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Monday, July 17, 2023

Artist Tom Hardy's 'Ancient Oaks' sculpture on Third Street, downtown McMinnville

 


Whence “Ancient Oaks” on Third Street in downtown McMinnville?

"Ancient Oaks" sculpture by artist Tom Hardy was installed in July 1964 on the front of First National Bank of McMinnville which is now a branch of Key Bank. The sculpture was there from 1964 until some “recent date.” What happened to it?

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July 10, 1963, McMinnville N-R/News-Register included this photo. Cutline info: Big crane was moved into position on Third Street this week to aid in the demolition of the McMinnville First National Bank building. Structure is being razed and a new one-story bank building will be erected on the site.

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New bank opens at McMinnville

April 6, 1964, By Thelma Dolan, Salem Capital Journal correspondent

Story with McMinnville dateline says First National Bank of McMinnville was founded Dec. 3, 1883, and (was) the “oldest independent bank in Oregon. The new modern structure stands at Third and Davis streets on the same corner that the original bank was located.“ Story also says, “An aluminum panel by Tom Hardy, Portland artist, will be placed over the front door sometime this spring. It will not be completed by opening day. Hardy is known for many panels and art in metals at Portland State College, Lloyd; Center, the telephone building, and a fountain at Eugene. This is the first time he has made a mural in white metal.”

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Thomas Hardy to Sculpture Piece for Bank Entrance

April 15, 1964, McMinnville N-R/News-Register

Thomas Hardy, noted Portland sculptor, has been commissioned to design and build a metal piece to be placed on the brick facing above the entrance of the newly completed home of First National Bank of McMinnville.

Hardy has achieved fame as one of the most successful metal art scupltors in the country. His works includes pieces for the Lloyd Center, Lane County Courthouse Mall in Eugene and Portland State College.

Working with dark rough metals, Hardy designed and built the “birds” piece for the Lloyd Center, the “fish” piece for the courthouse in Eugene, and the “panoramic” piece for Portland State College.

Hardy spent several hours in the McMinnville area after being commissioned by the bank to get a general impression of the area.

After seeing the many groves of oak trees in the vacinity, Hardy has decided the bank piece will be an oak grove with the foothills of the coast range in the background.

The work will present a real challenge, Hardy said. It will be done with aluminimum, a substance with which he’s never worked.

“It will be tailored to fit the building and the area,” Hardy said.

He said he has just begun work on the project and estimated it would take about six weeks to complete.

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McMinnville First National Bank Gets Thomas Hardy Sculpture

July 8, 1964, McMinnville N-R/News-Register

Thomas Hardy, Portland sculptor and painter who works have won nationwide acclaim, was in McMinnville Tuesday to supervise the hanging of his latest work, an all-aluminum piece that will grace the front entrance of the First National Bank of McMinnville.

Hardy was commissioned to do the piece several months ago by bank offici9als who wanted something that would capture the atmosphere of the locals.

The sculptor spent an entire day in the countryside around the city before reaching a decision about the subject to be sculptured.

The result is a stunning representation of several groves of oak trees with two beautifully executed horses standing in a pasture of waving grass in the foreground.

It was decided the work should be done in aluminum to blend with the aluminum letters which face the building.

The work presented some problems for Hardy who had never worked with aluminum before. In creating the work, he used a burning torch to make the metal melt and run in desired patterns.

The finished product is one of Hardy’s best and is the first art piece of note to hand outdoors in the city.

As the present time Hardy is working on a commissioned piece for the Los Angeles Opera House. The work will be a flight of birds executed in gold leaf on bronze. He is also to begin two pieces for the Federal Courthouse in Juneau, Alaska. Both will be done in bronze.

Recent works completed by Hardy include two large whooping cranes which are mounted in the center of the driveway at the Physicians and Surgeons Hospital in Portland.

The Portland sculptor has also completed work for the lobby of the Pacific Building in Portland, Lane County Courthouse, Portland Hilton Hotel, and the Lloyd Center.

Hardy’s works will be displayed as a showing scheduled for Oct. 15 at the Oregon Ceramic Studio in Portland and plans are in the works for a showing in New York City within the next two years.

His assistant, Albert Goldsby, was in McMinnville with his Tuesday to assist in hanging the work above the bank entrance.

