Hawkins County

            Hawkins County is one of the oldest counties in Tennessee and it was first established as a separate North Carolina county in 1787. Rogersville serves as the county seat. The main street of Rogersville was defined by the route of the Great Wilderness Road, that attracted many settlers to travel through the town on their way to Bean Station, Cumberland Gap and Kentucky. During the 1840s through the 1870s, the county was notable for its marble industry. The marble was used in the Washington Monument in Washington, D. C., as well as the balustrades and stairways of the Capitol. In addition, the marble was used in the South Carolina State Capitol and in the municipal buildings of Baltimore. Hawkins County has eighteen Century Farms and the oldest is the Campbell Acres Farm that was founded in 1782. For more information regarding Hawkins County, go to the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History & Culture website.

For a brief historical sketch of each farm, click on the farm name.

Arnold Farm

Beal Farm

Breezy Heights Farm

Brooks Farm

Campbell Acres Farm

Circle J. Farm

Fudge Farm

Kirkpatrick Farm

Little Valley Farm

Long Meadow Farm

Lyonsdale Farm

Maple Hill Farm

Moore Farm

Orricks Home Place

Rolling Acres Farm

Sam P. Roark Farm

Talley Farm

Valley Breeze Farm

The following map is for a general geographical understanding. It does not provide the specific locations of the farms because of privacy reasons.

Hawkins County Map

Map courtesy of Carole Swann, Tennessee Department of Agriculture


Arnold Farm

Cordell Arnold

Barn with Burley Tobacco

Arnold Farm was founded in 1887 by Henry Francisco and his wife Katherine Brown.  The couple’s son B.J. Francisco acquired the property in 1916.  He and his was wife Salley Calhoun Francisco were the parents of seven children.  On 30 acres they raised corn, hay, cattle, apples and wheat.  Leota Francisco Arnold, daughter of B. J. and Salley, purchased the property in 1958.  Her son, Cordell, became the fourth generation owner of the family farm in 1994.  Today the farm produces burley, tobacco, beef cattle and hay. In March of 1932 a cyclone destroyed most of the farm buildings as well as fences.  The barn was rebuilt in 1932 and has been used since then for hay, cattle and tobacco. A storm shelter built by B.J. Francisco after the devastating storm still serves its original purpose and is also a storage place for apples and potatoes.


Photo: Burley tobacco hanging in a barn on the Arnold Farm.

 

Beal Farm

Charles Beal

            One of East Tennessee’s 200 year old farms, the Beal Farm dates to 1780 when Captain Thomas Amis, a veteran of the Revolutionary War, acquired 1,000 acres of land located three miles east of present-day Rogersville. Once a North Carolina state legislator, Amis married twice and had fifteen children. His son Haynes inherited the farm in the early 1800s. The property continued to pass from one generation to the next until Lucy Maxwell Beal and her two daughters, Matilda Ann and Mary, inherited the farm in 1963.

            Lucy Beal died in 1976 and Matilda Ann and Mary became the sole owners of Meadow Brook. They now manage 250 acres and specialize in producing tobacco and cattle. The sisters also report that two mid-nineteenth century buildings, a brick house and a rock springhouse, still stand on the family land.

 

Breezy Heights Farm

Charles William Sanders, Jr.

            Generations of agricultural expansion and innovation, combined with dedicated service in progressive agricultural organizations, identify the Breezy Heights Farm as one of the most significant farm operations in Hawkins County. The farm lies on the south side of the Holston River, approximately four and a half miles from Rogersville. Acquiring 163 acres, John and Nelly Dodson Saunders established the farmstead in 1791. John was a stockgrower who lived along the Holston River as early as 1783. When he died in 1807, he willed 232 acres to his son James Saunders. James and Jane Ross Saunders were the parents of nine children. With slave labor, the family operated a prosperous farm, producing livestock, hay and flax.

            John Ross Sanders purchased the homeplace plus 184 acres of his grandparents’ land in 1844. The crops that the slaves produced did not change; indeed, the farm yielded flax until the Civil War. John married Martha Ann Reynolds and they had seven children, one of whom, John Ross Sander, Jr., inherited the farm in 1891. An elder in local Cumberland Presbyterian churches for over fifty years and a Mason for 71 years, Ross was a charter member of the Hawkins County Farm Bureau, a county road commissioner and the county chairman of the Food Administration during World War I. As a farmer, he raised Jersey and beef cattle, swine, tobacco, corn, wheat and hay. Ross, married to Mollie Bailey, was the father of six children.

