Texarkana Gazette

Augusta farm stands test of time

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AUGUSTA, Ga. — Mud, sweat and gears.

The words, printed on a recent birthday T-shirt, show the effort by Charles Thompson, his brother Harold and their ancestors to sustain their Augusta farm for more than 100 years.

Augusta’s largest commodity farm and oldest African Americanow­ned business, which was honored on Oct. 4 as a Georgia Centennial Family Farm, did not survive by happenstan­ce.

Now more than 2,200 acres of choice river-bottom land five miles from downtown Augusta, the farm endured mud — from both its floodplain location and in mudslingin­g by others to take it, Thompson said.

His father’s trusted attorney nearly caused the family to lose much of the farm in the 1960s, he said. After his father suffered a stroke, the prominent Augusta attorney advised him to sell much of the land — to the attorney and a group of investors.

Digging into the records, the younger Thompson realized his father’s will needed changes to ensure the farm stayed with the family. Few local lawyers would take the case, but eventually Thompson said he found one.

“He got in there, he got things straighten­ed out and got his will corrected so we wouldn’t be in a bind,” Thompson said. “If we hadn’t dug into this and been really on top of it, we could have lost it.”

Keeping a farm in successful, continuous operation meant keeping a close eye on many moisture-related factors — temperatur­e, drought — to avoid worm and insect invasions or simply too much rain, he said.

The farm has never relied on any other source of water besides precipitat­ion, Thompson said.

“Down in the river bottom so far, we’ve been able to get by with so-called dry land farming,” he said.

The amount of human sweat has gone down with the third word, gears, he said.

“From one-row equipment to eight- to 12-row equipment — and equipment that drives itself now,” he said. “From controllin­g weeds and grasses with steel to controllin­g them with chemicals.”

Augusta historian Joyce Law said she and County Extension Agent Campbell Vaughn compiled much of the informatio­n to apply for the centennial honor from Thompson family, legal and city records.

The 100-year designatio­n dates to the 1918 purchase by the Thompson brothers’ grandmothe­r — John Ann Crosby Thompson — of 660 river-bottom acres and the farm’s uninterrup­ted operation since, Law said.

Vaughn said the grandmothe­r’s land purchase most impressed him.

“It’s an amazing thing — this African American lady didn’t even have the right to vote but bought hundreds and hundreds of acres of land and managed a huge operation.”

Thompson said it was definitely his grandmothe­r, not his grandfathe­r, who ran the farm.

“When folks see that, how amazing that was, but she had a head for business,” he said. “From my understand­ing, she ran things and he helped out.”

Many blacks lost their farms over the years, as did many whites, Thompson said. Black farmers often lost farms because the younger generation left the South to find better jobs elsewhere, and those left behind lost track of the business, he said.

Black or mixed-race farmers owned 235,289 acres in 2,055 Georgia farms in 2017, out of the state’s combined 40,500 farms, according to the U.S. Census of Agricultur­e.

The Thompsons’ land holdings actually date to 1870 during Reconstruc­tion with purchases closer to downtown Augusta, according to Law’s research.

In 1875, the brothers’ great-grandfathe­r, Charlie Crosby, won first place in a state competitio­n for his mule, Stonewall, and the family’s continued success as draymen — drivers of a low, flat-bed wagon without sides — enabled his daughter to pay off the 1918 mortgage in three years, Law wrote.

The family has made other historic contributi­ons to Augusta, Law said.

John Ann Crosby Thompson’s husband, John Thompson, was a charter member of the Augusta NAACP branch and its only farmer. In 1928, he was president of the Richmond County Republican Party.

Their uncle, Edwin Thompson, was a corporal in the World War I 325th (Colored) Field Signal Battalion, when the Army first recruited college-educated African American men to serve in the signal corps.

More recently, Harold Thompson was the 1959 valedictor­ian at Lucy Craft Laney High School and was one of the first African Americans to graduate from Augusta College, Law said.

The extensive applicatio­n process was assisted by the city planning, IT, tax commission, city commission and cemetery department­s; county extension; the Augusta Library’s Georgia Room staff; the Savannah Riverkeepe­r; the Lucy Craft Laney Museum of Black History; Historic Augusta’s Erick Montgomery, who provided vintage maps; and others, Law said.

Mayor Hardie Davis presented Thompson with a key to the city and on Oct. 4, Law, Vaughn and Commission­er Bill Fennoy went with the two brothers and nearly 20 family members to the Georgia National Fair in Perry to receive their award.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Charles Thompson photograph­ed Oct. 2 at his east Augusta, Ga., farm.
Associated Press ■ Charles Thompson photograph­ed Oct. 2 at his east Augusta, Ga., farm.

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