Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

‘Constant care’

Enola farm recognized as Century Farm

- BY CAROL ROLF Contributi­ng Writer

The Hoggard-Stevenson Union Valley Farm in Faulkner County dates back to 1878, when William C. Hoggard purchased about 80 acres from his brother, Thomas Hoggard. That first parcel grew to eight parcels, with William’s daughter, Eva Dee Hoggard, and her husband, Marvin Felix Stevenson, purchasing additional land in 1917.

Those eight parcels include 311 acres that were recently honored by the Arkansas Century Farm program as one of 30 2020 Arkansas Century Farms. Eleven grandchild­ren of the late Eva and Marvin Stevenson now own the farm.

One of the Stevensons’ grandchild­ren, Dee “Ann” Elizabeth Stevenson Grigsby, and her husband, Grady Anthony Grigsby, of Little Rock attended the Dec. 11 ceremony in Little Rock to receive the official sign denoting the land as a Century Farm. Thirty farms from 23 counties in Arkansas received recognitio­n in the 2020 Arkansas Century Farm Program, administer­ed by the Arkansas Department of Agricultur­e. The program, establishe­d in 2012, recognizes Arkansas farms of 10 acres or more owned by the same family for at least 100 years.

“The Hoggard-Stevenson Union Valley Farm not only survives in our family’s collective memories, but our ancestral home lives on as a working farm where our kin still tend the land, harvest hay and raise cattle,” Ann Grigsby wrote in the Century Farm applicatio­n. “We are thankful for their stewardshi­p and for our shared 142 years of continuous family ownership. With its longevity, constant care, use and agricultur­al productivi­ty, we believe the Hoggard-Stevenson Union Valley Farm qualifies to be honored as an Arkansas Century Farm.”

Ann said another family, that of Tennessee “Tandy” Harned, has owned and farmed part of the land as well.

In addition to 120 acres Harned bought from W.C. Hoggard and sold to Marvin Stevenson, Tandy Harned also owned other neighborin­g land, passed down to his descendant­s, two of whom are his great-greatgrand­sons, brothers Jeffrey and Billy Todd Harned, who own land adjacent to the Hoggard-Stevenson farm.

“One of Tandy Harned’s sons was William Walker Harned,” Ann said. “He became our uncle Walker when he married Jenetta ‘Nettie’ Hoggard, a sister of our grandmothe­r Eva Hoggard [Stevenson]. The other son was Nollie Hoggard, who was the grandfathe­r of Jeffrey and Billy Todd, the brothers who now look after our farm.

“Our Harned cousins have always been esteemed members of our family,” Ann said.

Eva Dee and Marvin Stevenson had four children — Raymond Felix, born in 1916; Marjorie Marie, born in 1918; Millard Gail, born in 1922; and Amaryllis Marguerite, born in 1918. All are now deceased.

Raymond and his wife, Ann Calvert, are parents of Ann Grigsby, the late John Raymond Stevenson, who died in Vietnam in 1968, and Kent Calvert Stevenson of Oregon.

Marjorie Marie and her husband, Valmar V. Hendrix, are parents of Brian Stevenson of Florida, Craig Stevenson of Tennessee, Anita Stevenson of Maryland and Susan Stevenson Swanson of Arizona.

Millard “Gail” and his wife, Joyce Biggs, are parents of Michael Gail Stevenson of Texas.

Amaryllis “Amy” Marguerite and her husband, Don Jones, are parents of Charles Jones of Georgia, Beth Jones of Missouri, Katherine Jones of Colorado and Scott Jones of Little Rock.

“My grandfathe­r Stevenson — ‘Granddad’— was an extremely hard worker and a no-nonsense man whose word and will were law,” Ann said.

“Granddad’s father had died before he was born, and the loss of never having known his birth father was always a sorrow to him, even though his very stern mother eventually remarried and had more children,” Ann said.

“Fortunatel­y, Granddad was also a man of very high ethical and spiritual standards; he truly loved his children and grandchild­ren but didn’t often express such feelings in direct affection. He had a very commanding voice — and a temper when riled —and expected his four children to work right along with him on the farm. Granddad carefully taught his two sons and two daughters — and eventually us 12 grandchild­ren — to be helpful workers on the farm, stressing the importance of using caution around the animals and machinery,” she said.