            By the late 1930s, Charles William Sanders had acquired over 260 acres from his parents and brother. Charles enjoyed a distinguished career of public service as president of the Hawkins County Farm Bureau and as president of the Tennessee State Mutual Insurance Company of Rogersville. On the farm, commodities from the family’s Holstein cattle herd provided necessary cash income.

            As of 1976, both Charles and his wife Frances Holston lived at Breezy Heights, but their son Charles William Sanders, Jr., actually owned and operated the farm. Charles inherited the family land in 1969 and seven years later managed a successful dairy operation and fields of corn and tobacco.

 

Brooks Farm

Robert Brooks

Mack Brooks

George Brooks

Alma Brooks

            The history of the Brooks Century Farm is a reminder of the importance of religion in the lives of Hawkins County’s farm families. In 1823, Anthony Brooks of North Carolina acquired 600 acres of land and established the Brooks Farm twelve miles west of Rogersville. The family recalls that Anthony “taught the Bible in the community.” He wed Hannah Brooks and in 1856, their son Stokely D. Brooks inherited 450 acres of the farm. Stokely and his wife Eliza Lipe raised eleven children, one of whom, William Anthony Brooks, acquired 80 acres of the family land in 1872.

            William managed a typical Hawkins County farm, producing corn, wheat, vegetables and cattle. He also made and sold furniture and caskets. Both enterprises were prosperous enough that William purchased 55 additional acres of land from his father in 1891.

            In 1927, Lida Mae Wright Brooks inherited 135 acres of the original Brooks Farm. The great great granddaughter of the founders, she lives in the original homeplace, which has been remodeled and expanded throughout the decades. Her children, Robert, Mack, George and Alma Brooks, work the land, cultivating tobacco, hay and vegetables and raising cattle.

 

Campbell Acres Farm

John L. Campbell

            Another Century Farm in Hawkins County that is over 200 years old is the Campbell Acres Farm. Thomas and Delphia Caldwell established the farm in 1782, acquiring 400 acres within one mile of Surgoinsville. Their labor yielded several different types of livestock and foodstuffs, including sorghum, geese and oxen.

            Twenty years after the farm’s establishment, James S. Caldwell inherited the land from his parents. He raised more specialized crops and considered corn, wheat, hay and livestock to be his commodities for market.

            The farm passed through different generations of the family for the next 100 years and in 1939, Mrs. Effie W. Campbell, the widow of James L. Campbell, acquired the property. Today, her son John L. Campbell owns the land and  produces corn, tobacco, hay and cattle on the farm.

 

Circle J. Farm

William Joe Manes

Elizabeth Rose Kite Manes

            The Circle J. Farm was founded by George Kite who came to Hawkins County, Tennessee in March of 1796 from Rockingham County, Virginia. George was accompanied by 50 other pioneers who came through the “unbroken forests of Virginia and settled in the Holston valley.” In order to protect the settlement, the pioneers built a fort on the site. Eventually, this site that was located six miles south of Rogersville became the property known as Circle J. Farm. Under George’s ownership, the 600 acres produced horses, cattle, hay and corn. Married to Susan Barrett Kite, the couple had three children.

            Their son, John Kite was the next owner. John, who was a Revolutionary war veteran, worked the land and raised horses, cattle, hay and corn. He wed Betsy Louderback and they had six children. Their names were Elizabeth, Martin, Mary, Henry, George and James.

            The third owner of the land was Martin Kite, Sr. Married to Susannah A. Kite, the couple had nine children. Their son Martin Kite, Jr. became the next owner. During the Civil War, a troop of Union soldiers camped on the farm.

As time moved on, Martin’s son, David S. Kite acquired the land. He fathered seven children. After David died, Joe bought out the other heirs and became the sole owner of the land. Along with his wife, Mildred Burchette, they raised one daughter named Elizabeth Rose Kite. Eventually, Elizabeth became the next generation to own the farm. She married W. C. Manes and they had one son named William Joe Manes.

            Today, Elizabeth and her son, William Joe Manes still own the farm. The farm now produces corn, hay, wheat, oats, tobacco, sugar cane, cows, goats, hogs and chickens. A corn crib and a barn that were built in the nineteenth century are still standing and being used today.

