California, I'm embarrassed to say, because it isn't a proper fix. My tractor's lever had been booger welded on at some point, and even though I ground the weld down, I broke the lever off the body trying to unscrew it. I ground the protruding shifter lever smooth, then pushed the assembly back to where it would normally sit, then took a skinny cutoff wheel on an angle grinder and chopped off about 5/8 of an inch. Then I pushed it through and out of the housing. The shorter overall length allowed it to come out of the transmission housing.
I used a magnetic pickup stick to fish around and find the broken-off piece of the lever. I ground the body of the lever flat and square, then drilled a hold in the center of it, most of the way through. Then I welded an M8 nut over the hole, and ran a tap down the hole, and finished by welding the broken off angled rod back on, and got a little more weldment built up (It had fractured the weld).
I put the repaired assembly back in. It all lined up ok. Then, I found a cheap 13mm box end wrench in my loaner tools, and put it on the welded nut, then put a washer between that and the bolt head. When everything was tight, the wrench was clamped to the body of the shifting selector, and became the new handle. So now, instead of a proper lever to select high and low range, I have a cheap Chinese 13mm box end wrench.:confused2:
Like I said, not at all a proper fix!:laughing: I'm still assembling all the parts I need to properly resurrect this old heap into a (moderately) safe machine; these components are one more!