Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
University of California
Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources

Kern County farming families with a 100-year legacy to be honored by UC Cooperative Extension

A UC Cooperative Extension septic tank demonstration project in Kern County.
Fourteen families who have a farming heritage in Kern County stretching back more than 100 years will be honored Aug. 21 by UC Cooperative Extension, which itself is celebrating 100 years of service to local farms and families.

In 1914, Congress and the president realized that, in order to feed a great nation, ag research advances from top universities had to reach farmers. So they created Cooperative Extension. For 100 years, Cooperative Extension academics have worked side-by-side with farmers to boost yields, battle pests, ensure food safety, protect the environment and make the best use of irrigation water available.

Some of the families to be honored Thursday are:

The Carver-Bowel family
The first generation of the Carver-Bowel family came by wagon train to California in 1850. Six generations have worked the cattle ranch that straddles the Kern-Tulare county line.

The Porter family
Farmer Dick Porter's grandfather planted oranges in Kern County in 1902. When the trees produced fruit, he hooked up his private train car to a trainload of Midwesterners to sell them land where they could grow "California gold." (A photo of the train car is below.)

The Fry family
Like UC Cooperative Extension, the Fry Ranch got its start in 1914. Mary Rebecca Yarnell Fry Lamb purchased 20 acres of undeveloped land in the Shafter area. In time, the family began a dairy and grew feed for the milk cows. They acquired land and, over 100 years, grew everything from alfalfa to wheat.

"When Kern County was created, the flatlands were considered uninhabitable, but over the years determined farming families put down roots and became the foundation of an industry that now produces farm crops valued at more than $6 billion a year," Marsh said. "Agricultural research and teaching have played a tremendous role in achieving that milestone and will continue to do so in the future."

When:

5:30 to 8 p.m., Thursday, Aug. 21

Who:

Members of 14 local families who have been farming in Kern County for more than 100 years

Leticia Perez, Chair of the Kern County Board of Supervisors

Zack Scrivner, District 2, Kern County Board of Supervisors

Helene Dillard, Dean of the UC Davis College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences

UC Cooperative Extension Kern County academic staff

Where:

Kern Agricultural Pavilion, 3300 E. Belle Terrace, Bakersfield

Info:

Brian Marsh, director, UC Cooperative Extension, Kern County
(661) 868-6210, bhmarsh@ucdavis.edu

 

The Porter family rail car used to entice Midwestern families to Kern County.
Posted on Friday, August 15, 2014 at 9:41 AM
Tags: Kern County (4)

Comments:

1.
Was Porterville named after the Porter family?

Posted by Lauren M. McNees on August 15, 2014 at 1:23 PM

2.
According to the article about Porterville, Ca, on Wikipedia, the town was named after Royal Porter Putnam, who in 1860 settled in the village growing around the Tule River Station of the Butterfield Overland Mail. Putnam bought 40 acres of land and built a store and hotel. The town took it's name from the founder's first name because another Putnam family lived south of town.

Posted by Jeannette E. Warnert on August 18, 2014 at 9:17 AM

3.
Hi Regarding the Fry farm Shafter:  
Just wanted to mention that my mother Carmen Beltran Nadal was born 9-22-1922 on the Fry Farm that was located at Scaroni rd just north of Merced ave in Shafter ca. Carmen was born and lived in the Fry's Barn with her dad and mother until about 1930 when the family moved into Wasco and they build an adobe house on 15th street, Carmen still lives in wasco and will be 95 yrs old..  
Carmen said the Fry's would come to the farm once a moth to pay the workers.

Posted by maurice nadal on June 8, 2017 at 8:36 PM

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