 

Fudge Farm

Ella M. Fudge

            The Fudge Farm, which is located twelve miles east of Rogersville, is the second Century Farm in Hawkins County to evolve from the original 1852 estate of Conrad Fudge. It gains special significance for the number of its remaining mid-1800s buildings. In 1948, Ella M. Fudge inherited 76 acres of the family land. The founders’ great granddaughter, Ella lives in a mid-nineteenth century two-story brick dwelling. A log granary, barn and smokehouse, each at least 100 years old, are intact and in use. Together with a farm tenant, Miss Fudge operates a property that yields tobacco, hay, grass and cattle.

 

Kirkpatrick Farm

Charles Randolph Kirkpatrick

Martha K. Nelson

            Farmhouse on the Kirkpatrick FarmIn 1834, Aaron Mooney founded the Kirkpatrick Farm, which is located on Berry Road in Hawkins County. Mooney lived on 694 acres, a portion of which once served as an Indian campground. Married three times, he had ten children and the family annually planted several types of crops and raised livestock. They also cultivated flax, the raw material for ropes and cloth.

            Anna Mooney Kirkpatrick inherited 440 acres of the farm from her parents in 1889. Together with her husband James Kirkpatrick they changed the direction of the farming operation. Rather than raising sheep, mules and horses, the Kirkpatricks specializes in breeding cattle. They also raised cotton for family use instead of flax and other coarse materials for their clothes.

            In 1962, the farm passed into the hands of the founder’s great grandson C. Randolph Kirkpatrick and Martha K. Nelson. Randolph, as of 1976, operated 552 acres of the original farm, growing tobacco, hay, corn and small grains while raising beef cattle. He also reported that a nineteenth-century granary and corn crib still stood on the family land.

Photo: The farmhouse on the Kirkpatrick Farm.

 

Little Valley Farm

Howard D. Klepper

            Located in the Alum Well community, Little Valley Farm’s founders were Elijah and Sarah Hennard, who initially acquired 473 acres in 1852. The Hennards, together with their ten children, managed a traditional East Tennessee farm that yielded livestock, corn and wheat.

            S. D. Brice, the founders’ grandson, purchased at least 300 acres of the original farm in 1886. He added sheep to the farm’s products. Unmarried, Brice deeded the farm to his sister Alice Hennard Shanks in 1916. The family reports that under Alice and her husband James’ ownership the farm’s crops and livestock remained unchanged.

            At her mother’s death in 1942, Eva Shanks Klepper, the founders’ great granddaughter, inherited the family land. Eva and her husband Fred raised three children. In addition, the Kleppers worked the farm’s first tobacco fields.

            The founders’ great great grandson Howard D. Klepper obtained 300 acres of the original farm in 1975. As of the following year, Howard farmed a total of 407 acres, specializing in tobacco and beef cattle. The homestead’s original log house, although covered by weatherboard and enlarged, still stood on the property, along with a portion of a nineteenth century log barn. 

Long Meadow Farm

Robert Miller Young, Jr.

Georgiana Young Pearson

Frances Young Torbett

The Long Meadow Farm is located 2 miles north of Surgoinsville and was founded by William Young in 1791. Married to Carolyn Walker, the couple had five children. Prior to establishing the farm, William and his son John participated in the Revolutionary War. John Young served as a private in the Ballard’s Company in North Carolina.

            The next owner of the farm was John Young. While managing the farm, he and his wife Margaret Galbraith raised twelve children. Their son, John Young, II became the third generation to own the land. Like many Tennesseans, John and his son Wylie participated in the Civil War by serving on the Confederate side. 

As time moved on, the farm was acquired by Wylie Miller Young. Along with his wife, Ida Whitlock, they managed the farm and raised four children. However, one of their children, died at an early age. Eventually, the farm was passed on to the three remaining children, Henry, Frances and Robert.

Under the siblings ownership, the farm produced tobacco, wheat, cattle and sheep. Henry never married, however, his sister Frances married Charles Edward Schumacher. Although Frances was married she never had any children.

Robert married Naomi White Fulkerson and their children became the current owners of the land.

Today, Robert Miller, Jr., Georgiana Young Pearson and Frances Young Torbett continue to manage the farm but they lease the land to Darrell Brewer, who has no relation to the family. The farm now mainly produces tobacco and beef cattle. The farm is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and has many buildings from the nineteenth century that still stand. Some of the buildings include a log corn crib, a stable, a log kitchen, a log spring house, a log smoke house and a main farm house.

