The information on this page is not "offical" documentation.It is only accurate to the best of my ability. If you notice any discrepancies please contact me and I will update the information.
| 1827 | The Cockshutt family - James, Mary and children Ignatius and Jane immigrated to Canada from Lancashire, England. |
| 1877 | James G. Cockshutt, son of Ignatius, founded the original Cockshutt factory, THE BRANTFORD PLOW WORKS at Brantford, Ontario. He operated it until its incorporation in 1882. |
| 1882 | The business was incorporated as THE COCKSHUTT PLOW COMPANY, with James G. Cockshutt as president. Approximately 50 workers were employed. |
| 1885 | James Cockshutt died as the result of tuberculosis at 34 years of age. Managers bearing the Cockshutt name continued to operate the company until 1957. |
| 1885 | The JGC Sulky Plow, invented by James G. Cockshutt, was patented following his death by his wife and his brother W.F. Cockshutt. |
| 1903 | Cockshutt Plow Company employed 900 people in a modern plant built on a 33 acre site. |
| 1910 | The company went public, expanded their buildings and increased the number of employees to 1300. |
| 1910 | Cockshutt purchased ADAMS WAGON COMPANY, BRANTFORD CARRIAGE COMPANY, and FROST AND WOOD COMPANY to expand their line of machinery. |
| 1914-1918 | World War I - Cockshutt provided wagons and carriages for military use. Shiploads of farm machinery were exported to England. |
| 1924-1928 | During this period, the company was a Canadian distributor of Hart-Parr tractors. |
| 1928-1933 | Allis-Chalmers tractors were sold under the COCKSHUTT name. |
| 1930 | Oliver, now incorporated with Hart-Parr, produced COCKSHUTT tractors. Identical tractors were painted green for Oliver and red and cream for Cockshutt. |
| 1930 | Produced the "Tiller combine", selling 100 in their first year. |
| 1939-1945 | World War II - The company built aircraft parts, ambulance bodies, gun mounts and 100,000 hand grenades per month with up to 6,000 people being employed. |
| 1953 | Cockshutt expanded their operation by purchasing the National Farm Equipment Co-op at Bellevue, Ohio. |
| 1946 | The first actual Canadian COCKSHUTT tractor called the '30' went into production. |
| 1957 | English Transcontinental Company purchased controlling interest in the COCKSHUTT PLOW COMPANY and ran it under the name COCKSHUTT FARM EQUIPMENT COMPANY LTD. |
| 1961 | White Motor Corporation purchased part of the Brantford plant and the rights to the harvester/combine lines. Operating under the name COCKSHUTT FARM EQUIPMENT OF CANADA INC. They also took over the branches and many Cockshutt dealers. |