B6—Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, November 22,1980 t? j — Lentury harm award Eighth generation operating Banner view Farm MARIETTA - Ban ner View Farm of Irwin and Grace Engle, R 1 Marietta, has been in the family for eight generations and was purchased m 1802 by the first Engle family to set foot in the United States from Switzerland. The Engles, spelled “Engel” in those days, settled by the Susquehanna River on land adjoining the present farm in 1754. In 1802, Irwin’s ancestors purchased his present farm for the sum of “4,000 pounds of current Pennsylvania money in gold or silver coins.” This averages 19te pounds per acre for the original 203 acres but Engle says he’s not sure of the value which that represented. The original land was eventually divided between three families, with Irwin’s father retaining 85 acres. In 1944, his father purchased back 24 ot the original acres; in 1968 he purchased 44 acres; and last year Irwin purchased an additional 79 acres to bring the total acreage to 233, with 230 of it tillable. According to Engle, the farm has been in a variety of crops over the years, in cluding tobacco, wheat, barley and com, and he and his wife presently raise com and alfalfa as the mam crops. They are milking 145 head of Holstems and have about 212 heifers. Irwin’s brother Melvm also helps with the bam and field work. The Engles have one daughter, Daphne, 7, who helps feed calves. The dairy business began with the marriage of Engle’s parents about 50 years ago when they began “having a few cows and eventually had a stable for 16, which were milked by hand,” Engle Manorfield Farm (Continued from Page B 5) A dairy kept by an aunt in the family records that she watched the Columbia Bridge burning “from a hill above the farm” during the Civil War. The second Jacob in the line of descendants, who owned the farm from 1830, operated a still and transported whiskey to Philadelphia in barrels. Charles and Mary have three grown children. David C., pastor of Ross Street United Methodist church; Judith 8011, Hummelstown; This picturesque century and Karen Troop, farm continues as a working Quarryville. farm after seven SheUenberger does all of generations of being tilled by the crop farming, but is also Shellenbergers SELECT BREEDING SCHOOL To Be Held In Lancaster Co. Week of December 8 If Interested Contact: Clifford Gibble - 717-665-4252 or Nelson Krelder - 717-687-6214 Photo from 1900 shows farm buildings of Engle farm, which are believed to have been built around time land was purchased in 1802. said By the time he was 10, Irwin remembers having increased the herd size to about 30, and because his father had a heart condition, his mother, the children and hired help accomplished the work. Engle studied vocational agriculture at Elizabethtown High School, and was a member of its FFA chapter. He began buying dairy cows at that time and added one York 4-H beef club meets YORK The monthly meeting of the York County 4-H Baby Beef Club was held on November 10 at the 4-H Center. At the recent York-Adams baby beef roundup and sale, members received an average of 87 cents a pound for the steers sold. Also, there were 14 steers selected president ot the board of directors of Manor Mutual Insurance Company and has his own agency. He is active in the Mountville Lions, and the Masonic Lodge. Both Charles and Mary are members of the Mountville United Methodist Church and Mary belongs to Farm Women Society 4 and is a member of the Mountwaybia Club She retired after 25 years as a librarian in the Penn Manor School District. SIRES row of ten cows of his own to his father’s herd. Following graduation, Engle worked with his father for three years until his death and then worked for his mother for another IVz years before purchasing the farm from her. He said, “We