Photo: The farmhouse on the Long Meadow Farm.

 

Lyonsdale Farm

Jessie Lyons Brown

Lyonsdale Farm House

Around 1806, William and Matilda Lyons established the Lyonsdale Farm in Hawkins County. On 1,640 acres, they raised tobacco and cattle. In addition to farming, William partnered with his son David and established a store known as William Lyons and Son and called locally “Lyons Store”.  The two-story brick building, which was operated as a store from about 1800 to 1900, also served as the Lyons Post Office from 1837 to 1866.  The conscription center for the Confederacy was also located at this building.  Located on the stage road, now Highway 11W,  William and Matilda also operated an inn and way station in their home .  Nine children were born to the couple.

            The next owner of the land was their son, Clinton Gallagher Lyons. Married to Margaret Lavinia Cooke, the couple raised five children.  During this generation,  the farm continued to support primary crops including tobacco, livestock, and a variety of grains and vegetables. As time moved on, the farm was passed to Clinton’s son, William Cooke Lyons and then it was acquired by William’s son, George Conner Lyons.  He and his wife, Jessie Powell Draper, they had four children, Mary Elizabeth, Virginia Ewing, Frances Draper and Jessie Goodbar.

            In 1966, the great, great granddaughter of the founder, Jessie Lyons Brown acquired the farm.  She and her husband, William Horatio Brown, IV, oversee the farm’s management, leasing it to Wayne Byington who raises tobacco, cattle and hay.  A two-story log home, built in 1891, the historic Lyons Store and Post Office building, and a blacksmith shop that were constructed in the late nineteenth century are reminders of the two hundred years of farming history that the Lyons family celebrates this year.  

Photo: The farm house on the Lyonsdale Farm.

Maple Hill Farm

Jane Fudge Cole

Eula Fudge Parker

Mary Ann Fudge Range

            A native of Virginia, Conrad Fudge founded Maple Hill Farm in 1852. Conrad and his wife Louisa McGhee purchased 213 acres of land twelve miles east of Rogersville where the “Old Stage Road” passed in front of their farmhouse. A founder of the Fudge’s Chapel Methodist Church, Conrad was a traditional East Tennessee farmer who practiced mixed agriculture.

            John Frankin Fudge, Conrad and Louisa’s only living descendent, inherited the entire farm in 1891. Besides introducing new types of livestock to the farm, John continued to operate the family’s sorghum mill. He further supplemented his farm income by serving as the Surgoinsville postmaster for fourteen years. Married twice, John had six children and his son Charles H. Fudge obtained 74 acres of the family land in 1927. Charles directed most of his farming efforts toward cultivating tobacco and raising cattle. His daughter Jane Fudge Cole inherited 56 acres of the farm in 1969. Today she continues to live at Maple Hill and manage its everyday operations. Jane shares ownership of the property with her daughters Eula Parker and Mary Ann Range.

 

Moore Farm

Howard G. Moore

            MuleIn 1834, James Moore, Sr. founded the Moore Farm in Hawkins County. On 150 acres, he raised tobacco, corn, wheat, beef cattle and mules. Married to Ann Beckner Moore, the couple had five children. Their names were, Elizabeth, Eliza, James, Jr., John Rufus and Martha.

            The next owner of the land was John Rufus Moore. Under his ownership, the farm produced the same livestock and crops as the founder. While managing the farm, John Rufus built a smokehouse and a cellar on the property. In 1864, he enlisted in the Third Tennessee Mounted Infantry for 100 days and was on guard duty as corporal along the line of the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railway. In 1871, John Rufus wed Emily A. McCullough and they had four children. From 1881 to 1886, John Rufus sold agriculture implements at a location near his residence. According to the family, John Rufus hauled the implements from a rail sighting at Rogersville Junction, known today as Bulls Gap. After hauling them to his shop, John assembled the parts and resold them to farmers in the community.

In addition to serving the community with agricultural implements, John’s farm served as a stopping point for many people who took their horses and mules to Morristown, Tennessee to be resold. John provided shelter for the horses and mules and allowed the men to stay over night at house before they left for Morristown in the morning.

Eventually, John’s son, Dorsey James Moore became the third generation to own the farm. Under his ownership, the farm produced corn, wheat, cattle, sheep, horses and mules. Dorsey married Myrtle Grisgby Moore and they had four children.

