Driving directions
New Franklin, Howard County
Research
Hickman House
Tours and Events
People
Contact us
Superintendent:
Gene Garrett
Farm Manager:
Ray Glendening
Nancy Bishop
10 Research Center Rd.
New Franklin, MO 65274
Phone: 660-848-2268
Fax: 660-848-2144
Email: Bishopn@missouri.edu
|
Introduction
|
Aerial view of the 660-acre Horticulture and Agroforestry Research Center, New Franklin, Mo.
|
The Horticulture and Agroforestry Research Center (HARC), located at New
Franklin, Mo., is the primary research site for UMCA. This 660-acre farm
includes several experimental fruit and nut orchards; forest farming, riparian
buffer and silvopasture demonstrations; forage shade trials; greenhouses; a
flood tolerance laboratory; five lakes and ponds and one of Missouri's oldest
brick homes, the 1819 Thomas Hickman House. The farm, set in the beautiful,
rolling Missouri River hills, is also the U.S. National Arboretum Midwest Plant
Research and Education Site. Tours and educational events are hosted regularly.
HARC is one of the University of Missouri's 14 outlying research farms, a
network of sites across the state hosting state-of-the-art programs that bring
Missouri agricultural land and forest owners new information for reaching
maximum income potential and environmental benefits on a variety of land types
and ecoregions.
Interdisciplinary cooperation at HARC allows researchers from several
departments including entomology, plant pathology, horticulture, agronomy,
animal science and agroforestry to combine knowledge and research efforts to
address a more diverse array of topics. The University of Missouri Center for
Agroforestry supports the agroforestry research and demonstration program at
HARC to further its mission to initiate and coordinate agroforestry activities
within the state of Missouri and enhance the development of agroforestry within
North America and the temperate zone, world wide.
The farm hosts educational events and tours regularly, including the annual
Missouri Chestnut Roast. The family-oriented event draws a crowd of more than
4,000 guests each fall to showcase the benefits of agroforestry, including the
production of value added products.
Through an interdisciplinary approach, UMCA leads the nation in key research
areas conducted at the HARC farm:
- Extensive bioremediation, non-point source pollution and shade and flood
tolerance studies.
- An innovative, outdoor 12-channel flood tolerance research laboratory
- Projects for producing gourmet, high-value mushrooms, including morel
and shiitake
- The U.S. National Arboretum Midwest Plant Research and Education Test Site
- Location of one of Missouri's oldest brick homes, the historic 1819
Thomas Hickman House
- Premier research studies on the development of eastern black walnut,
northern pecan and Chinese chestnut into profitable orchard crops
History
The Horticulture Research Center opened in 1953 with a focus on horticultural
research. In 1993, the agroforestry research program was introduced to the
540-acre farm. The Horticulture Research Center became the Horticulture and
Agroforestry Research Center in 1995. A recent land purchase of 118 acres to the
west of the existing property expands the total acreage to nearly 660 acres.
Long before the first experimental tree plantings, the land which is now the
HARC farm played a key historical role for Missouri and the Midwest. Lewis and
Clark passed through the area in 1804, finding a trading post had already been
established in present-day Howard County. Just two miles south of the farm is
the site of the original town of Franklin, Mo., which was established in 1816
and grew to a population second only to St. Louis by 1820. As the starting point
for William Becknell's party and the legendary Santa Fe Trail, Franklin became a
major point of commerce and trade for the Westward Expansion movement.
One of the Midwest's most outstanding examples of early architecture remains
today on the farm, the historic 1819 Thomas Hickman House. The 1800-square foot
home is an outstanding example of the Georgian Cottage - an architectural design
once popular across the Midwest as settlers migrated from the southern regions -
and is one of the oldest brick homes in the state. Recognizing the homestead's
unique architectural, cultural and agricultural significance, the University
began a restoration project in 1996 with the excavation of the home's summer
kitchen site. The goal of this project is to restore the house to its historic
condition and to develop it as a visitor center for the HARC farm, holding
permanent educational displays of local archeological, geological and historical
interest. Learn more about this project.
Land and Soils - The Missouri River Hills region
Visitors to the research farm often comment on the beautiful, rolling hills and
exceptional views. The farm is positioned amidst the Missouri River Hills at one
of the highest elevations in Howard County, creating a diversity of
establishment sites for researching plant and tree combinations.
The current acreage sits on seven recognized soil associations. The most common
soil type - rich, fertile, well-drained, windblown silt-loam known as loess --
covers the bulk of the property and is over 100 feet deep at its center.
Horticulture Research
Agroforestry Research
|
The Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station is the research arm of the
College of Agriculture, Food and Natural
Resources
at the University of Missouri-Columbia
Site maintained by people at AgEBB
agebb@missouri.edu |