[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 160 (2014), Part 1]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages 115-116]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                         HONORING JOHN T. HART

                                 ______
                                 

                        HON. BENNIE G. THOMPSON

                             of mississippi

                    in the house of representatives

                        Tuesday, January 7, 2014

  Mr. THOMPSON of Mississippi. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor a 
hardworking and self-motivated 65 year old black farmer, John T. Hart, 
who just keeps on going.

[[Page 116]]

  Mr. John T. Hart, a native of Holmes County, Mississippi, has been a 
farmer most of his life, with the exception of some years that he lived 
in Chicago. He left Mississippi, a farmer and relocated back to 
Mississippi approximately four decades ago. If it was possible, one 
might say that farming is in his DNA. He is just that passionate about 
the farming industry. His heart for farming stems from his late father, 
Harrison B. (HB) Hart, who was one of the largest African-American 
farmers in Holmes County, even during struggling times for farmers. 
John Hart and several of his siblings helped their father to build the 
legacy.
  Today, Mr. Hart still carries on his father's legacy through a 
successful farming business of his own. One of his brothers also has a 
thriving farming business. To work from before sunup to pitch black 
dark is the norm for this hill farmer, who has also farmed hundreds of 
acres in the Mississippi Delta. Cotton, corn and soybeans have mainly 
been his crops of choice over the years. This year, just for fun, he 
has added 20 acres of ``delicious'' watermelons that have become in 
popular demand by local and area consumers and grocery businesses.
  Just like other industries, the farming business for Mr. Hart and 
others have had its share of blows. In a November 22, 2009 New York 
Times article by Shaila Dewan titled, ``In Mississippi Delta, a 
Promising Summer Washed Away by the Fall,'' Mr. Hart was one of the 
featured farmers interviewed for the article about continuous rain that 
had damaged farm crops that year for farmers in Mississippi, Alabama, 
Georgia, eastern Arkansas, and parts of Louisiana. ``You just keep 
going,'' Hart is quoted saying in the article.
  Mr. Hart is also a cattle rancher. Yes, the man who has turned dirt 
for decades also raises cattle. He owns a herd of cattle from good 
stock. How does he do it all with only the help of two farm hands? Only 
God knows.
  Although the Mississippi farming business has seen its share of ups 
and downs, Mr. Hart still remains steadfast to his passion even though 
at 65 he could be sitting on the beautiful front porch of their ranch 
house with his wife, Prince Ella Edwards Hart, of 44 years, looking out 
over the horizon of land God has blessed them with.
  Mr. Hart is a graduate of Tchula Attendance Center (now, S.V. 
Marshall High School). He and his wife, a retiree in the medical arena, 
have three adult children and three grandchildren.
  Will this be the year Mr. Hart brings all of his farm's heavy 
equipment out of the fields for good, recline in that chair beside his 
devoted wife and friends on that front porch? Who knows?
  Mr. Speaker, I ask my colleagues to join me in recognizing Mr. John 
T. Hart for his impeccable dedication and endurance of successful 
farming.

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