121 Somerville Road, Southeast
Decatur, Alabama 35601-2446
U.S.A.
Company Perspectives:
An unselfish dedication to the mutual objectives of growth and success for its member farmers is the hallmark of Alabama Farmers Cooperative, Inc.
History of Alabama Farmers Cooperative, Inc.
Based in Decatur, Alabama, Alabama Farmers Cooperative, Inc. (AFC) is a federated cooperative, made up of 52 local, farmer-owned cooperatives, serving Alabama and the Florida panhandle. AFC is one of the largest farmer-owned agribusinesses in the Southeast. It operates some 80 stores, which are each governed by a local cooperative. All members share in the profits of the stores and other ventures, as well as benefit from AFC research and systemwide marketing efforts. Local co-op stores, which sell to the general public as well as farmers, offer a full range of agricultural supplies and services. The feed department not only offers horse, cattle, hog, and poultry feed, but also fish feed, sheep and goat feed, rabbit feed, deer and wild animal feed, and dog and cat food. Co-op stores supply a wide variety of medications, vitamins, and supplements. In addition, AFC offers many products that cater to non-farming customers: home and garden accessories, such as gifts and home decorating, outdoor furniture, and lawn and garden ornaments; landscape supplies, including greenhouse and nursery supplies; bird and wildlife feeders and accessories; pond and water gardening products, including pond fertilizer; fertilizers, repellants, and plant foods; pet supplies; sporting goods; and even toys. Other store product lines include farm equipment, lawn and garden equipment, fencing supplies, tool boxes and fuel tanks; and tires. AFC operates a gin division, peanut division, and plant division. The gin division, Currie Gin, operates two cotton gins in Alabama, one of which is among the largest in the state. Peanuts are handled through Opp, Alabama-based Anderson's Peanuts, a leading marketer of seeds and peanuts, which it also sells internationally. The plant division is comprised of Bonnie Plant Farms, a Union Springs, Alabama, business that is one of the nation's largest sellers of annual flowers and vegetable plants. In addition, AFC and partner Southfresh Farms own SouthFresh Aquaculture, providing feed, fingerlings, and two processing plants to Alabama and Mississippi catfish farmers. More recently, AFC and the Midwestern Land O'Lakes cooperative have joined forces to create Agriliance-AFC, LLC, an effort to increase buying power in the purchase of seed, crop protectants, and crop nutrients. To keep members informed, AFC produces a monthly publication, Cooperative Farming News. AFC is governed by a board of directors comprised of working farmers and is a member of the National Council of Farmers.
Farmers Cooperatives Grow Out of 19th-Century Conditions
As long as farming was done for subsistence there was no great need for cooperatives, but with the rise of commercial farming the need for farmers to band together for their mutual benefit began to mount. During the 1800s the railroads, as well as grain elevators, spread across the United States, making commercial farming more viable but also putting farmers in the difficult position of dealing with a local monopoly that was interested in charging the highest possible price. The Granger movement, which started in 1866, attracted a number of farmers who wanted to band together to combat the exorbitant rates charged by the railroads and grain elevators. Farmers formed cooperatives to pool their buying power for needed supplies and to cut out the middleman when selling their products, as a way to negotiate the best price. It was not until 1922, when the United States Congress passed the Copper-Volstead Act, that farmers and ranchers were able to legally form cooperative associations for their mutual benefit.
In 1936 representatives of several local county cooperatives met in Decatur, Alabama, and agreed to pool their money in order to receive a price break on a large order of nitrogen fertilizer. To achieve this purpose they formed a new cooperative, the Tennessee Valley Fertilizer Cooperative, AFC's predecessor. In 1937 Edmond P. Garrett, Sr., was named general manager and chief executive officer of the co-op, a position he would hold for the next 31 years. Garrett, born in 1898, was college educated, a graduate of Alabama Polytechnic Institute in Auburn, Alabama.
Over the years, Tennessee Valley Fertilizer gradually added to its purpose. By World War II it was making food for cattle and hogs, and in the final years of the decade beginning to clean and process seeds. During the 1950s the co-op expanded its fertilizer facilities, eventually possessing storage facilities for both liquid and dry fertilizer. In addition, the co-op expanded well beyond fertilizer, feed, and seeds, and during the 1950s used its buying power to offer member farmers tires, lubricants, and farm tools. In 1957, a grain marketing service was added to sell the grain produced by north Alabama farmers. Eventually the co-op would own ten granaries.
Adoption of AFC Name: 1961
In 1961 Tennessee Valley Fertilizer acquired the Farmers Marketing and Exchange Stores and changed its name to Alabama Farmers Cooperative. In addition to serving the needs of member farmers, these co-op stores were also open to the general public, to gardeners and homeowners, thereby further increasing AFC's buying power. The network of co-op stores, operating under a variety of names, would eventually number 80. The 1960s also marked the end of Edmond Garrett's term as AFC's general manager. He retired in 1968 and died ten years later at the age of 70.