gradually increased the size of the herd.” The cows are con tamed in a free-stall bam and are milked in the older to represent the county at the Pennsylvania Farm Show to be held in January at Harrisburg. An election of officers was held and the new officers are: President - Bill Wise, Vice President - ’Bob Livingston, Secretary - Tammy Eisenhour, Asst. Secretary - Chris Shive, WC’lkC (MOWING Kim , ( ■ DISTRIBUTORS FOR v SCHLESSMAN'S > , SEED CORN 4 BRANDS AVAILABLE r PREMIUM SINGLE CROSSES • NEW SX-810 - Excellent for silage or grain • SX-802 - Excellent for standability • SX-520A - High Yields w/Excellent standability *\jVX>VVXAAAJVXAAA/XruVV • CHEMICALS • SOYBEANS ARC ALFALFA ‘l3O AAAAAAAAAAMMAAAAAAAMVMnVM CLEARANCE SALE ON TWINE •20.95 Cash And Carry WHOLESALE & RETAIL BOYD’S SEED CENTER, INC. 306 lona Rd., Lebanon, Pa 17042 Phone: 717-272-8943 inner ham in 16-cow units. Engle said he had always been told he was the fifth or six generation to farm the land, but closer study revealed his family to be the eighth generation. His searching was made somewhat easier because of an Engle family history, a bound volume covering the years of the family from their Swiss beginnings to their home at Wild Cat along Treasurer - Annette Walters, Asst. Treasurer - Chris Kinsley, Reporter - Julie Myers, Asst. Reporter - Tim Kinsley, Historian - Deb Hoffman, Asst. Historian - Cathy Shive. Committee meetings for the upcoming banquet were held following the business meeting. the Susquehanna up until the year 1927. He speculates that they settled by the river because of its importance as a transportation source. Engle says he imagines their cluef reason for leaving Europe was for religious freedom and remarked that the ongmal Engles founded the River Brethren Church on their farm. Part of that sect became Brethren m Christ While no dates can be found on either the large farm home which, was constructed in two sections or the bam, it is assumed that they were built shortly KOEHRING g. ■ PORTABLE OIL-FIRED HEATERS “ ENERGY SAVING • DEPENDABLE • Operates on kerosene or (uel oil • Energy efficient and convenient • Instant heat where and when you need it MMMK WEAVER’S FARM SERVICE >7KIP R #5, P.0.80x 117 fc W Shippensburg, PA 17257 AREA DEALERS FOR BOYDS SEED CENTER HEIFERS MILL WILLIAM KENEPP Begins, Pa McVeytown, Pa CARL BROWN DENNIS LOY Pine Grove, Pa Pine Grove, Pa BLAINE FAHRINGER MARVIN MARTIN Catawissa. Pa Clyde, N Y JOHN 0. HERSHEY MARK SEIDEL Turbottsville, Pa Maxatawney, Pa PAUL HIVELY RONALD SHAFFER Felton, Pa Herndon, Pa JAMES LANDIS FRANKLIN TROXELL Hamburg, Pa Andreas. Pa AMOS ACKERMAN ALLEN WEAVEN Mt Bethel, Pa. Port Trevorton, Pa STANLEY SHULTZ JOHN ERB Halifax. Pa Manheim, Pa GEORGE LERCH GLENN BAUIET Annville, Pa Drums. Pa DALE GREINER FARNSWORTH FARM SUPPLY Manheim, Pa Hughesville, Pa PAULDEGLER RALPH FISCHER Sinking Springs, Pa Crystal Springs, Pa TRI-VALLEY NURSERY'S CLAYTON FOGLE Valley View, Pa Lewisburg, Pa HAROLD RANCH WAYNE UNDENMUTH Cochranville, Pa Danville, Pa ROBERT CHAPIN WEAVER’S FARM SERVICE Nescopeck, Pa Shippensburg, Pa VAN MAR FEED BRUCE ULMER Shoemakersville, Pa Bellefonte, Pa JAMES BEHNEY RODNEY RICE York Springs, Pa Newburg, Pa HAROLD REMALEY GILBERT ADAMS Schnecksville, Pa New Bloomfield, Pa LOREN BUCHER JOHN HARRIS Quarryv tile. Pa Milford, Del JOHN GISEWHITE Milroy, Pa after the land was pur-j chased. ' The Engles are active members of the Maytown Brethren in Christ Church, and belong to the Lancaster County Holstein Association and Lancaster County Farmers Association. Engle is a member of the Elizabethtown Voung Farmers Association With accurate records and a family history, the Engles are proud of the history of their family, but are quietly carrying on the long tradition of farming spread over the eight generations which lived in this country