Background
Vern Leroy Schield was born on November 13, 1902, on a farm near Hawarden, Iowa, United States.
Vern Leroy Schield was born on November 13, 1902, on a farm near Hawarden, Iowa, United States.
His early life was spent working on the family farm, where Vern Schield showed a fascination with machinery. Following brief training in mechanics in Ames, probably at Iowa State College (now Iowa State University of Science and Technology), he continued agricultural work, relocating with the family to a farm near Montevideo, Minnesota, in 1920
Considering a career as a missionary, Vern Schield attended Anderson College (now Anderson University), a Church of God school in Indiana, from 1922 to 1924. He chose instead to pursue business education and graduated from Minneapolis Business College in 1928.
In 1930 Vern Schield and his brother Wilbur acquired the machinery of a nearby limestone quarry and sold crushed lime to farmers to improve their soil. The brothers, both musically talented, performed as "The Limestone Boys" in local venues and on WMT, a Waterloo radio station, to advertise their business.
With business poor in the midst of the Great Depression, Wilbur Schield sought work in Indiana in 1933, while Vern Schield continued the lime business. The improving agricultural economy under the New Deal benefited the operation, and in 1936 Vern Schield purchased the quarry. Keeping rundown equipment functioning and finding new ways to use machinery to boost productivity at the quarry challenged and honed Schield’s mechanical genius. He saw the advantages of having a small dragline - a crane with a bucket that scoops with a dredging action - that could fill trucks delivering lime. Using parts from a variety of machines, in 1942 Vern Schield created such a dragline mounted on a truck. Requests from other quarry owners for similar machines convinced Schield of the opportunities available in producing equipment suitably sized for small operators.
In 1943 Schield’s brother Wilbur rejoined him at the quarry, where the two began producing truck-mounted cranes, dubbed Bantams. Shortages of labor and materials during World War II hampered the business, but the war’s end brought an economic boom in which it prospered.
In 1946 the firm moved to a new plant built in Waverly and incorporated as the Schield Bantam Company. The Bantam served a critical need in the postwar construction boom by providing excavating equipment small contractors could afford. Vern’s mechanical abilities and Wilbur’s business savvy served the company well. By 1956 annual domestic and international sales figures topped $10 million, and Bantams dominated the market for similarly sized machines. The company was noted for encouraging open communication with employees and was an early adopter of a profit-sharing plan. In 1963 the Koehring Company acquired the firm.
The company’s success and overseas markets gave Vern Schield the opportunity to travel widely. Reflecting his early interest in religious work, he often found time to visit missionaries. There he discovered needs that his mechanical talents could meet. In 1952 Vern Schield founded Self-Help, Inc., a nonprofit organization now known as Self-Help International. Initially, Self-Help purchased and reconditioned various kinds of machinery, much of it obsolete in the American economy but well suited to conditions in developing nations, and sold it at prices customers there could afford. In the 1960s Vern Schield designed a small tractor he named the Self-Helper. Built from salvage and surplus parts and funded partially through donations, this tractor was intended to help small farmers in developing countries improve agricultural yield. Self-Helpers are no longer produced, but Self-Help International continues other projects aimed at helping people in the developing world find ways to improve their lives.
In 1968 Vern Schield founded the Schield International Museum in Waverly to display artifacts he collected from his extensive travels. It also exhibits the first Bantam and houses the Self-Help International offices.
On December 11, 1932, Vern Schield married Marjorie Vosseller. They had two children.