Deere’s Dubuque Factory Celebrates 75 Years
The John Deere Dubuque Works factory opened in 1947, and now has 3,000 employees, half in production and half in engineering, supply, and customer support.
General Manager Mark Dickson says post-World War II labor shortages forced Deere to build its new plant away from its tractor plants in Waterloo, Iowa. Dubuque welcomed the new plant, which initially made tractors, but converted to handling part of Deere’s construction and forestry business in 1970. 1.2 million machines have been produced in Dubuque since it opened.
Dickson predicts the Dubuque Works will keep its current workforce, and could grow 10% more in the next year. Equipment produced in Dubuque is mainly sold in the North American market.
Related Articles
Upgrade From John Deere: Knuckleboom Loaders
Deere Names Forestry President
New From John Deere: 900 MH-Series Tracked Harvester With Intelligent Boom Control
Deere Purchases Robotics Company
John Deere, Hitachi End Joint Venture
Deere Elects New President For Worldwide Construction & Forestry and Power Systems
Latest News
Interior Secretary Urges Shrinking Four Western National Monuments
Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is recommending that four large national monuments in the West be reduced in size, potentially opening up hundreds of thousands of acres of land revered for natural...
WANT MORE CONTENT?
Spanning seven decades since its inception in 1952, Timber Harvesting highlights innovative and successful logging operations across the U.S. and around the world. Timber Harvesting also emphasizes new technology and provides the best marketing vehicle for the industry’s suppliers to reach the largest number of loggers in North America and beyond.
Call Us: 800.669.5613