WE'RE IN THIS
TOGETHER.
©2024 The Charles Machine Works, Inc.
In 1902, Carl Frederick Malzahn, a German immigrant seeking to escape the harsh winters of Minnesota, moved his family to Perry, Oklahoma, and opened a blacksmith shop with his sons, Charlie and Gus. The business prospered, and several years later, with the advent of an oil boom, it became Charlie’s Machine Shop, specializing in repairs for the nearby oil fields.
Young Ed Malzahn, Charlie’s son, learned from his elders the process of adapting a business to meet changing demand. In the late 1940s, he began to apply his mechanical engineering degree to a device that he believed would be in great demand once it was produced.
At the time, the process of installing residential utility services—electric, gas and plumbing lines—involved slow, tedious pick-and-shovel labor. Ed Malzahn’s idea was to create a compact trencher that would dramatically reduce the time and effort of this process. Working together, Ed and his father spent months in the family machine shop creating the prototype of what would be known as the DWP, which stood for Ditch Witch Power.
Ed Malzahn was only 28 when the first production trencher rolled off the assembly line. It was the first mechanized, compact service-line trencher developed for laying underground water lines between the street main and the house. But it didn’t merely solve an age-old problem for utility contractors. The DWP paved the way for the creation of the compact trencher industry, which today produces all types of equipment for efficiently installing any type of underground utilities including water, sewer, and gas lines, and telecommunications, CATV, and fiber-optic cables.
Now known as The Charles Machine Works, Inc., Ed Malzahn’s organization remains a leader in the industry it essentially created. Still based in Perry, Oklahoma, the company designs and manufactures a wide variety of high-quality underground construction equipment: trenchers, vibratory plows, pneumatic piercing tools, backhoes, electronic guidance and locating tools, horizontal directional drilling systems, drill pipe, downhole tools, vacuum excavation systems, excavator-tool carriers, and mini skid steers. All of these products are recognized around the world for their advanced design, rugged construction, long-term durability, ease of use, and reliability.
Even after achieving household-name status in the worldwide construction industry, the Ditch Witch organization remains true to its roots: family and community. Ed Malzahn has handed over CEO duties to his granddaughter, Tiffany Sewell-Howard, who represents the fifth generation of the Malzahn line—beginning with Ed’s grandfather Carl—to run the family company.
The company’s extended family includes the residents of and around the town of Perry, population around 5,000. Since the early 1950s, hundreds of Perry-area residents have started and had life-long careers on the expansive campus that contains the company’s 30-acre manufacturing plant and training, testing, research, and product development facilities. The Ditch Witch plant employs more than 1,300 people. While the temptation is great to reduce manufacturing expenses by exporting those jobs overseas, as many companies have, the Ditch Witch organization is committed to providing American-made products.
Ditch Witch products are an important part of the history of American industry. The Ditch Witch compact trencher has twice been named “one of the 100 best American-made products in the world” by Fortune magazine. In 2002, American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) President Susan H. Kemp awarded the Ditch Witch organization a bronze landmark plaque. More recently, The Travel Channel recently recognized the company’s dedication to homegrown products by featuring the Ditch Witch manufacturing facility on its program “Made in America,” hosted by John Ratzenberger.
The original Ditch Witch trencher became a permanent part of the new Oklahoma History Center in Oklahoma City in 2005. But the trencher’s inventor, Ed Malzahn, who was inducted into the Oklahoma Inventors Hall of Fame in 2004, isn’t exactly ready to be a museum piece. The embodiment of the durability of the machines he pioneered, Malzahn serves as an inspiration to future generations of innovators.
©2024 The Charles Machine Works, Inc.
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
Best suited for irrigation and fiber installation, the Rock Saw attachment can effortlessly cut through rock, concrete, and other tough materials with unmatched precision.
SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750, SK3000
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
From landscaping and hardscapes to tree care and construction-grade tasks, your stand-on skid steer can take on more than you think. We've got you covered with a variety of buckets from 4-in-1 to heavy and light material buckets. Widths range from 34" to 66".
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750, SK3000
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750, SK3000
SK1050, SK1550, SK1750, SK3000
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750, SK3000
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK1050, SK1550, SK1750, SK3000
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750, SK3000
Stay efficient on large jobsites with a trencher attachment for your skid steer. It’s a smart alternative to large, specialized equipment for utility installation and landscaping jobs. Available in standard 6”, 8” and 12” maximum widths with maximum depths of 36", 38", 48” and 55.5”.
SK600, SK800, SK900, SK1050, SK1550, SK1750, SK3000