Have you ever heard of Mr. Booker Whatley!!? If not you’re in for a real treat! Thank you Mr. Booker for your contribution to farmers we thank you! Black History 365❤️🖤💚!
Born in Alabama in 1915, as the oldest of twelve children, Booker Whatley was passionate about food production and land stewardship from a young age. After graduating with a degree in agriculture and serving in Japan during the Korean War (where he used hydroponics to safely grow food for US troops), he earned a doctorate in horticulture from Rutgers University. Dr. Whatley later returned to school, earning a law degree at the age of 73.
Beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, recognizing a strong connection between self-sustaining land ownership and political decision-making, Dr. Whatley aimed to increase profits for small-scale food producers while introducing new ways to improve and popularize regenerative agriculture. As a long-time professor at Tuskegee University, he began advocating for ways farms can generate profits and attract sharers, particularly as Black farmers were routinely denied vital federal assistance.
The CSA and PYO models allow food growers to utilize the resources they already have while forging long-lasting relationships with their local communities. Tragically, like so many contributions of Black Americans throughout history, Dr. Whatley’s groundbreaking philosophy and methods were overlooked for many decades. Today’s national and local food systems would look radically different if even a few of his innovative approaches were adopted over the last six decades.
With the number of CSA farms and sharers increasing throughout the country each year, Booker Whatley’s life’s work is finally receiving the recognition and attention it deserves. To read more about Dr. Whatley’s profound legacy, check out these articles:
https://youtu.be/8WpB_Gv7DkU
Dr. Booker T Whatley — Franklinton Farms
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