Next»
Retired Blacksmith Built A Working Windmill Farm
Terry Rodman says he went a little overboard when his wife Kris asked him to put up a small windmill for their yard in the 1990’s, but he’s glad he did. Instead of buying a lawn-size windmill, he used his blacksmith and carpentry skills to build one more than 40 ft. tall. “If we’re going to have a windmill, it might as well be full size,” Rodman says. That project started his “windmill fever” that’s continued for three decades.
His collection has grown to more than 40 full-size working windmills that are erected around his yard. Another 50 or so are piled across the road, awaiting his refurbishing skills.
Rodman says every one of his windmills holds special meaning, and he’s happy to share stories with people who stop in to see them. His collection holds a rare, scooped blade Iron Turbine, an all-metal device built in the early 1900’s, that he acquired as a pile of scrap from a fence line on a California farm. After hauling it home he rebuilt it to like-new condition.
That same treatment went into a wooden model with the brand name Bright and a patent date of 1880 on the tail. Rodman located it on a windmill junk pile in southwest Texas and completely restored it. He believes it’s the only one in existence.
While many of his windmills were made in the USA, which at one time had more than 300 manufacturers, his collection has a strong international theme. He imported one model from the Netherlands after seeing it there while he and his wife traveled to her native country. Others are from China, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, Canada, South Africa and Australia. He wanted one from Spain, but couldn’t arrange shipment, so he built a replica from pictures.
Every windmill in Rodman’s collection has a working fan that spins in the breeze, some providing the familiar sound of metal scratching metal as pump arms move up and down.
“Some people restore tractors, cars, farm equipment and other things, but I find this more to my liking,” Rodman says. It also lets him meet a lot of interesting people because they stop in to see his handiwork firsthand.
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Terry Rodman, 165 40th Ave., Jasper, Minn. 56144.


  Click here to download page story appeared in.



  Click here to read entire issue




To read the rest of this story, download this issue below or click here to register with your account number.
Order the Issue Containing This Story
2021 - Volume #45, Issue #6