
Lee Pollert
Clarksdale, Missouri
(2004) |
Lee Edmond Pollert was born August 24, 1920 at Clarksdale,
Missouri. He still resides on the farm where he was
born.
In 1946 he bought his first combine (a MH 21), which
he purchased from his brother Ray Pollert who was
a Massey-Harris machinery dealer. He would later buy
more combines and had as many as three of his own
in the field at one time, plus manage two machines
for his brother Ray. The last combine he bought in
1954 was a MH 90 Special, which he ran until 1961
at which time he retired from the wheat tour to manage
the family farm.
He married Alice Charlene Gabbert on May 9, 1953 in
St. Joseph, MO. They had one son Glenn.
Lee harvested wheat, beans, milo, grass seeds, rape,
flax, and just about anything else that had a head
on it and was edible. He went from Texas to Canada
in his adventures in the Great Plains. His brother
Ray was instrumental and a guiding influence in his
harvesting career as Ray was a Massey-Harris dealer
and promoted the great Harvest Brigades in 1944.
The
two brothers had a reputation as “authorities”
about combines and thrashing. If their neighbors or
fellow harvesters had a problem with the operation
of a machine they would be called on to help out.
Lee’s influence on the tour was well known and
widely missed when he quit in 1961. While it is not
easy to find someone he thrashed for in Texas, Oklahoma,
Colorado, Nebraska, Montana, North or South Dakota,
or Missouri from 43 years ago-there was not one farmer
in 15 years and 50,000 acres that he couldn’t
cut for the next year. I think that influence and
contribution to harvesting says it all. |