How Automotive Innovation Helped Shape Modern Farming

Museum explores how early car makers played a part in advancing agriculture

CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA (FARM MONITOR) — The connection between farming and automotive innovation is on display at the Savoy Automobile Museum in Georgia. The museum focuses on the history and cultural impact of vehicles, including how early car technology played a role in advancing agriculture.

Curatorial Research Assistant Mary Argusa says that connection often surprises guests.

“We really give people a chance to see that car companies did much more than cars,” Argusa said. “They were very much involved in agriculture.”

Argusa explains that as technology developed, ideas used in automobiles were adapted for farm equipment, helping mechanize agriculture and increase production.

She says that shift became especially important as more people moved away from rural areas and farms expanded, requiring equipment that could handle larger operations.

The Savoy Automobile Museum sits on more than 35 acres, offering visitors a closer look at how farming and automobiles are connected.

Related Stories
Waylon NeSmith says continuing the operation is a way to carry on the lessons and legacy his father left behind.
The new initiative is helping agricultural leaders strengthen their advocacy and leadership skills.
Favorable weather and hard work are leading to high strawberry yields and steady crowds at Green Acres Farm, a u-pick destination in Cochran, Georgia.
Student Katelyn Lindsay is traveling the country to support growers and connect consumers to the crop.
Growers say flavor remains strong despite smaller size of onions.
Georgia Grown Marketing Coordinator Happy Wyatt has spent the past 20 years teaching young students about agriculture and its connection to their everyday lives.

Knoxville native Neal Burnette-Irwin is a graduate from MTSU where he majored in Journalism and Entertainment Studies. He works as a digital content producer with RFD News and is represented by multiple talent agencies in Nashville and Chicago.


LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

First-grade teacher Taylor Dougherty at Eastern Elementary School was named the 2026 Ag in the Classroom Award winner for her efforts to teach students about agriculture.
Lawmakers say payments will support schools, infrastructure and public safety in rural communities.
Initiative brings students from different backgrounds together to build relationships and broaden perspectives
Arkansas Farm Trail Passport brings visitors to operations across the state, like Horton’s Produce & More, where strawberry harvest focuses on quality over quantity.
The analysis models how trade disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz may continue to drive up the cost of fertilizer.
Study looks at how triazine chemistry impacts effectiveness against resistant weeds