 


PHOTO: THOMAS HARDY, noted Portland sculptor, top of ladder, and his assistant, Albert Goldsby, pose before an an aluminum sculpture completed by Hardy for the McMinnville First National Bank. The work was hung above the front entrance of the new bank. (N-R Photo No. 2326).

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Postcard shows new home in 1964 of McMinnville First National Bank of McMinnville




The McMinnville First National Bank of McMinnville postcard posted here is from 1964 or 1965. Photos on the postcard by professional photographer Frank Colcord of Colcord Studio, McMinnville. Note the text which says the bank’s “strength and stability” is “symbolized by the ‘Ancient Oaks’ mural which sets the style for our new home.”

 

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Tom Hardy obituary

Tom Hardy, age 94, Nov. 30, 1921 - May 07, 2016

Published by The Oregonian from Jun. 10 to Jun. 12, 2016.

On May 7th, 2016 Oregon lost an artistic treasure. Thomas Austin Hardy died.

An only child born in Redmond, Tom devoted his life to portraying Oregon’s natural bounty. Tom’s childhood fascination with nature led him to memorize the Latin names of all he saw in the field and wilderness by age 12.

At age 16, Toms exhibit at the Portland Art Museum forecast an art career.

After earning a Univ. of Oregon BS in General Art in 1942, 2nd Lt. Hardy reported for duty in the U.S. Air Force in Honolulu.

Home in 1946 and back to artistic endeavors, watercolors and ceramics were exhibited at the Portland Art Museum and Oregon Ceramic Studio.

A 1952 MFA from U of O in Direct Metal Sculpture and Lithography led to teaching positions at U of O, UC Berkeley, Reed College, Univ. of Wyoming and the San Francisco Art Institute.

Tom’s worldwide travels to Africa, Europe and Tahiti introduced an international flavor to his work. Upon return, metal sculptures, water colors, prints, paintings and watercolors unfolded.

Tom’s work hangs in major museum collections throughout America. Representative museums include The Whitney Museum and The Metropolitan Museum in New York. His work is also found in major West Coast museums, private offices, public buildings and private collections.

A crowning achievement to Tom’s career was Sen. Mark Hatfield’s commission to design and produce the bronze eagle seal on Pres. Franklin Roosevelts monument in Washington, D.C.

In 1997, Pres. Bill Clinton welcomed Tom to a celebration of Roosevelts life at the unveiling of the monument.

Warm and friendly to all he met, his works will keep his memory fresh and alive.

At Tom’s request, there will be no memorial service. Remembrances may be made to Pacific NW College of Art, www.pnca.edu or the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University, jolbrant@willamette.edu.

Gather from 2 to 4 p.m. Wednesday, June 15, for a toast honoring Tom at his favorite lobby bar in the Benson Hotel, 309 S.W. Broadway, Portland.

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ARTIST TOM HARDY

1921 (Redmond, Ore.) -2016 (Portland, Ore.)

Oregon artist Thomas (Tom) Austin Hardy was nationally known for his metal sculptures and calligraphic drawings of animal forms including birds, bison, and horses. He was born on November 30, 1921 in Redmond, Oregon and was the only child of Orlando Buel (O. B.) "Pete" and Marie Austin Hardy. Hardy's love of nature and his worldwide travels enriched his sculptures and art. He was a prolific artist, showing his first exhibition at the Portland Museum of Art at the age of 16. As an openly gay man, Hardy served as an advocate for the LGBTQ community in Portland, Oregon. Hardy died on May 7, 2016 in Portland, Oregon.

Hardy earned a Bachelor of Science in General Art degree from the University of Oregon in 1942. During World War II, he served in the Air Force in Hawaii and Guam from 1942 to 1945. After his military term, Hardy focused on ceramics and watercolors and exhibited at the Portland Art Museum and Oregon Ceramic Studio. In 1952 he earned a Master of Fine Arts in Sculpture and Lithography from the University of Oregon. He then secured teaching positions at the University of Oregon, University of California at Berkeley, Reed College, the University of Wyoming, and the San Francisco Art Institute.

