MOWER OF THE MONTH
Number Thirty Seven
GREENS MULTUM IN PARVO

Multum In Parvo is one of the strangest names ever given to a
lawn mower. It means "much from little" and comes from the ancient
Latin language. Latin was still widely used in written documents by the legal,
academic, medical and ecclesiastical professions during the Victorian era
(indeed it is still used for some documents). The name may have been chosen to
hint that the mower was well-bred and ideal for the sort of owner who was
educated to understand the meaning of the name. We shall probably never know the
truth.
In fact, Green's had already used a Latin name for its earlier
Silens Messor model. When the Multum In Parvo was introduced in the 1880s (no
one is sure of the exact date) it was intended as a smaller version of the
Silens Messor. It was produced in 6", 7", 8", 10", 12",
14" and 16" cutting widths. Prices in 1910, for example, ranged from
£1-10-0 to £5-10-0, including the wooden-sided grass box. Generally, examples
that have survived tend to be the 6", 8" or 10" models while
Silens Messors can be found at sizes up to 24" (and wider if including the
pony and horse mowers of a very similar design).
Green's offered the Multum In Parvo with gear and chain drive
but most of the surviving examples are gear driven. Interestingly, most Silens
Messors are chain drive even though they too were offered with both
transmissions.
The Multum In Parvo was a great success and many thousands were
sold. Production continued into the 1920s but by the end of that decade the
company had introduced new models.
The design of the Multum In Parvo changed over the years. Some
models had all of the gear wheels on one side while others had a gear on each
side (one on the rear roller, one on the cutting cylinder) connected by a drive
shaft running across the chassis to transfer power from one to the other. Some
had gear covers and others did not. These changes make the Multum In Parvo very
popular with collectors because of the variety that can be found.
A number of Multum In Parvo mowers have survived but far fewer
than contemporary machines of similar design from the leading manufacturers such
as the Ransomes Automaton (in various guises), the Shanks Caledonia and of
course Green's own Silens Messor.

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