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Scrapers, trenchers and manual graders. Roadbuilding machinery won’t look like this again...
The newest roadbuilding machines can zoom over unmade ground in no time, with modern motor graders being particularly speedy.
It wasn’t always this way of course. At one time split logs were used to grade roads, and devices thal loosely resembled horse-drawn trenchers were used for larger highway projects in some parts of the world.
In fact, the very first continous excavators were most popular for building roads. According to Giant Earthmovers, most of the early grader manufacturers, such as Russell (which became Caterpillar) Austin-Western and Adams produced these machines. Originally elevating graders were pulled by packs of horses and later by steam traction engines or crawler tractor. The elevating conveyor was powered by a chain or gear drive. The discharged material would then be loaded into wagons running alongside, or formed into ‘windrows’ to make up the road base.
Again, according to Giant Earthmovers, the first continuous excavators were built by the New Era Manufacturing Company in 1866. This early machine was built from wood, though in later years it was built from metal following a takeover by Austin Manufacturing.
By the mid 1940s, most manufacturers had abandoned elevating graders in favour of the more modern motor-graders and scrapers. Although the technology is outmoded today, the process was efficient as dirt was moved directly from the road surface to the embankment.
The King Road Drag was a grader implement for grading dirt roads that revolutionised the maintenance of the dirt roads in the early 1900s. It was invented by David Ward King, a farmer whose farm was in Holt Township, near Maitland, Missouri.



FEATURED COMMENT
I have operated one which was used to build country roads in the prairies in the late 1940s. It was pulled by a Caterpil