| Ferris
Donates Conservation Easement On Big Black
Grey
Ferris of Vicksburg recently donated a conservation easement
to the Mississippi Land Trust, Mississippi's largest land
trust. This donation includes bottomland hardwoods and a small
portion of pasture on the farm covering 2,114.20 acres.
According
to Leila C. Wynn, President of the Mississippi Land Trust,
"With the help of conservation-minded landowners like
Grey this portion of the Big Black River will be protected
for future generations. We are grateful to the Ferris family
for donating this easement."
According
to Ferris, "Those of us that are blessed with the ownership
of natural resources have a responsibility of being good stewards
of the land. We should all strive to ensure that we leave
our lands in better shape than we found them."
Ferris
Farms has a very colorful history. It was purchased by E.B.
Ferris in 1918. Mr. Ferris was the founding director of Mississippi's
Agricultural Experiment Stations. He employed his vast knowledge
of diversified agricultural practices in the management of
his farm. In 1935, his son, Bill Ferris, graduated from Millsaps
College and moved to the farm, where there were many sharecroppers.
As the country's economy improved, the sharecroppers left
the farm in search of a better life. Bill and his bride, Shelby,
were busy raising five children and decided to begin the slow
process of restoring the land and creating their own vision
for the farm. The bottomland hardwoods of the Big Black River
were allowed to return.
The Ferris
family were pioneers in the region in employing agricultural
conservation techniques. They terraced the fields and provided
other erosion control measures to protect the farm. Their
son, Grey Ferris, left his law practice in Vicksburg in 1974
to return to the farm where he works and lives today with
his family. Shelby and her daughter, Martha Ferris Kostmayer,
also reside on Ferris Farms. Martha and her family occupy
a house built in 1825 by B.L.C. Wailes, the first president
of Washington-Jefferson College and founder of the Mississippi
Historical Society. The University of Alabama has identified
Native American burial mounds on the property. General Grant
once marched across the property to Vicksburg.
Today
Ferris Farm has grown to over 6,000 acres. During the past
three years, all cropland has been converted to pasture and
there are over 1,000 cows on the property.
"If
you are a landowner in Mississippi and care about fish and
wildlife resources, you need to strongly consider a conservation
easement," concluded Ferris.
For more
information about conservation easements and/or the Mississippi
Land Trust, write: Mississippi Land Trust, P.O. Box 23, Stoneville,
MS 38776.
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