Five To Be Inducted In Agriculture Hall Of Fame, Including Reed and Fitch
The Arkansas Agriculture Hall of Fame will induct five new members, including the late State Sen. Jon Fitch and former Arkansas Farm Bureau president, the late Stanley Reed.
The new inductees include:
Dr. Lionel Barton of Fayetteville (Washington County), poultry specialist and professor emeritus with the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service. Barton dedicated his career to strengthening the poultry industry in Arkansas and was instrumental in the development of the University’s Poultry Center for Excellence.
Abraham Carpenter Sr. of Grady (Lincoln County), founder and owner of Carpenter produce, a 1,500-acre, family-run enterprise that has supplied quality produce to the state and nation for more than 40 years.
Jon S. Fitch (deceased), a former state senator and director of the Arkansas Livestock and Poultry Commission. Among other accomplishments, Fitch was instrumental in the eradication of the cattle disease brucellosis in Arkansas.
Stanley E. Reed (deceased), former chair of the University of Arkansas Board of Trustees and president of the Arkansas Farm Bureau Federation. Reed was a cotton and soybean farmer from Lee County who spent his life advocating for and furthering the cause of agriculture in Arkansas.
Howarth Erwin Taylor of Hickory Ridge (Cross County), president of Hickory Ridge Rice Farms, Taylor Seed Co. and Hickory Ridge Farm Supply Co. Taylor has been a leader in the rice industry for more than 60 years.
The inductees will be honored at a luncheon on March 9 at 11:30 am at Little Rock’s Embassy Suites Hotel. Luncheon tickets are $35 each and are available by calling (501) 228-1470.
The Agriculture Hall of Fame is sponsored by the Arkansas State Chamber of Commerce and Arkansas Farm Bureau and honors those who have made significant contributions to Arkansas agriculture and the state’s economy.