As time moved on, the land was acquired by Dorsey’s son, Vernon C. Moore and eventually it was passed on to Vernon’s son, Howard G. Moore. Today, Howard still owns the land. Along with his wife, Vivian Cooter Moore, they cultivate corn, wheat and tobacco and raise mules and hogs. In addition to managing the farm, the couple had two children, John Howard Moore and Scarlett Sue Moore. A farm house, a smokehouse and cellar that were built in 1866 and a house and barn that were constructed in 1900 still stand on the land today.

 

Photo: A mule on the Moore Farm.

Orricks Homeplace

Frank and Alva Orrick

Log Cabin

            In 1877, John Orrick established the Orricks Homeplace farm in the Big Hill community of Hawkins County. On fifty acres, the farm raised corn, sugar cane, beans, tomatoes, strawberries, apples, cattle and hogs. Married to Rainy Orrick, the couple had one son named Samuel R. Orrick.

Under Samuel’s ownership, the farm produced tobacco, strawberries, corn, oats, hay and molasses. In addition, he raised cattle, horses, mules and hogs. Along with his wife, Hattie Steadman Orrick, they had six children. Their names were Maggie, Viola, Frank, Ellen, Kyle and Samuel Edgar Orrick, Jr.

            In 1952, Frank and his wife Alva Orrick, acquired the farm. Today, Frank and Alva continue to own the farm and live on the land with their daughter, Geraldine Seals and her sons, Curtis, Chris and Frankie. Currently, the farm produces cattle, goats, young heifers and poultry. In addition, the acreage yields tobacco and vegetables. A log house made from hand hewn timbers that was constructed in 1846 still stands and the owners live in it. In addition to the log house, a corn crib, a smoke house and a barn built in the nineteenth century continue to be used as well.

Photo: The log house on the Orricks Homeplace Farm.

 

Rolling Acres Farm

 Mary Lucille Arnett Ryan

Frederick Ryan

            Between the late 1700s and World War II, the innovations of progressive farming transformed Rolling Acres Farm into one of East Tennessee’s most modern agricultural operations. Established by John and Winnie Grigsby in 1789, Rolling Acres Farm is located six miles southeast of Rogersville. The Grigsbys produced many types of farm commodities, including flax and fruit in addition to the standard crops and livestock of East Tennessee. They also donated land for the construction of the Grigsby school, a place where their seven children could receive a rudimentary education.

            James David Grigsby was born in 1752 to John Grisgsby, a private in John Willis's company during the Revolutionary War. He married Winfred Breeding and moved to Hawkins County, which was then in the State of North Carolina and purchased two hundred plus acres of land on the South side of the Holston River on July 28, 1789. The couple had thirteen children, but their son, Nathaniel Grigsby inherited the family’s 250 acres in 1859 and tilled the land for the next four decades. Nathaniel married Elizabeth Lauderback and they had one son, James David Grigsby. James married Frances Gulley and in 1899, their daughter Lucy Anne and her husband Louis M. Arnott acquired the property. Although the family planted the proven crops of East Tennessee, they also included honey, lye soap and turkeys among their agricultural products. They remember that “with the development of the tractor, farm plow and other tools, man’s work was made easier” and farm operations became more efficient.

            Edgar N. Arnott, the founders’ great grandson, acquired all 250 acres of the family land by 1949. Serving as the director of the county co-op and as a member of other agricultural and civic organizations, Edgar was an innovative farmer who was among the first in Hawkins County to electrify his farming operations and who instituted artificial breeding to improve his large dairy farming operations. 

            Edgar Arnott died in 1976 and willed his land to his wife Jewel Odom Arnott. Jewel was also active in several agricultural and civic organizations and was president of the Hawkins County Home
Demonstration Club Council. Today the farm is owned by their daughter, Mary Lucille Arnett Ryan. Lucille married Frederick D. "Rip" Ryan who operated the dairy until they ceased dairy operations in 1989, when they converted to beef. Rip an Lucille had five children: Bridget, Frederica, Beth, Etta and Tim. After Rip's death in 1997, she has continued to work the two hundred year old farm with the help of her son, Timothy Arnott Ryan. The farm still produces corn, wheat, tobacco, and hay for their beef cattle operation. 

 

Sam P. Roark Farm

Pearle Roark Williams

Helen Roark Rogers

Agnes Yates

Sam L. Roark

Mrs. E. B. Bridges, Sr.

