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Towards the end of the Second World War, local
builder Douglas Hayter was attempting to satisfy an urgent
need for affordable temporary housing. As adequate materials
were scarce, these buildings had to be made principally from
timber. The drying sheds used to cure the wood were hard to
access through overgrown grass. Not to be thwarted, Mr Hayter
addressed the problem by mounting a 2 stroke motorcycle engine
on top of a dustbin lid, added some wheels, attached a
sharpened blade to the crankshaft and a mower was born. The
solution attracted the interest and attention of visitors
whose requests for copies turned Hayter from house maker to
mower maker, the role it has maintained to this day.
Many significant mowers have emanated from the site in
Spellbrook, a hamlet between Harlow and Bishops Stortford in
Hertfordshire. There have been grass toppers, hay cutters,
orchard mowers, bank mowers and pedestrian controlled models
like the evergreen Hayterette introduced during the 1960s.
Another milestone was the introduction of the 19" Harrier
model in 1970. So successful is this machine that even twenty
eight years later it was voted Product of the Decade by those
discerning critics, the dealers who sell them.
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