“Granddad farmed all his life and, in an early part of his adulthood, also ‘carried the mail’ … in a horse-drawn buggy and eventually also taught school. He had graduated college with complete command of American history, teaching the subject for decades in Faulkner County and later in Pulaski County. His brother-in-in-law, our Uncle Walker Harned, also taught in the local schools …,” Ann said.

“In later years, Granddaddy drove to Little Rock to teach in the Pulaski County Special School District, but he remained active in Faulkner County,” she said. “Because of his prominence in the community and his speaking skills, whenever the preacher had to be absent in the little Church of the Nazarene he and Grandmothe­r attended, Granddad was often the substitute in the pulpit. … I loved to sing and was often asked to sing a ‘special’ [solo] on summer Sundays,” she said.

“Grandmothe­r tended to be shy, but in the growing seasons, she always brought huge bouquets to church, setting the vases atop the piano and also near the pulpit. … I loved that old church and the covered ‘campground’ directly opposite from the church, an arbor where revivals were held every summer,” Ann said.

“I spent every summer of my young life on the Union Valley farm, and also the second farm my grandparen­ts eventually bought in Vilonia, roaming all over both farms with my cousins and two brothers,” she said. “But we also harvested hay and fished for crappie and catfish with bamboo poles on the grassy banks of the farm ponds. …

“They bought the second farm while continuing to farm the Union Valley land. The ‘new’ farm had a wonderful apple orchard and pear trees. … The local Amish family would bring their horse-drawn wagons to harvest some of the fruit, paying the small price Granddad asked by writing their bank check in pencil.”

Ann said her grandparen­ts “started a dairy business on the ‘new’ farm, which Grandmothe­r managed largely on her own … but occasional­ly hired a local boy to help. Every summer, my two brothers, cousin Mike and I helped with the cows and other farmwork. The dairy was a huge job. …

“Grandmothe­r finally sold the Vilonia farm several years after Granddad died very unexpected­ly,” Ann said. “He farmed up to the very day he died, even though a decade earlier, he had lost his left hand in a hay baler when he was attempting to redirect some hay into the machinery. He never allowed that handicap to slow him down, and we never heard him complain about the prosthetic hand that was minimally useful.”

After losing her husband, Eva Stevenson continued to live alone on the farm for several more years.

“Ultimately, she was persuaded to move to Conway. There she lived in one side of a new duplex while her sister, Nettie, who had also been widowed, lived on the other side …, Ann said.

“Both lived for many more years; Aunt Nettie died in 1981 at age 91, and Grandmothe­r died in 1992 at 95,” Ann said.

“This Union Valley farm was the ‘home place’ of our forebears,” she said. “For we grandchild­ren who are Eva Dee Hoggard Stevenson heirs, all our lives, we’ve known and cherished the farm as the ancestral home. Our grandfathe­r … predecease­d our grandmothe­r … and their last surviving child and heir died in 2018.

“We 11 surviving grandchild­ren are now Grandmothe­r Stevenson’s only heirs. The farm has been a prominent figure throughout our entire lives as we shared childhood adventures in its broad fields and dense forests, helped with hay harvests and gathered countless heartfelt memories.”

Michael Stevenson of Texarkana, Texas, 78, is the oldest of the Stevenson grandchild­ren and the executor of Eva Dee Stevenson’s estate.

“I have many memories of our Union Valley farm. I’m not much of a cattle farmer, but my wife and I do live on a beautiful farm near Texarkana owned by her family,” he said.

“I help take care of pastures, feed the cattle and keep an eye on the herd. This is after 50 years of living away from the area and working as an engineer and science administra­tor. So, though it’s somewhat accidental, I’ve gone full circle with my early farm life in Arkansas,” Michael said.

“I’m the only grandchild in this family who now has any associatio­n with farming. As to the children of Marvin and Eva, only my dad, Gail, ever tried farming, but only for a few years after he came back from World War II service. He and Ray were both engineers and lived in a number of different places, as did Margie and Amy,” Michael said.

“I lived most of my younger years with my parents and Stevenson grandparen­ts on our ‘home farm’ near Vilonia, but made many trips, especially during haying season, to the Union Valley farm. I would go with my grandfathe­r Marvin almost daily to the Union Valley farm and started hauling hay from there by age 12 or so. I moved with my parents to New Boston, Texas, in 1956, the year I started high school, but still went and stayed summers with my grandparen­ts on the Vilonia farm while working hay and cattle,” Michael said.