Walter A. Roark

Roger K. Roark

Farm house

Details on antebellum house construction highlight the story of the Roark Century Farm, founded by John Chestnutt in 1798. Chesnutt owned 50 acres of land located five miles southwest of Rogersville. A native of South Carolina, he came to Tennessee to homestead. His early success as a general farmer established the homestead and his land has remained in his descendants’ possession for over 180 years.

            The second generation owner was John’s son Rode Chestnutt, who directed his slaves in building a large brick house in 1842. According to the family, “the bricks were burned on the farm (and) the logs were cut and the woodwork in the house was hand carved.” Rode willed the farm to his daughter Mollie Chestnutt Kirkpatrick, the wife of William Kirkpatrick. The Kirkpatricks “owned and ran the first woolen mill in this part of the country.” Upon her husband’s death, Mollie married Sam P. Roark and they raised eight children. Sam “was a rural mail carrier, farmer, magistrate, deacon in the Presbyterian Church and a charter member of the Farm Bureau.”

            In 1964, Sam Roark died and the farm passed into the hands of his children. Walter A. and Roger K. Roark, as of 1976, worked the farm, raising cattle, tobacco, wheat, corn and hay. The brick farmhouse of 1842 is intact and used as a dwelling.

Photo: The brick farmhouse on the Sam P. Roark Farm was built in 1842.

 

Talley Farm

Robert C. Talley and Cornie K. Talley

            Located twelve miles south of Rogersville, the Talley Farm was founded by Kinchen Miller in 1889. On 42 acres, Kinchen cultivated corn, small grain and hay. In addition, he raised cattle and hogs. Married twice, he fathered eight children.

Kinchen’s son, Benjamin Franklin Miller was the second generation to own the land. Prior to becoming the owner of the property, Ben and his three children from his first marriage came from Washington County to live with his parents. In 1892, Benjamin married again and he fathered three more children. While raising children, Benjamin also managed the farm that produced wheat, corn, hay, cattle, hogs and horses. 

Benjamin’s daughter, Lucy Myrtle Miller Talley became the next owner of the farm. Under her ownership, the farm experienced some changes with the remodeling of the farmhouse and the construction of a tobacco barn. In addition to improving the farm, Lucy operated a community grocery store. Along with her husband, Thurman A. Talley, the couple had three children. Their names were Olen A. Talley, Mary Miller Talley, and Robert C. Talley.

In 1988, the great grandson of the founder, Robert C. Talley acquired the farm. Today, the farm produces corn, hay, tobacco and cattle. Robert has continued to improve the farm by building new barns, fences and another farm house. While he farms full-time, he also works for the A. S. C. office measuring crops and works part-time on the tobacco market.

 

Valley Breeze Farm

Sidney Turner

            William and Jemima Pullen Phillips established Valley Breeze Farm in 1791. Their initial 640 acres are located in the St. Clair community of Hawkins County. Practicing general farming, the Phillips and their nine children “were hardworkers and neighborly.”

            Charlotte Phillips Arnott and her husband Minnis inherited 84 acres of the farm in 1899. Two years earlier, Minnis had contributed to a written history of Hawkins County. According to the family, he “was very poor in early life but by working as a carpenter and blacksmith, he was the owner of several hundred acres of farm land by the time of his death.” During Charlotte and Minnis’ ownership, the farm produced grain, cattle, swine, fruit, vegetables and sugar cane.

            In 1907, William Minnis Kite received 84 acres of the original Phillips farm. William constructed a new barn and corn crib, along with several smaller outbuildings. He also used a tenant house to build an addition to the family home. Married to Elsie Haun and the father of two daughters, William was an early member of the Hawkins County Farm Bureau and helped “build and maintain the first telephone lines in our community.” Like so many twentieth century farmers, he cultivated tobacco as a major cash crop.

            Ruth Kite Turner, the wife of Bruce Turner, inherited 84 acres from her parents in 1940. Forty-six years later, the Turners still manage the farm, which totaled 90 acres. Although Fred Hurd now leases a portion of the land, Mrs. Turner points out that “all six of her children-Alvin, William, Lana, Fred, Sidney and Judy-did their share of work in developing the farm and maintaining it.” The Turners’ story of families working together to keep a farm vibrant and alive is a story shared by all of Tennessee’s Century Farms.