ABOUT
Crump’s history began with horse drawn spreaders around the time of the first world war, the exact date is not known. Our records commence with the 1926 horse drawn Maple, Mulga & Myal drop spreaders. In 1930 the ‘O’ series spinner type were released, for horses of course. By 1935 there was a range of 15 spreaders which catered for all farming operations. There were ground drive models for ponies, for horses and for towing by trucks and tractors and models for mounting on tray trucks and farm trailers. The concept, accuracy and basic design of the 1930 spinner spreader was so good that it was used until replaced in 1970 by the Kurrajong series.Production of the drop spreader series stopped in the early 50’s due to granulated fertilisers becoming readily available. The Acacia and Kurrajong series have now been improved since the business was relocated to country Victoria by Bruce Gribben in November 2005. The manufacturing business and office headquarters for Crump Australia are now located in Shepparton.
SERVICE
All technical information on spreaders from 1926 is intact, excepting machine number records. From remaining records we know that at least 30,000 spreaders have been manufactured since 1945. Spare parts sales indicate that a very large portion of these and the 1935/45 spreaders are still in use today.The facts are, replacement parts and instruction manuals are available for nearly all Crump spreaders regardless of their age, excepting items like horse shafts, spoked wheels and timber hopper ends, etc. We can even supply a copy of the original 1926 drop spreader manual and service that machine with parts from later models.
What better guarantee can a manufacturer offer.
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|