In 1969 AFC completed another major acquisition, adding Anderson's Peanuts. The man behind the Anderson name was Robert B. Anderson, who became interested in peanuts while working one summer in a Greenwood, Florida, peanut shelling operation. In 1933 Anderson left his family's farm and along with a man named Bryant Pender started the Anderson-Pender Peanut Company, a small buying and shelling operation. Two years later Anderson bought a shelling plant in Andalusia, Alabama. He and Pender split in 1938, and now Anderson took in his brothers, Edward and Alban, as partners. Together they formed another buying and shelling operation, the Hartford Peanut Company. Anderson continued to grow his peanut holdings in the 1940s. He launched a harvest season buying office in Jay, Florida, in 1945, gaining a good supply of high-quality seed stock. In that same year, he also established the Luverne Peanut Company. Anderson's connection to the company's present-day location of Opp, Alabama, came in 1955 when he bought a local shelling plant, which he renamed the Opp Peanut Company and brought in his son, James B. Anderson, to manage it. The Anderson family now owned four shelling operations and a network of buying locations in Alabama and Florida. After the family sold its peanut business to AFC in 1969, the Andersons remained very much involved. James headed the division until he retired in 1982. John W. Anderson succeeded him and ran the peanut division until 1989, at which point he took over as president and CEO of AFC. In the 35 years of AFC ownership, Anderson's Peanuts significantly upgraded its facilities, replacing two outdated shelling facilities with a state-of-the-art plant in Goshen, Alabama, in 1977. Then, in 1986, AFC added a 12-million-pound cold storage facility to the Goshen grounds. In addition, AFC added more buying locations and warehouses.
Acquisition of Bonnie Plant Farm: 1975
AFC's next major acquisition came in 1975 when the co-op acquired Union Springs, Alabama-based Bonnie Plant Farm. The business was started in 1918 by Livingston and Bonnie Paulk in Bullock County, Alabama. The couple started out with a small truck farm in Boynton, Florida, but were ruined by a freeze that killed all of the area's vegetables and fruits. They moved back to his hometown of Union Springs, Alabama, in June 1917, living on his uncle's farm, and started some small-scale planting of cotton, corn, and peanuts, as well as hogs, but were only able to scrape by. To make ends meet during the winter months, they decided to raise cabbage plants in their garden to sell to area merchants. The following winter they planted a much larger crop and began to advertise the plants in the local newspaper, which drew out-of-town orders. As the business grew, so did the accounting and paperwork. Now in need of letterhead, Livingston went to a printer to have some made. When asked the name of the business, he decided on the spot to name it after his wife, calling it the Bonnie Plant Farm.
The Bonnie Plant Farm began to advertise in farm newspapers throughout the south, which led to a much greater cabbage crop and the addition of onions, strawberries, and potato plants. After seven years of growing the plant business on their uncle's farm, the Paulks were able to buy their own 200-acre farm. To keep up with competition they began to deliver their plants, a move that not only retained old customers but brought in new ones. In 1936 they built a greenhouse where they could plant seed in boxes, transfer the small plants to pots, and later transplant to the fields. In this way the Paulks were able to get their produce to the market early and receive a better price. Next, they built a packinghouse with one room sealed off to serve as a seed room.
By 1940 the Paulks had established a steady business in their winter crops, but it provided little more than a good living. In the postwar years, however, that would begin to change as the Bonnie Plant Farm evolved into a true business. Bonnie reached the $1 million mark in annual sales in 1967. At this stage the farm mostly offered field-grown vegetable plants, but within a few years, in answer to customer demand, Bonnie began to focus on greenhouse potted plants. As a result, the farm began to build more greenhouses. After AFC bought Bonnie in 1975, Paulk family members, like the Andersons, stayed on to run the business. With AFC's support, Bonnie began to expand rapidly, adding trucks and building new greenhouses to serve an ever-growing market. By 1983 Bonnie marketed to 13 states and annual sales reached $9 million. Expansion was fueled even further by the rising popularity of garden centers by mass market retailers. Bonnie built up its sales staff, constructed more greenhouses, and as a result was well positioned to enjoy great success in the 1990s. In 2000 Bonnie would take in more than $42 million in revenues. As was the case with the Anderson family, one of the Paulks would eventually rise to the top at AFC. In 1996, Tommy Paulk, grandson of Bonnie's founders, became AFC's CEO, the fourth in the co-op's history.
