[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 128 (Tuesday, September 9, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S5426]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MEETING HOUSE FARM CENTENNIAL
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, Vermont has always been a farming State,
and it is the dairy, livestock, vegetable, and fruit farms to which we
owe thanks for the open pastures and spectacular vistas that Vermonters
and all those who visit our State cherish. None is more beautiful than
Meeting House Farm in Norwich, owned by Deb and Jay Van Arman. The
farm, located on a hill outside of the village, with an expansive view
down the beautiful Connecticut River Valley, has been in the family
since Deb's and her brother David Pierce's grandparents arrived in a
Sears, Roebuck & Company wagon from Quechee in 1914.
On Saturday, August 2, Deb, Jay and David hosted a centennial reunion
for a grateful crowd of family and friends who came from as far as
California, Holland and South America. The reunion was a celebration of
farming, family, and community for those who grew up on or visited the
farm over the years. They shared stories of haying and collecting maple
sap with Deb and David's father ``Bub,'' riding the tractor and
collecting eggs, and sitting around the kitchen table sharing one of
their mother Janet's bountiful meals. Janet ran a day care at the farm
for local children and later became Norwich's beloved town clerk.
The dairy herd was sold in the 1980s, but the haying goes on. There
are goats and Deb's big vegetable garden, and half a dozen Holstein
cows from another farm graze the hillside. Meeting House Farm
represents the best of Vermont, and we owe a debt of gratitude to the
Pierce-Van Arman family for keeping it a farm all these years.
I ask unanimous consent that an article about the centennial on the
front page of the August 3rd Valley News be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From The Valley News, Aug. 3, 2014]
A Century of Farming in Norwich: Family Members Flock From Around the
World To Mark Anniversary
(By Aimee Caruso)
Norwich.--A Norwich family marked 100 years of farm life
yesterday with hayrides, games and dinner, photographs,
storytelling and socializing.
Meeting House Farm, owned by Jay and Deb Van Arman, has
been in the family for a century, and the trend is set to
continue into the future.
Yesterday, however, was all about celebrating the crop of
longtime friendships and family bonds the Union Village Road
farm has produced over the decades. Wearing name tags, people
of all ages mingled yesterday, snacking and sharing memories.
Milling near a table laden with pies, candy-studded cookies
and other goodies, they described the farm as a warm and
lively place.
Jeff Bradley, who grew up just down the road, was in 4-H
with the Van Armans' children and spent many days on the
farm, tossing hay bales and collecting sap for maple syrup.
He longingly recalled the yeast doughnuts and dill pickles,
both of which were eaten dipped in maple syrup, made by Deb's
late mother, Janet. And he remembered something else that
left a big impression on him.
``No matter what, you stopped by and they had time for
you,'' said Bradley, who now lives in Massachusetts with his
family. ``Time for a story, time to sit down and have
coffee.''
People have always dropped in and visited the farm, said
Deb Van Arman, seated under a large white tent set up for the
occasion. ``It's been important to encourage that so we have
a sense of community. We have that, and we're very
grateful.''
Yesterday's gathering, months in the making, drew about 240
people from across the country and beyond, including 26 of 27
first cousins. The 27th wanted to come, but couldn't make it
because his wife was sick, Deb Van Arman explained.
The Van Armans' children and their families came in from
New York state, Chile and Holland. One family friend came
from Taipei, Taiwan; others made the trip from Hamburg,
Germany. In addition to relatives, the group included people
who had worked on the farm, neighbors, and former neighbors,
``people who have helped us over the years,'' Deb said,
choking up. ``It's just great.''
Some spent the night on the farm; others bunked with
neighbors who had opened their houses for the occasion and
provided food and beer, said the Van Armans' son, Tom. ``It's
like Airbnb on steroids.''
The 116-acre farm, established in the 1780s, is thought to
be the town's oldest working farm. It's named for the timbers
in the original barn. When Norwich's first meeting house was
torn down, the farm's owner, Constant Murdock, bought the
beams for his barn, said Nancy Hoggson, president of the
Norwich Historical Society. Initially a subsistence farm, it
would eventually grow into a dairy business.
Deb Van Arman's grandparents, Charles and Lucy Pierce,
bought the property in 1913 and moved there from a small farm
in Quechee. The Pierces' son, Charles ``Bub'' Pierce, and his
wife, Janet, lived with them on the farm, where Janet ran a
day care and Bub farmed until he became ill in 1970, the same
year the Van Armans married. Bub died the following year, and
Janet farmed with the neighbors' help until later in 1971,
when Jay took over. They expanded their herd and carried on
with the dairy business until 1986.
With three children to put through college, a farmer's pay
wouldn't cut it, so the couple took part in a federal herd
buy-out program, selling their dairy cows. Both are
officially retired--Jay was a mail carrier in Norwich, and
Deb, a physical therapist, worked at the VA. But their work
on the farm didn't end. Deb keeps up the grounds, including
the vegetable, herb and flower gardens. Jay runs a composting
business and makes hay--he puts up and sells about 14,000
bales a year, their main income. They also depend on the
state's current use plan to reduce taxes, he said. ``If it
wasn't for current use, we wouldn't be here.''
Theirs is one of eight farms featured in Cycles of Change:
Farming in Norwich, now on display at the historical society.
The exhibit, comprising photographs, video, oral histories
and text, will run through next spring.
Farming has seen big changes over the past several decades,
and rolling with the times has taken perseverance, financial
investments and plenty of hard work. New federal regulations
in the mid 1900s meant expensive upgrades for dairy farms,
Hoggson said. ``A lot of small farmers couldn't adjust to
those changes, so they had to close up shop.''
She called the fact that the same family has owned Meeting
House Farm for a century ``extraordinary.''
``Keeping that land together has been really, really
important to the whole family,'' she said. ``It's very
unusual, I think, and a real credit to them as individuals
and to their commitment to the land, the importance of
family, and place that they have been able to do this.''
Yesterday's event was, in part, a tribute to that effort.
``We wanted to celebrate all the happiness (the farm) has
brought and all the hard work my parents have done through
thick and thin,'' said daughter Emily Myers. ``It's not easy,
having a lot of property. . . . It can be very expensive,
especially with taxes, and they have been able to make it
work.''
As with most farm kids, summers and the hours after school
found the Van Arman children tending to chores. Growing up on
the farm has had a lasting impact on them, Myers said. ``It
gave us great morals, great values and always a sense of
home.''
On display yesterday was the Sears and Roebuck wagon Deb's
grandparents bought to travel to the farm with their young
children. The family had hitched their cows to the wagon, and
on the way, one gave birth on Christian Street. Her father
retrieved the calf the following day. Their move from Quechee
to the farm, made in mud season, was quite a journey, Deb Van
Arman said.
Within the next few years, a similar, if much more modern,
trek will take place, as the Van Armans' daughters, Kate and
Emily, plan to return to the farm with their families.
``The only thing I ever knew was this farm,'' Deb Van Arman
said. Knowing her children will carry on the tradition ``is
very special.''
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