11 Oregon family farms honored for longevity
HILLSBORO, Ore. — Three generations of the Grossen family sat around a picnic table on a recent Thursday and talked about their family and their 112-year-old dairy farm.
The Peter Fred Grossen Farm is in Hillsboro, Ore. Peter Fred Grossen founded it in 1904, after he immigrated from Switzerland with his family. More than a century later, his great-great grandson David Grossen and his family will receive a Century Farm Award from the Oregon Century Farm and Ranch Program honoring the farm for its history in Oregon.
The Grossens are one of 11 families being honored for longstanding farms at the Oregon Century Farm and Ranch Program Awards.
Six farms from six counties are being awarded Century status, meaning they have been in continuous operation at least 100 years.
Five farms from four counties are being awarded Sesquicentennial status, meaning they have been in continuous operation at least 150 years.
Andrea Kuenzi, program coordinator, said families must follow a formal application process in which they document the history of the operation of their farm with photos, original deeds, personal stories and other historic records.
David Grossen said researching the history of his family farm was a fun family project.
Grossen’s wife, Jackie, their two children and sister were heavily involved in researching the history of the farm — from when Peter Fred Grossen immigrated to the United States in the 1880s to when their grandfather ran a dairy business to get his family through the Depression to now, with David and his son Hank starting an artisan cheese operation.
The Peter Fred Grossen Farm started as a dairy farm and creamery with Brown Swiss cows. The Grossens also sold wheat, oats, barley, hay and Swiss cheese. The farm’s main crops currently are hay, wheat, Brown Swiss cattle and Swiss cheese.
“The Grossens are very connected to their history and to each other,” Jackie Grossen said.
Other farms being awarded with Century status are: Omeg Family Orchards, Alley Ranch, Carman Ranch, M. Christensen Family Farm and Alder Glade Farm.
Farms being awarded with Sesquicentennial status are: Mosby Century Farm, Jesse & Ruby Looney Farm, Maple Hill Farm, Gordon Zimmerman Farm and Smith Bros. Farm LLC.
The Oregon Century Farm & Ranch Program Awards Program will have an awards ceremony at 11 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 27, at the Oregon State Fair. Award winners receive a certificate signed by Gov. Kate Brown and Katy Coba, director of the Oregon Department of Agriculture. Roadside signs are imprinted with the founder’s name and the year the ranch or farm was established.
“It’s so neat to see the families document their history and the history of Oregon agriculture and make it available to the public,” Kuenzi said.
2016 will be the first year all of the information about the historic farms will be available in PDF form for the public to see. Since 1958, Kuenzi said the records were kept as hard copies at Oregon State University. The Oregon Century Farm and Ranch Awards Program received a grant to digitize all of its records.
For the Grossens, researching their history was a way of growing even closer as a family.
“It was so cool to look through all of the old photos,” said Maria Grossen, David Grossen’s daughter. “I really love learning about our history.”
Oregon Century Farm & Ranch Program
The Oregon Century Farm & Century Ranch Program honors farmers and ranchers who have worked the same land for at least 100 years. The program is administered through the Oregon Farm Bureau Foundation for Education and is partially funded through a partnership of the Oregon Farm Bureau, Wilco, Oregon State Historic Preservation Office and OSU Libraries’ University Archives. Since its start in 1958, 1,175 farms and ranches across the state have been registered.