Adventists for Tomorrow

Our mission is to provide a free and open medium that will assist individuals in forming accurate, balanced, and thoughtful opinions regarding issues within and without the church.

You are not logged in.

Announcement

Due to a large increase in spam, I have frozen forum registration. If you are new to the site and want to register, e-mail me personally at vandolson@gmail.com. Thank you.

#1 03-16-09 1:08 am

don
Member
Registered: 12-28-08
Posts: 1,121

Adventism and Rural Life

<b><font color="ff0000">Adventism and Rural Life</font></b> <BR> <BR>Our readers here at atomorrow may enjoy an essay written by Oshawa Missionary College&#39;s farm manager, L. N. Holm in 1921.  <BR> <BR><i><font size="-1">&#40;Kingsway College&#39;s administration building has been named after this man.&#41;</font></i> <BR> <BR><a href="http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/ECM/ECM19210719-V21-29__B/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=1" target="_blank">Eastern Canadian Messenger, July 17, 1921, page 8</a> <BR> <BR><i><font size="-1">&#40;Holm describes the farm in detail and provides a theology of farming. This seems to reflect <a href="http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9A06E7D8173AE733A25757C2A96E9C946196D6CF" target="_blank">Teddy Roosevelt&#39;s support of rural life &#40;1910&#41;.</a></font></i><blockquote><b>The College Farm</b>  <BR> <BR>The college farm consists of two hundred and  fifteen arces of surveyed land. About one hundred acres of this is in pasture, ten acres in orchard, five acres in college campus, and one hundred acres in field.  <BR> <BR>The farm is equipped with good modern buildings, a herd of fifteen milch cows, three  teams of horses, one hundred and fifty White  Leghorn chickens, silo, and necessary farm  machinery.  <BR> <BR>It is situated in the southern Ontario fruit  belt, and the prospects for fruit growing are  very good. There is a fine orchard of select  trees which, when properly trimmed and cared  for, will become a valuable asset to the school.  Last year we picked about two hundred barrels  of apples which more than supplied our dining  department for the school year. We are work  ing on the orchard as fast as we can, and hope  to have it in good condition by another year.  Strawberries do very well in this locality and  raspberries exceptionally well. This spring we  set out three thousand of each, and hope to be  well supplied with these delicious fruits by next  year.  <BR> <BR>This land was occupied by tenants for a  number of years before it was purchased by the college, and in attempting to grow crops of any  kind we are constantly reminded of the double  curse resting on the earth because of sin. We  are trying to eradicate some of the foul weeds  by seeding much land into hay, summer fallow  ing a part, and planting as much as we can in  a hoe crop. Then we are building up the soil,  by a rotation of crops, providing better drain  age, carefulness in tilling the soil, and by the  use of natural and artificial fertilizers. The  hay crop is considerably better this year than  last, the corn and garden also look fair, but  the small grain and potatoes are poor, due  partly to drought.  <BR> <BR>We have laid definite plans for developing  the dairy and poultry industries, and have done something along this line during the past few  months. At present the college dairy supplies  the dining roon with milk and butter. We also  deliver bottled milk to twenty-five families living  near the school. This industry will grow as  we get more land in hay and have better facil  ities to care for our dairy products.  <BR> <BR>The poultry industry is almost entirely new.  This spring we purchased a new incubator and  brooder and raised about two hundred and fifty  chickens. Aside from the need for eggs at the  college, there is a splendid market for fresh  eggs at a fancy price. As this department de  velops, we believe that financially it will become  one of the most successful departments of the  farm.  <BR> <BR>Practically all the farm work is done by stu  dents, who are thus enabled to work their way  through school, at the same time gaining an ex  perience along this line. In harmony with the  instruction given this people through the Spirit  of Prophecy, it is the plan of the school to  teach both the theory and practice of agri  culture.  <BR> <BR>The book of Genesis teaches that the place  of all places to live is on the farm. God&#39;s plan  for the race is to keep close to the soil, and all  great reformers in the earth&#39;s history have sent  the people back to the land. At one time God  sent three million men and women to Palestine,  where he placed every family on a farm which  they were forbidden to sell. City property  could be sold, but the farm belonged to a man,  or his posterity, for all time.  <BR> <BR>Besides these reasons, denominational statistics show that more than fifty per cent of the  boys and girls who come from the farms to  our schools, return to the farm often less prepared to cope with the practical tasks confronting them than before they attended school.  Courses in agriculture overcome this difficulty.  Agriculture as a subject of study contributes  to certain values and controls of life the same  as any other subject; it applies directly to concrete problems of everyday life, whose solution  has educational values; and it liberalizes the  education of the student.  <BR> <BR>Successful farming requires education, energy, a keen and orderly intellect, executive  ability, foresight, wide experience and a knowledge of farm machinery. Which of these qualities do you desire? Come to Oshawa Missionary College and our farm department will help  you acquire them.  <BR> <BR>L. N. HOLM  <BR>Farm Manager  <BR>  <BR><a href="http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/ECM/ECM19210719-V21-29__B/index.djvu?djvuopts&page=1" target="_blank">http://www.adventistarchives.org/docs/ECM/ECM19210719-V21-29__B/index.djvu?djvuo pts&page=1</a> <BR></blockquote> <BR> <BR><a href="http://www.kingswaycollege.on.ca/admin/images/Building&Facilities/admin%20&#40;2&#41;.JPG" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.atomorrow.net/discus/messages/10/802.jpg" alt=""></a> <BR><font size="-2">&#40;Click on picture to enlarge&#41;</font> <BR> <BR><font color="ffffff"><font size="-2">.</font></font>

Offline

#2 03-16-09 3:55 am

bob_2
Member
Registered: 12-28-08
Posts: 3,790

Re: Adventism and Rural Life

Try putting a chicken coup in that suburban area and see what the zoning boys do to you, eh???? To say nothing of the stench from the dairy cattle, that close to suburban homes. Good research for the article though, Don, and a good choice for a rename or combined name with Leland.

Offline

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB