Caterpillar Sixty - Oklahoma, 1959
Alex Hawley

Caterpillar Sixty - Oklahoma, 1959

This is one of my Legacy photos; ones that were taken by my parents then recently printed by me.

This was Dad's all-time favorite photo. He kept a print of it on his desk for years. We were in Oklahoma when one of those U-turn moments occurred. Suddenly I saw the strangest, most grotesque piece of machinery ever. This thing was sitting by itself on the salt flats, hooked to a "salt picker" sled. It was still in use, relegated to picking salt but it all paid the same to the big Sixty. I have never seen a Sixty in use ever since. Can hardly find one in a museum although there are a cherished few that have survived and have been restored.

The Caterpiller Sixty is significant in the evolution of heavy machinery. This was the tractor that made Caterpiller world famous. At sixty horsepower, it was the most powerful tractor of its time. It wasn't until the late 1950s that conventional wheeled tractors started equaling and surpassing that much power. It was very reliable. I've read accounts of plowing in excess of 15,000 acres in one year; a staggering amount of work from one machine in the 1920s. In 1931, the Sixty became the first Diesel-powered tractor in the world. That change forever changed heavy machinery and sired nearly all modern-day earth-moving machines. One had a minor movie role of note, appearing in John Ford's "The Grapes of Wrath", in the scene where the house "went under the Cat".

Please note the traditional tin cans atop the intake and exhaust stacks. Not just someone's hayseed contrivance. This was a simple and sure way of keeping water out of the engine.

Printed on Kodak Ektalure. This was surely worthy of a few sheets of that rare paper.
Location
Oklahoma Salt Flats
Equipment Used
Yashica TLR
Exposure
unknown
Film & Developer
Kodak B&W, species unknown
Paper & Developer
Kodak Ektalure, PF130 1:1
Lens Filter
don't think so
I can only agree with the pirate, this is an interesting photo and bit of information.

Cheers.
 
That's cool, Alex! Very nicely printed too. Thanks for sharing.
- Thomas
 
I enjoyed the information you provided as much as the image. The image itself is very straightforward and powerful! Thanks for posting.

George
 
Great picture and I've been educated as well. It looks formidable. Almost like something out of "Mad Max"

pentaxuser
 
Your information on the machine goes well with the image. A powerful beast in its day.

cheers
TEX
 
Reminds me of something from Star Wars, Alex... thanks for the history on this unusual machine. This picture is wonderfully ambiguous, as the scale of the machine is vague... could be HUGE, could be quite small... I like not quite knowing!! What a wonderful picture to have from your dad!!
 
Thanks to everyone for all the kind comments. I'm not done with printing this one yet. Plan on trying it with a neutral tone paper and really try to wrench all the tonality and starkness out of it I can. Its worthy of an 11x14 print too.
 
Fantastic detail. I agree that on this occasion a bit of background only adds more to the picture.

Thanks

Rob
 

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Alex Hawley
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Filename
cat60.jpg
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Dimensions
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