黑料正能量

Begun by alumni, the Farmers Market shapes community

April 30th, 2014

Samuel Johnson, class of 1975, and his wife Margaret Wenger Johnson '69 were the first farmers to sell their produce in downtown Harrisonburg for an entire growing season. They went on to lobby for a farmers market and see their dream come to fruition. (Photo by Jon Styer)

Samuel Johnson, class of 1975, and his wife Margaret Wenger Johnson ’69 were the first farmers to sell their produce in downtown Harrisonburg for an entire growing season. They went on to lobby for a farmers market and see their dream come to fruition. (Photo by Jon Styer)

Margaret Wenger Johnson 鈥69聽held out a mason jar of grape juice. 鈥淚t鈥檚 rich,鈥 Samuel Johnson (class of 鈥75) said. Margaret nodded and smiled, like they鈥檇 discovered it bubbling from the ground 鈥 instead of steaming in a steel vat.

The Concord grapes that she had methodically de-stemmed with Marjorie Nafziger 鈥74, MA 鈥97 (counseling), grew on vines handed down from Margaret鈥檚 father, Chester Wenger 鈥41. 鈥淎nd his dad grew grapes, and his granddad grew grapes,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o Samuel and I planted grape vines at the very beginning of our time here.鈥

That was in 1978. They planted blueberries, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower and tomatoes 颅鈥 but had nowhere to sell their produce locally. So they dreamed of a farmers market.

As Samuel weighed kale and talked to customers, Radell Schrock 鈥01 sold his last winter carrots of the day. He joins up to 70 other vendors to sell produce and crafts at the Farmers Market each Tuesday and Saturday morning, made possible by the Johnsons鈥 vision 35 years ago.

Schrock graduated from 黑料正能量 with a major in biology and minor in secondary education, then taught at Eastern Mennonite High School for four years. He kept a garden at home, and what began as an idea for a way to make some summer income evolved into a vision of supporting himself with his hands.

Schrock, from Wisconsin, hungered to work more with the soil, but wasn鈥檛 sure how to make a living in Valley agriculture. 鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult to move to an area and try to sell piece by piece,鈥 he said. Helped by his connections with around 400 students and their families from his years of teaching, he was able to transition to full-time farming and community supported agriculture. A half-dozen years later, he still sees many of them at the market every week.

Margaret Johnson 鈥69 processes home-grown grapes in the Johnsons' home kitchen. (Photo by Samantha Cole)

Margaret Johnson 鈥69 processes home-grown grapes in the Johnsons’ home kitchen. (Photo by Samantha Cole)

The Johnsons brought their idea for a farmers market to the Downtown Harrisonburg Retail Merchants in 1978. The following year, they were one of four sets of farmers selling in the Liberty Street parking deck

They were the only ones to continue selling at the market site for the whole summer season, but weren鈥檛 deterred. 鈥淲e were young and strong then, and our dreams were driving us,鈥 Margaret said.

The Harrisonburg Farmers Market Association was incorporated in 1994.

Shortly after, Kris Shank-Zehr 鈥92 noticed the vendors in the deck on her way to work 鈥 a part of downtown she hadn鈥檛 been aware of while she was a student. She started buying a few vegetables each week, and then eventually wrote seasonal recipes for the market鈥檚 weekly newsletter.

In 2006, the market migrated from the parking deck to the municipal lot on South Liberty Street, until the construction of Turner Pavilion in 2008. Students, visitors and locals pass through the modern-day market to pick up the week鈥檚 groceries or just socialize.

Part of the market experience is unplanned conversations while shopping for items her family will eat that week, Shank-Zehr said, unlike the supermarket where customers tend to get in and get out as quickly as possible.

The market has become 鈥淗arrisonburg鈥檚 premier social event,鈥 Samuel said, laughing. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of visiting and networking, people meeting old acquaintances and making new ones in between their market transactions.鈥 The Johnsons still see customers they served 35 years ago.

Looking back to those first days, they reflected on why they chose this vocation, given the admittedly low pay and hard work.

In college, Samuel was an avid gardener and enamored with Chester Wenger鈥檚 vineyard 鈥 and Wenger鈥檚 daughter 鈥 but didn鈥檛 know what direction to take after graduation.

鈥淚 had been in the Army,鈥 Samuel said: Thailand, during the Vietnam War, despite having applied for conscientious objector status. He struggled with that. 鈥淎s I was leaving the Army, I had resolved that I was going to commit the rest of my life to peace and not contribute to materialism and violence.鈥

Josie Showalter is the current manager of the Farmers Market, which has grown to nearly 70 vendors on Tuesday and Saturday mornings, plus musical performers and much socializing.

Josie Showalter is the current manager of the Farmers Market, which has grown to nearly 70 vendors on Tuesday and Saturday mornings, plus musical performers and much socializing. (Photo by Samantha Cole)

Farming, they decided together, would be their part in 鈥渃ontributing to life鈥 while raising a family. They bought some land in Keezletown in October 1978 and built a home. Margaret, having finished a master鈥檚 degree in early childhood education at James Madison in 1975, began her own nursery school to supplement the farm income. Today she teaches at Cub Run Elementary School.

鈥淲e had very little money, but we both decided we would rather live with that uncertainty and do what we really wanted to do,鈥 she said. In the 鈥70s and early 鈥 80s, emphasis on local, organic food hadn鈥檛 made it to Rockingham County yet: they needed to be their own advocates.

Market Manager Josie Showalter says the Johnsons鈥 commitment, creativity and willingness to collaborate with others brought their dream to reality. This was despite competition from area supermarkets, which are able to buy factory-farmed items wholesale and undercut the prices local farmers must charge to survive. At the Farmers Market, consumers get to meet the people growing their food and talk to them about their production methods, creating community and fostering everyone鈥檚 health.

鈥 Samantha Cole 鈥11