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USA, Illinois, Pontiac, 15521 E 1830 North Road
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About enterprise
Stoller construction equipment, Company
The Stoller family came to the United States from Switzerland in the 1860’s and settled on a farm near Metamora. Within a few years the family moved farther west to Davis County, Iowa on the Missouri border. In 1891 the entire family returned to Gridley, IL and continued farming. Four of the original children migrated to western Ohio in 1913. Chris Stoller stayed in Gridley and fathered eleven children. His five boys showed an early interest in machinery by operating a corn Sheller business and inventing a snowplow that was pulled by horses.
The oldest son, William took a job selling farm machinery at age 16. Two years later he would die of Diabetes. Insulin was not available.
During the Great Depression, the second and third sons, Albert and Rueben entered the grocery business and the fourth son, Clarence, operated a bulk fuel business delivering gasoline and kerosene in five gallon cans to farmers. It was during these on farm visits that Clarence began to observe the trend away from horses. Tractor power for row crop work was gaining in popularity. Consequently in 1934 he answered an ad in the Prairie farmer from the Allis Chalmers Company and became an agent selling tractors while on his fuel route. He sold 12 tractors that first year and traded in horsed on some of those transactions. He rented an office on Third Street in Gridley for $5 per month and kept the trade-in horses in a corral across the street.
In 1935, Rueben and Clarence Stoller purchased the I.H. Dealership in Gridley, IL operated by the Peter Klopfenstein family. The store was located on Center Street in Gridley where the current U.S. Post Office exists. Eventually they would relocate to a site on U.S. Route 24, previously occupied by a stallion farm. In 1939, Clarence built a second store in Chenoa, IL. When Clarence was drafted in to the U.S. Army in 1942, Albert took over operations of that location and retired from there in 1963. Rueben oversaw the Gridley store until 1970 when that building was destroyed by fire.
Upon returning from World War II in December of 1945, Clarence bought a herd of 30 Brown Swiss cows and started up his own dairy on the home place 2 miles north of Gridley. Several years later, representatives from International Harvester encouraged Clarence to reenter the agricultural machinery business in 1948. At that time, he bought out the Sinew Family dealership in Pontiac, IL, the site of the old Bess Husseman Farm. Construction on a new building began in 1949. That same building has since been added to six different times, but the original building still exists, continuing to serve customers throughout generations of farmers.
When Stoller International first opened the products offered were the C-20 and C-30 tractors, two-row planters, threshing machines, oat seeders, barge wagons, flare wagons and sickle mowers. Since then Stoller IH has witnessed the technology advancements in agricultural equipment that have resulted in available horsepower tractors increasing from 30hp to 530hp. The advancements have also produced precision planting equipment from 1 row to 36 rows. Harvesting equipment that advanced from single-row horse drawn machines to satellite guided self-propelled combines with 40 foot draper platforms and 16 row corn-heads.
In stock
The Case IH Early Riser Planter leads the industry in accuracy and productivity.
The name "Early Riser" means— Faster, more uniform emergence due to superior seed to soil contact.
The planter is available in the following configurations:
12 N Pivot Transport
16 N Pivot Transport
12/23 Pivot...
Group: Transplanters
In stock
7"x7"x3/8" Double Frame
39" Underframe Clearance
14" to 18" Operating Depth
1¼"x6" Shanks made of
High-Strength Steel
Reversible Wear Shins
Fall or Summer Points in ADI or Tuff Metal II
Super 1200 Coulters with 20" Blades
Group: Cultivators
In stock
5088, 6088, 7088, 7120, 8120, 9120
Tracks available on 9120
Industry-leading AFX rotor
Adapts to over 80 grain types
Maximizes grain quality and savings
Matched capacity through all systems
Fewest drive components
Group: Combines for farming
In stock
Maximum quality, minimal loss
Powerful performance
Superior reliability
Easier maintenance
Faster harvest speeds
Highest-quality corn harvesting
Group: Combines for farming
In stock
Poly Bonnet Lift
Gathering Chain Quick Assembly
Drive Hub
Auger Transfer System
Aluminum Gearbox
Snout Adjuster
Trash Deflector
Triple Protection
Group: Combines for farming
In stock
A large 26-in. (660-mm)-diameter floating auger
Stainless steel auger trough for increased durability
Single lever hydraulic connection for fast header hook-ups
Super Sta-Sharp™ knife sections for the ultimate in cutting performance
Heavy-duty knife guards and tethered knife drive shield...
Group: Combines for farming
In stock
Designed to match crop types, yields and combine capacities
Wide range of cutting widths
Flexible and rigid models
Years of proven performance
Variable Draper speeds
Group: Combines for farming
In stock
Steiger® and Quadtrac®
350-600 hp (390-660 peak hp)
Narrow Wheel Tred and
Wide-Frame models available
Most powerful tractor
Fuel-Savings in SCR Engine
Technology & Tier 4A Compliant
New Operator Environment
Innovation Beyond the Cab
Ground Level Serviceability
Group: Tractors