Hardy received many public and private commissions throughout his art career including: the Golden Bear in the Student Union at UC Berkeley in 1980, the Senator Mark O. and Antoinette Hatfield fountain "Eagles and Aerie" at Willamette University in 1989, and the bronze eagle seal for President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's memorial in Washington, D.C., which President Bill Clinton unveiled in 1997. Hardy gained national recognition through his representation by The Whitney Museum of American Art and The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. His works are found in galleries, museums, and public and private collections including the Seattle Art Museum in Washington, the Portland Art Museum in Oregon, Museum of Modern Art in New York, American Institute of Arts and Letters in New York, Kraushaar Galleries in New York, and the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University in Salem, Oregon.

 

Source:: archiveswest (dot) orbiscascade (dot) org

 

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Tom Hardy Papers

Tom Hardy Papers are in Salem. They are part of the Pacific Northwest Artists Archive, a collaborative project of the Willamette University Archives and the Hallie Ford Museum of Art, the Pacific Northwest Artists Archive (PNAA) is a collection of materials related to the careers of artists who are or were active in Oregon and Washington for the major portion of their careers.

https://libmedia.willamette.edu/commons/item/id/169

Apparently in the Tom Hardy Papers Box 3, Item 20: McMinnville ("Ancient Oaks" sculpture for First National Bank of McMinnville) 1964

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TOM HARDY’S FINAL STUDIO SALE

By Southern Oregon Artists Resource, 1978 contributed posts

View all Southern Oregon Artists Resource's posts.


About the author: SOAR: The Southern Oregon Artist's Resource is a directory of Southern Oregon artists, artisans and those who serve them and calendar of their art events, and Art Matters!, our blog posting Southern Oregon art events and matters of interest to artists, enthusiasts and patrons of the arts near and far. SOAR was created and is maintained by art advocate and web designer Hannah West in Jacksonville, Oregon to promote our diverse and talented arts community to our visitors and the rest of the world.

 














PHOTO Tom Hardy in his Portland studio

A Heights Estate Sale will be bringing to the public the 3 day Studio Sale of artist Tom Hardy. One of the region’s most accomplished artists will be opening the doors of his massive warehouse studio and selling the ENTIRE contents.

Hundreds of paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures, a massive book collection, furniture, a huge selection of tools and supplies, staging and lighting, oddities as well as the vast collection of art and antiques Tom has acquired throughout his life and career.

Selected artists from Tom Hardy’s private collection include: Bruce Taggart, Robert Bosworth, Jim Brittany, Pat Zucaro, R. Guthrie, R. Seabass, George Lafayette, Keith Keiffer, Bill Colby, Sherrie Wolf, Stewart, Garner Lunk, W. Curtis Mel Schuler, Robert Hanson, Sheehan, Mel Katz, Harry Widman, Laverne Crause, Jim Hillman. Carson, Dan England, Laurie Ness, Foraine, Gordon Wilson, Ron Jansen, John Rork,Boe Stevenson, J Backstand, Katherine O’Connor, Rackham

Tom Hardy has spent more than 50 years as an artist and teacher. His creations have been exhibited in museums, galleries, and private collections throughout the United States and his art is followed at a National level. Mr. Hardy also has public commissions that can be found in Federal, State, and City institutions throughout the United States.

 



PHOTO FDR memorial seal by Tom Hardy

From the Cal Berkley “Golden” bear to the FDR Memorial in Washington, D.C., Tom Hardy has been prolific and diverse throughout his illustrious career.

For additional information and photos of the sale, visit tomhardystudio.com.

BIOGRAPHY

Born:

November 30, 1921 in Redmond, Oregon

Education:

Medford and Corvallis High Schools

Oregon State University

U of Oregon

BS General Arts, 1942

MFA in Sculpture, 1952

Military: 1st Lt. US Infantry and Air Force, Hawaii and Guam 1942—1945

 


PHOTO The Golden Bear was installed in the Student Union of UC Berkeley in 1980. Designed by sculptor Tom Hardy, the 500-pound bronze bear is gilded with a thin layer of gold leaf and mounted atop a 18-foot high concrete pillar. The Golden Bear, the school’s mascot, was a gift of the Class of 1929

Teaching:

UC Berkeley 1956—58

Tulane University 1958-59

Artist in Residence, Reed College, 1959-61

University of Wyoming 1975-76

Major Solo Exhibitions:

Seattle Art Mus. 1953

Stanford U. Gallery, 1954

UCLA Gallery 1954

U of British Columbia, 1955

College of Architecture, UC Berkeley, 1957

Oakland, CA. Art Mus. 1957
Kraushaar Galleries, New York, 1954, 1958, 1962,1966, 1970, 1974, 1978

