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Wednesday, December 26, 2001

This 1913 tractor right at home


Family room fine place to park it

By Jack Sullivan
The Associated Press

        SABIN, Minn. — Builders usually had two questions for Jim Briden when he explained his plan to park a 20-ton antique steam tractor in his new family room.

        “Are you married?” and “Does your wife know about this yet?”

        “I'm married to a man that's just always outside the box,” Lynette Briden said with a laugh, sitting on a couch under a Christmas tree and tractor that both stand taller than 12 feet.

        Jim Briden's 110-horsepower Case tractor was one of 50 the company built in 1913, and one of only five restored intact today.

        Mr. Briden said he became interested in old tractors as a child. He finished the restoration on the Case tractor 20 years ago, after six years of work that led him around the country, borrowing parts from other owners so he could have replacements cast for his machine. He bought the tractor from a British Columbia saw mill, which was using just the boiler and engine for power.

        Mr. Briden shows the machine at the Western Minnesota Steam Threshers Reunion in nearby Rollag, where collectors of antique farm and construction equipment meet every Labor Day weekend.

        The tractor runs fine, although it needs 350 gallons of water per hour. When the Bridens moved to a ranch house near Sabin, about 12 miles southeast of Fargo, N.D., they began planning to add a family room.

        “The room kept getting bigger and bigger until there was room enough for everything,” Jim Briden said.

        To support the tractor's weight, 3- by 5-foot footings were sunk into the ground beneath a concrete floor. The floor is 6 feet thick under the tractor's large iron rear wheels, which carry 18 tons of its bulk.

        A 13-foot-square door in the wall is camouflaged on the outside with the same blue siding as the rest of the addition. Inside, the door is painted the same dark green as the rest of the room.

        A neighbor brought over a modern tractor to push in the old Case. At 11 feet wide and 12 1/2 feet tall, it fit inside with inches to spare, Mr. Briden said.

        “I'm sure this would give Martha Stewart a headache,” Lynette Briden said. “How do you decorate with a 20-ton piece of iron in your living room?”

        But the red-and-dark green tractor blends in well in the family room. The lights that hang from the 16-foot ceiling came from a small Clay County church; a cast-iron spiral staircase salvaged from Fargo's demolished water plant rises to a loft office.
       



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