Arkansas Agriculture Hall of Fame announces 2017 class
The Arkansas Agriculture Hall of Fame will induct six new members March 2 at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Little Rock. The Class of 2017 includes: Weed scientist Ford Baldwin of Austin; attorney Bill Bridgforth of Pine Bluff; retired agriculture educator Lew Brinkley of Jonesboro; fruit breeder John Clark of Fayetteville; timber executive Peggy Clark of Arkadelphia; and the late Adam McClung of Vilonia, who served eight years as executive vice president of the Arkansas Cattlemen’s Association.
“This is a wonderful class of inductees for the Arkansas Agriculture Hall of Fame,” said Butch Calhoun, chairman of the Arkansas Agriculture Hall of Fame committee and former Arkansas Secretary of Agriculture. “The broad reach of these six individuals has been felt in every corner of Arkansas, from the Delta to the hills of western Arkansas. I have said this before and it bears repeating. Agriculture is one of the great success stories of our state. We are pleased to bring recognition to these individuals who have impacted our state’s largest industry in such a positive way.”
Adam McClung (posthumous)
McClung served as executive vice president of the Arkansas Cattlemen’s Association from 2009-17, generating membership growth over that span and creating the Young Cattlemen’s Leadership Class, designed to develop leadership skills for tomorrow’s agricultural leaders. McClung died suddenly Aug. 6, 2017. He was 37. His efforts to bring positive change to the beef industry, and all of agriculture, spurred the White House and the U.S. Department of Agriculture to recognize him in 2014 as one of 15 “Champions of Change” from across the country. He was director of membership at the Arkansas Cattlemen’s Association from 2006-08, then moved to the Oklahoma Beef Council as director of industry relations. He returned to Arkansas in 2009 to lead the membership and legislative efforts of the Arkansas Cattlemen’s Association.
Peggy Clark
Peggy Clark is owner and manager of Clark Timberlands and has been synonymous with sustainable forestry for almost 40 years. She assumed the role of manager of the family timber, cattle and real estate investment business in 1987 after the untimely death of her father, Charles Clark. She has grown the timber business to encompass timberland in eight south-central Arkansas counties and includes other real estate investments, a livestock auction, and a working farm and cattle ranch. She was the first woman appointed to the Arkansas Forestry Commission, the first female president of the Arkansas Forestry Association, the first woman to serve as president of the national Forestry Landowners Association and the first female elected to First Commercial Corporation’s board of directors.
John Clark
John Clark is considered a leading expert in the field of fruit crop genetics and breeding, particularly blackberries, grapes, nectarines and peaches. A distinguished professor in the department of horticulture at the University of Arkansas he has released 62 fruit cultivars, with more than 21 million plants sold. John Clark’s development of the thornless, large-fruited blackberries was just the first of many innovations in the blackberry industry. His most meaningful success might well be the development of new genetics and production practices that will enable the availability of fresh blackberry fruit year-round.
Dr. Lew Brinkley
Brinkley has taught three generations of students at Arkansas State University, spending his 46-year career there as a professor of agricultural economics, department administrator, student advisor and mentor. When he retired from full-time service in 2005, the ASU College of Agriculture alumni established the L.E. Brinkley Endowment for Student Development to provide ongoing support of student activities.
Bill Bridgforth
Bridgforth is senior partner in the law firm of Ramsay, Bridgforth, Robinson and Raley, where he represents the legal needs of farmers and ranchers in Arkansas and the United States. His focus has been on educating and assisting farmers, ranchers, accountants and lawyers, particularly on issues involving federal farm programs.
Ford Baldwin
Baldwin is retired from the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture and operates a consulting business, Practical Weed Consultants. He writes for the Delta Farm Press. Baldwin is regarded as one of the country’s top experts in the field of herbicide-resistant weeds.