Pensacola Art Center, 1958
Columbia, South Carolina Art Mus., Retrospective, 1961

Columbia U. School of Architecture Gallery, New York, 1961

Tacoma Art League, 1962

Spokane Art Center, 1963

Boise Art Center, 1963

 




PHOTO Tom Hardy, a pensive moment in younger days

Port Townsend, WA, Art Center, 1964

Coos Art Mus., 1967

U of Idaho Art Mus., Moscow, 1971

Sun River Lodge, Bend, OR, 1973

Chas. Campbell Gallery, San Francisco, 1974

Wash. State Mus., Olympia, WA, 1974

Salem Art Assoc., Salem, OR, 1974

Willamette U. Gallery, Salem, OR, 1975

Contemporary Crafts Gallery, Portland, Or Retrospective, 1976

Maude Kerns Art Center, Eugene, OR Lawrence Gallery, Gleneden Beach, OR, 1981

Timberline Lodge 1985

Tacoma Art Center, Retrospective, 1986

Salishan Lodge, Gleneden Beach, OR, 1988

Mt. Hood Community College, Gresham OR, 1990

UmpquaCommunity College, Roseburg, OR, 1990.

Major Group Exhibitions:

San Francisco Mus. of Modern Art

Denver Art Mus.

Metropolitan Mus. of Art, New York

Mus. of Modern Art

Whitney Mus. of American Art

Ogunquit, Maine, Art Mus.

Detroit Art Institute

Pennsylvania Academy of Art

National Institute of Arts and Letters, New York.

In Collections Of:

Seattle Art Mus.

Portland Art Mus.

San Francisco Mus. Of Modern Art

Santa Barbara Mus. of Art

Whitney Mus. of American Art

U of New York, at Purchase

Coos Art Mus., Coos Bay OR

University of Maine Art Mus.

Art Mus., Ogunquit, Ma

University of Wyoming Art Mus.

Important Commissions:

Lloyd Center, Portland, OR

Portland State University

Hilton Hotel, Portland, OR

US Federal Bldg., Juneau, Alaska

Kah-nee-ta Lodge, Warm Springs, OR

Western Forestry Center, Portland, OR

Salem Civic Center, Salem, OR

Timberline Lodge; Pioneer Square, Portland, OR
Mt. Hood Medical Center Gresham OR

Tuality Hospital, Hillsboro, OR

Mark O. Hatfield Fountain, Willamette U., Salem, OR

Umpqua Community College, Roseburg OR

Oregon Historical Society, Portland, OR

TOM HARDY’S FINAL STUDIO SALE
6/22/12 (12pm-4pm)
6/23/12 (12pm-4pm)
6/24/12 (12pm-3pm)
3449 North Anchor Street suite 600 Portland, Oregon. 97217

Public Relations: Lloyd Sutherland-Finch
Phone: (503) 459-8268
Email: info@tomhardystudio.com
Website http://tomhardystudio.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tomhardystudio
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/TomHardyStudio

Source:

https://blogs.soartists.com/ArtMatters/tom-hardys-final-studio-sale

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Visit McMinnville brochure from 2018 …

https://visitmcminnville.com/wp-content/uploads/18_AWBrochureFINAL-1-1.pdf

… includes in the HISTORIC McMINNVILLE ART WALK

15

ANCIENT OAKS – By Tom Hardy

Stainless steel; installed 1964



(Comment: Sculpture is in  aluminum, not stainless steel.)


 
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Tom Hardy Closing His Studio, Selling His Stuff

Legendary 90-year-old Portland artist selling everything in his studio next week.

By Richard Speer, Willamette Week,  June 15, 2012

At the age of 90, beloved Portland artist Tom Hardy has decided to shutter his studio and take life a little more slowly. Problem is, nine decades of life tends to leave one's studio chock full of accumulated stuff.

What to do with it?

Hardy is holding a sale, the goal of which is to liquidate everything in one fell swoop: hundreds of his drawings, paintings, prints, and sculptures, as well as books, furniture, lighting, antiques, and artworks by other artists he has collected, such as Mel Katz, Sherrie Wolf, and Bruce Taggart.

