with his parents in 1943. His
father, Carl, signed up with the government to get
a new Massey Harris combine and a new Chevrolet truck.
In return, his parents had to commit to make the complete
harvest run. After harvest they would sell the equipment
for more that it cost new. This was a tough time for
farmers since everything, (both steel and rubber)
was going into the war effort.
Tommy
bought his first truck and combine in 1952 when he
was only 14 years old. He borrowed the money from
the bank and was able to repay the bank after one
year of harvesting with his father. Tommy and his
father were able to keep working together until his
father had a stroke and was paralyzed in 1974. Tommy
with the help of his wife Mayme and their two sons,
Wade and Jim was able to manage the business until
1996, when Wade bought his first combine and truck.
Tommy
ran 1-5 Massey-Ferguson machines until the harvest
brigade quit making the harvest route in 1984. He
has worked close with the Massey-Ferguson brigade
out of Ontario, Canada, testing experimental equipment
to find ideas that would better their machinery. In
1984 Tommy changed to John Deere equipment which he
continues to use. The family has endured many hardships
and tragedies, but has managed to continue going on
harvest each and every year.
The
1979 tornado that wiped out a large section of Wichita
Falls, Texas also took everything that the Dishman's
owned. Everything included two houses, shops, barns,
cattle, horses, fences, Harvest equipment plus all
of their personal things. All that was left were the
clothes they had on while in the storm cellar. He
said we were fortunate as we came out of it without
a scratch.
Tommy
has served on the city council board for twelve years.
He has been committed to helping farmers and other
custom harvesters. A few years ago, he won an award
from U.S. Custom Harvesters Association for cutting
crops for the same farmer for the most years. Tommy
harvested for Lennis (Wright) Seeding of Perryton,
Texas for forty-two years. Both families won a trip
to Colorado Springs, Colorado.
The
2000 harvest was his forty-eighth year of never missing
a season. Tommy will continue to harvest as long as
his health will allow and the work is available. |