"Lucky Farmer Rural Photo Quiz" Carroll County Times Article for 24 September 2000 During the early 1950s when farming was still leading Carroll's economy, this newspaper featured a mystery photograph series about local farms. The paper published an aerial photo of a farm and asked readers and the owner to identify the location. A follow-up article identified the farm and provided its history. The owner received a framed photograph of the farm and gift certificates. The first image appeared in the August 14, 1952 issue of The Times and an article about the Ben King farm appeared the following week: |
The Times had some lucky visitors on
Tuesday. The first farmer to recognize the picture of his farm as printed in last
weeks issue of the paper brought his wife Vola and his twelve-year-old daughter
Barbara, into Westminster to get the framed picture and gift certificates awarded them
through the cooperation of local merchants. The picture printed last
week in the Lucky Farmer Rural Photo Quiz and reproduced here is an aerial view of the
farm home of Ben H. King, general farmer who lives near Mt. Union Lutheran Church on the
road from Uniontown to Middleburg. The King family have owned their sixty-seven acre
farm for three years, having moved to the present home from Mt. Airy. Before Coming
to Carroll County, they resided in Lee County, Virginia. Along with his general
farming, Mr. King has 21 holstein cows and a number of heifers. The home is about 40
years old and the family has tried to improve its appearance since they acquired it.
The Lucky Farmer Rural Photo Quiz continued into the fall 1952 with some challenging images. In October it took several weeks to identify a farm on Middleburg Road near Taneytown as reported in The Times:
Carrolls lost farm has been identified after almost two weeks. The staff of The Times was stricken with anxiety as press time drew nearer and the farm which appeared in the October 9 issue remained unclaimed. All possibilities of finding the farms owner were discussed and then laid aside as impractical. On
Wednesday, F. Kale Mathias, well-know monument dealer in Westminster, walked into the
office on official business and during the course of the ensuing conversation, the mystery
farm was mentioned. Mr. Mathias was shown the
picture and recognized the farm as one on the Middleburg Road, one mile from Taneytown,
where he had sold a monument. After checking
with his office, to be sure he was correct, he offered to stop at Taneytown and notify the
owner. Shortly
thereafter, we received a phone call from Mr. Mathias.
He reported mission successful and then identified the man as
Walter L. Harner. Mr. Harner appeared later
in the morning and identified the farm. Occupying
the mystery farm are Mr. Harner, his wife Hazel M. and two daughters, Elaine,
12, and Harriet, 6. Both children attend the
Taneytown Elementary school. The Harners have
lived at their present location since 1939 and Mr. Harner specializes in dairy farming and
does some general farming. The seven-room house situated on the
property is partly built of log in the interior, showing that the house must be quite old. The outside is weatherboard covered. Several modern buildings increase the value and
productivity of the farm. William H. Miller told Mr. Harner on
Saturday that he was the owner of the Lucky Farm, but Mr. Harner could not leave at that
time as he was busy filling his silos. However, he was preparing to leave for The
Times office when Mr. Mathias dropped in to tell him the good news. Mr. Harner received the usual framed
aerial view of his farm and the gift certificates from each of the advertising merchants
on the farm page. |
| The popular mystery farm series continued into the spring of 1953 and
eventually included about twenty-five properties. Nearly
half a century later, the articles are a valuable historical resource for documenting
local farming practices in the mid-twentieth century.
|
| Photo caption: | An
aerial view of the Valentine-Kiser Farm near Taneytown is similar to those published in
this paper during a 1952-3 mystery farm series. Historical Society of Carroll County
Collection, gift of Charles J. Trout, 1991. |