A longtime arts educator as well as a nationally exhibited painter, Hardy was most recently showcased last December by gallerist/curator Mark Woolley, who mounted a mini-retrospective at the old Ogle Gallery space in Old Town.

“To me,” Woolley tells WW, “Tom Hardy is the epitome of the independent Oregon spirit. Even though he has traveled extensively in Africa, Asia, and elsewhere, he has made art that is a reflection of his place in the world, which has always been grounded in Oregon. He’s also one of the last of his era in terms of how multi-faceted he is, having started in ceramics, then moved on to carved wooden work, welded steel, welded bronze, cast bronze, etchings, watercolors, every medium that was available to him.”

While Hardy’s range is broad, encompassing diverse media and a stylistic command of portraiture, nudes, landscapes, and gestural abstraction, it is as an abstract painter that the artist is arguably at his best. His intuitive sense of composition and technical verve have earned him a place in the pantheon of notable Northwest artists.


Wednesday, May 31, 2023

McMinnville High School 'Class of 1958' 65th reunion May 31, 2023

Mac High School’s ‘Class of 1958’ celebrated its 65th reunion in McMinnville, May 31, 2023. 

 

Photos taken at Golden Valley, lunch location.

Tuesday, May 16, 2023

'Recognizing the good': Awards honor community contributions




'Recognizing the good': Awards honor community contributions

By Starla Pointer, McMinnville N-R/News-Register, May 16, 2023

Stan Primozich, last year’s McMinnville Man of the Year, prepared to honor this year’s winner, Gene Zinda, at the Distinguished Service Awards banquet Wednesday night.

He lifted a thick sheaf of paper, indicating how many pages would be needed to list all of Zinda’s contributions over the last 60-plus years.

“Gene has given so much to this community and to all of us,” Primozich said.

The same could be said of all the winners honored at the DSA event: Junior Citizen Deven Paolo; Outstanding Farmers Marv and Georgia Bernards; and Outstanding Educator Kindra Butler; and Marianne Mills, Woman of the Year.

Woman of the Year was the final award presented at the banquet, hosted by the McMinnville City Club. Chelsey Nichol of the City Club summed up the evening by saying, “I’m thankful to live in a world with Marianne Mills in it … in a town with all our winners in it.”

The 2022 McMinnville Distinguished Service Awards event followed a tradition started by the McMinnville Jaycees in the mid-1950s.

After the Jaycees chapter closed, the DSA program was continued by a committee of previous winners, then by the Odd Fellows. This was the McMinnville City Club’s first year as host.

The evening’s keynote speaker, Dr. Scott Gibson, discussed the role volunteerism plays in building relationships and community.

Working together sparks understanding among people, he said. They may have different political or religious views, for instance, but they are working on a common goal.

We need to be open to diverse viewpoints, Gibson said. That will help counteract the polarization and separation that currently exists in this country.

Anger, lies, greed and the media try to divide us, he said; we need to combat that with community, service and friendship.

“We need to get together and listen to each other again,” he said. “Start by recognizing the good in people, even if they’re different from us.”

A longtime member of the McMinnville Lions Club, Gibson called for “re-energizing” clubs and organizations that perform community service. “Make service cool again,” he said. “Do something worthwhile while enjoying the company of others.”

The DSA winners did that, he said, and others should follow their lead.

Gibson prepared written remarks prior to the banquet, but almost lost them when a spill at his banquet table threatened to tear the printed pages to smithereens.

His notes saved, he opened with a joke about the growing presence of artificial intelligence. “I’m the last human speaker before ChatGPT takes over,” he quipped, adding — presumably joking — that computers may even someday take over his job as a physician who performs cancer screenings.

During the awards presentation, Primozich listed many of Zinda’s history of accomplishments: managing Skyline Manufacturing; founding the Rotary art and wine auction that supported scholarships and Rotary Nature Park; serving on the McMinnville Water & Light Commission for 15 years and on other boards such as the McMinnville Downtown Association.

He also led the Linfield Partners in Progress campaign; expanded the St. Vincent de Paul food pantry while president of that organization; and started a program to provide shoes for children at his Windemere real estate office.

The Man of the Year award came as a “total surprise,” Zinda said.

He said local residents had inspired him when he came to McMinnville in 1959. “I learned to give back to the community,” he said.