“My most vivid memories are from the summer of 1963. This was after my junior year in college at the University of Texas-Austin. I had gone with my parents to Cape Canaveral, where my father would be working on the Saturn program and where I hoped to find summer employment,” he said.

“On the way there, we got word that Grandfathe­r Marvin had lost most of his left arm in a hay-baler accident, so I was sent back to help out that summer. My grandfathe­r was slowed down for a few weeks but went right back to driving and haying with a vengeance,” Michael said.

“The Union Valley farm was always beautiful to me, and I roamed all over it as a kid,” he said. “Granddad always cared for the pastures and … he told me a lot about the history. … He was a history teacher, among other occupation­s.

“We are all very proud of the Century Farm honor, as it reflects on the hard work and perseveran­ce of our Stevenson grandparen­ts and their parents before them. Land was always so important to all those folks.”

For more informatio­n about the Arkansas Century Farm Program, visit agricultur­earkansas.gov.

 ?? CAROL ROLF/CONTRIBUTI­NG PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Dee “Ann” Elizabeth Stevenson Grigsby and her husband, Grady Anthony Grigsby, display the official Arkansas Century Farm sign at their home in Little Rock. Ann is one of 11 heirs of the Eva Dee Hoggard Stevenson estate; Eva and her husband, Marvin Felix Stevenson, owned the Hoggard-Stevenson Union Valley Farm in Faulkner County for many years. The Hoggard-Stevenson Union Valley Farm was establishe­d in 1878 and is a 2020 Arkansas Century Farm.
CAROL ROLF/CONTRIBUTI­NG PHOTOGRAPH­ER Dee “Ann” Elizabeth Stevenson Grigsby and her husband, Grady Anthony Grigsby, display the official Arkansas Century Farm sign at their home in Little Rock. Ann is one of 11 heirs of the Eva Dee Hoggard Stevenson estate; Eva and her husband, Marvin Felix Stevenson, owned the Hoggard-Stevenson Union Valley Farm in Faulkner County for many years. The Hoggard-Stevenson Union Valley Farm was establishe­d in 1878 and is a 2020 Arkansas Century Farm.
 ??  ?? The Harned-Stevenson house, shown here in about 1930, was built in about 1885. When Eva Dee and Marvin Stevenson purchased land from Tennessee “Tandy” Harned in 1917, the land included the house. Originally, the house had two log sections separated by a “dog-trot.” It was closed in and a kitchen added later, with the milled lumber siding added at that time.
The Harned-Stevenson house, shown here in about 1930, was built in about 1885. When Eva Dee and Marvin Stevenson purchased land from Tennessee “Tandy” Harned in 1917, the land included the house. Originally, the house had two log sections separated by a “dog-trot.” It was closed in and a kitchen added later, with the milled lumber siding added at that time.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTOS ?? William C. Hoggard farms in the early 1900s in Faulkner County
SUBMITTED PHOTOS William C. Hoggard farms in the early 1900s in Faulkner County
 ??  ?? William C. Hoggard and his wife, Sarah Elizabeth, were parents of three daughters, from left, Eva Dee, Louise and Jenetta, shown in about 1910. Eva Dee married Marvin Felix Stevenson, and the couple farmed in Faulkner County, combining parts of the Hoggard farm with the land they bought in 1917. Eva’s other two sisters never lived on the farm as adults. They inherited their onethird share of the Hoggard part of the farm, but Eva and Marvin later bought the sisters’ shares.
William C. Hoggard and his wife, Sarah Elizabeth, were parents of three daughters, from left, Eva Dee, Louise and Jenetta, shown in about 1910. Eva Dee married Marvin Felix Stevenson, and the couple farmed in Faulkner County, combining parts of the Hoggard farm with the land they bought in 1917. Eva’s other two sisters never lived on the farm as adults. They inherited their onethird share of the Hoggard part of the farm, but Eva and Marvin later bought the sisters’ shares.
 ??  ?? Eva Dee Hoggard and Marvin Felix Stephenson were married Nov. 3, 1912, when she was 16. Family members said this photo might have been taken on her wedding day.
Eva Dee Hoggard and Marvin Felix Stephenson were married Nov. 3, 1912, when she was 16. Family members said this photo might have been taken on her wedding day.
 ??  ?? William C. Hoggard in about 1890
William C. Hoggard in about 1890

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