It started 16 years ago with a calf. The other day M.N. Lowe
of Farmer, Randolph County, joined the American Guernsey Cattle Club and became
the first dairyman in Randolph County to be admitted into the ranks of that
select organization. But the whole thing began with one purebred calf that N.M.
bought back in 1929, 16 years ago, when he joined the dairy calf club being
organized in the county by E.S. “Shorty” Millsaps. The boy secured a
registered, highly bred calf from T.D. Brown in Rowan County, and from that day
on he determined to become a dairy farmer.
His first activity was to exhibit his calf at the little
Randolph County fair that fall, where he took 19th place in a field
of 20 entries made by the club boys of that county. N.M. says he always had a
thankful place in his hart for the boy who took the last place, because it kept
him from being at the very bottom. But this did not discourage the young
dairyman. He knew nothing then about how to groom a calf for exhibiting in the
show rink; neither did he know anything about how to show a calf once he was in
the ring.
Therefore, he came back the next fall and each succeeding
fall until the present war emergency caused the Randolph County fairs to be
cancelled. Each year, N.M. went a little higher in his winnings. He and another
boy, Charles Kearns Jr., now a lieutenant in occupied Germany, became friendly
rivals and they developed into two of the best cattle showmen that Randolph
County has ever produced. Young Lowe continued to show his animals, all of
which were the descendants of that first heifer calf. In 1939, for instance, he
took first and second places for senior yearling heifers; first and second
place for junior yearling heifers; third place for senior calf; first place for
junior bull calf; and grand champion female of the show. “Shorty” Millsaps says
he cannot recall the winnings made by this boy at succeeding fairs, but he does
recall that the time he almost made a clean sweep of all the first places.
Time when on. The boy graduated from the Farmer High School
in 1934 and then elected to remain with his father, Worth Lowe, on the home
farm. He worked here with his father until 1936, when he decided he must do
something about getting a place of his own. So he started working part time in
a textile mill at Asheboro. He did not sell his small breeding herd, however,
but continued to look after his animals early in the mornings and late in the
evenings, before and after his work in the mill. By 1939, he had enough money
to make a payment on a farm of his own, and moved there in the fall, taking his
Guernseys with him. He continued his work in the mill. By 1939, he had enough
aid in his farm work.
By 1943, he bought another tract adjoining his original
farm, which gave him 121 acres. With this amount of land, N.M. figured that he
could go ahead with his Guernsey breeding, and when labor became tight in his
home community he gave up his place in the mill and now devotes his time
exclusively to his farm and his Guernsey cattle.
During the same period, the young man has remodeled his
home, installed electric lights, has running water, and has equipped his home
in a modern, efficient manner.
This year, he built a modern barn for housing his cattle and
storing his feedstuffs. Right now, he plans to build a modern milking parlor
and milk house by which he can produce grade “A” milk. The building is to be
constructed of glazed tile.
It is well to go back also to the time when N.M. took his
cattle from the Randolph fair at Asheboro to the Piedmont District Fair at
Greensboro and won almost as completely as he had at his little county fair.
Shorty Millsaps says that his recognition by the National
Guernsey Breeders organization is richly deserved. And now that the young man
has realized the dream of his boyhood days, what he has done is an example to
other boys in that section. There is no better way in which to keep a boy
interested in the farm than to give him a valuable animal of his own. Mr. Worth
Lowe was wise enough to do this, an dhe has the satisfaction of seeing his own
son own a farm adjoining the home place. This boy is carving a name for himself
in the farming annals of Randolph County, and it all started with one little
Guernsey calf, 16 years ago.
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