Woman of the Year Mills also has a long list of accomplishments in McMinnville, said Ronni Lacroute, the 2022 winner who presented this year’s award.

A 1972 Linfield graduate, Mills is a longtime educator who started her career at Amity High School and retired from Mac High after serving as one of the first female Oregon high school athletic directors. She went on to work for McMinnville Habitat for Humanity for six years, three as director.

After retiring from public schools, Mills also supervised student teachers at Linfield for 10 years and taught pickleball classes. She served on the McMinnville Public Library Foundation Board and First Baptist Church board, volunteered at Memorial Elementary School, where her granddaughters go to school, helped with elections, and other community committees.

As a P.E. teacher and coach in the 1970s, Mills worked with some of the first competitive high school sports for girls. “Girls didn’t have access to high-level coaching then,” Lacroute said. “Marianne committed to providing that for them.”

She was inducted into the Amity Athletic Hall of Fame in 2016 for those efforts.

As a counselor, tennis coach and AD at Mac High, Mills was “a leader in a field where women haven’t always had a role,” Lacroute said.

Mills said helping girls achieve on the athletic field was very important to her. “It was so rewarding seeing them have opportunities.”

She noted how she has kept in touch with many of her former students and players. “I like people. I valued relationships,” she said. “I think that shines through in everything I’ve done.”

Friends were among people who congratulated her after she was surprised to learn she’d been named Woman of the Year.

A member of a family with deep ties to McMinnville, Mills grew up in Waldport and came to Yamhill County for college. She said she’s glad she stayed in the area.

“This has been a great place to call home. So many opportunities,” she said in her acceptance speech.

“To live a rich life, you need to be involved with others,” she said. “I have been richly blessed to be a member of this community.”

Paolo, honored as Junior Citizen, has been active in McMinnville, especially in supporting young people learning about careers in the trades, since he and his brother, Keath, started Solid Form Fabrication. They host interns and contribute to Mac High’s career tech programs.

Deven Paolo also spearheaded the creation of a foundation that provides scholarships to students who plan to study trades. The goal is for it to give out $20,000 annually.

“College is not for all, and high schools didn’t have shop classes anymore,” he said of how he became interested in helping students.

He’s pleased by the results, he said. “The impact you see … it’s always cool to see success stories.”

He recalled his own inspirations for career and community service, including Larry Judd, who taught drafting and woodshop at Yamhill Carlton High School, and Coach Dean Heuberger.

In accepting the DSA honor, Paolo also thanked his family for its support: father Murray Paolo, who also set an example; his brother and business partner, Keath; and especially his wife, Randi, and children Kasen, a high school junior, and Ellia, a freshman.

Young Educator of the Year Butler is in her fourth year of teaching kindergarten at Wascher Elementary School in Lafayette.

She always knew she wanted to be a teacher, she said. Working at the Bear Hugs preschool as a McMinnville High School student only strengthened her resolve.

“I’m big on relationships and connections,” she said. “I love to build relationships with students, and every day I see I’m making a difference in their lives.”

The Bernards, Farmers of the Year, own and run Bernards Farm west of McMinnville. They took over the family farm and Wallace Berry Farm in January 2022.

They grow crops that they sell at farmers markets, supply to restaurants and offer at a farmstand in the vintage barn on their property on Highway 18.

Bernards Farm has been selling at the McMinnville Farmers Market for 22 years. Marv serves on the MDA’s market committee.

He joked that his role on the farm is “playing in the dirt.” His wife does all the rest, he said.

The role women play in farming is too often forgotten, Marv Bernards said. His mother, Chris, “built Bernards Farm,” which started by selling corn, then added bedding plants and hanging baskets. Now Georgia “keeps the engines of the farm running,” he said.

Both he and his wife said they are honored to be recognized — and honored to be part of the McMinnville community.

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FRONT PAGE PHOTO - N-R May 16, 2023, print edition: Marianne Mills walks through the crowd of supporters at the Distinguished Service Awards event May 10 to receive her Woman of the Year award. Mills has been a teacher, coach, athletic director, supervisor of student teachers and director of McMinnville Habitat for Humanity, to name just a few of her accomplishments. (Photo by Rachel Thompson/McMinnville N-R/News-Register

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Linfielder Marianne Mills saluted in June 2023 issue of FBC Tidings. Congratulations!