AFC also enjoyed a period of strong expansion in the 1990s. In 1993 it formed a financing subsidiary to serve the seasonal and long-term needs of local cooperative members. A year later, AFC formed Dixieland Express, a transportation division with some 200 tractor trailers that served the eastern United States. (This business would be sold off in 2001.) McCullough, Alabama-based Currie Gin was acquired in 1997. The business was founded by the Currie family in Atmore, Alabama, in 1913 and moved to McCullough in 1950. AFC created SouthFresh Aquaculture, LLC, in 1999, a joint venture with Indianolia, Mississippi-based Southfresh Farms, and became involved in supplying the needs of Alabama and Mississippi catfish farmers.
AFC continued to launch new initiatives in the new century. It established the Co-op Calf Marketing Program to provide added value and better markets for cattle breeders through state-of-the-art preconditioning. In 2000 SouthFresh opened the first fish processing plant in Alabama's history, providing the state's catfish farmers with another marketing option. In 2003 AFC and regional cooperative Land O'Lakes formed a partnership, Agriliance-AFC, LLC, to pool their buying power to help members achieve better prices in the purchase of seed, crop protectants, and crop nutrients. By now, AFC was generating over $300 million in annual revenues. In 2003 the co-op recorded a net margin of $7.5 million before taxes.
Principal Divisions: Anderson's Peanuts; Bonnie Plant Farms; Currie Gin.
Principal Competitors: Farmland Industries, Inc.; Gold Kist Inc.; Southern States Cooperative, Incorporated.
Related information about Alabama
pop (2000e) 4 447 100; area
133 911 km²/51 705 sq mi. State in SE USA,
divided into 67 counties; the ‘Heart of Dixie’, the ‘Camellia
State’, or ‘Yellowhammer’; first permanent settlement by the French
at Mobile, 1711; N Alabama became part of the USA in 1783, the
remainder being acquired by the Louisiana Purchase in 1803; the
22nd state to be admitted to the Union, 1819; seceded, 1861;
slavery abolished, 1865; refused to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment
to the US Constitution and placed under military rule, 1867;
re-admitted to the Union in 1868, but Federal troops remained until
1876; capital, Montgomery; other chief cities, Birmingham, Mobile,
Huntsville; rivers include the Alabama (formed by the confluence of
the Tallapoosa and Coosa Rivers), Tombigbee, Mobile, Tennessee,
Chattahoochee; highest point Mt Cheaha (734 m/2408 ft); a
mountainous NE, separated from the S coastal plain by the rolling
plain of the Appalachian Piedmont; diversified agriculture, after
the boll weevil blight of 1915; cattle, poultry, cotton, soybeans,
peanuts; chemicals, textiles, paper products, processed food; iron
and steel industry centred on Birmingham; coal, oil, stone;
lumbering, fishing; many civil rights protests in the area in the
1950s and 1960s; areas devastated by Hurricane Katrina (notably
Mobile) in 2005.
margin:0 0 1em 1em;" class="toccolours">
| State motto |
Audemus jura nostra defendere |
| State bird |
Yellowhammer |
| State flower |
Camellia |
| State song |
"Alabama"
|
| State tree |
Longleaf
Pine |
| State spirit |
Conecuh Ridge |
| State reptile |
Red-bellied turtle |
Alabama is a U.S.
state located in the Southern United States. About three-fifths of the land area is a
gentle plain with a
general decline towards the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico. The
North Alabama
region is mostly mountainous, with the Tennessee River cutting
a large valley creating numerous creeks, streams, rivers,
mountains, and lakes. The lowest point east of the Mississippi River lies
in Dekalb
County along a creek cutting tower ridges, and creating
Buck's
Pocket State Park. Alabama generally ranges in elevation from sea level at Mobile Bay, to a little more
than 1,800 feet (550 m) in the Appalachian
Mountains in the northeast. The highest point is Mount Cheaha.
States bordering Alabama include Tennessee to the north; Alabama has coastline at the
Gulf of Mexico in
the extreme southern edge of the state.
National Parks in
Alabama include Horseshoe Bend National Military Park in Daviston; and
Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site near
Tuskegee.
Alabama also contains the Natchez Trace Parkway, the Selma To Montgomery National Historic Trail, and the
Trail Of Tears
National Historic Trail.
History
Among Native American people once living in present Alabama were
Alabama
(Alibamu), Cherokee,
Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, Koasati, and Mobile.
Meso-American influence is evident in the agrarian Mississippian
culture that followed.
The French founded the
first European settlement
in the state with the establishment of Mobile in 1702.
Race and ancestry
The racial makeup of the state and comparison to the prior
census:
The largest reported ancestry groups in Alabama: American (17.0%),
English (7.8%),
Irish (7.7%),
German (5.7%),
and Scotch-Irish (2.0%).
Religion
Alabama is part of the Bible Belt, in which evangelicals and fundamentalists are predominant. Alabama's agricultural outputs
include poultry and
eggs, cattle, plant nursery items,
peanuts, cotton, grains such as corn and sorghum, vegetables, milk, soybeans, and peaches. Although known as "The Cotton State", Alabama
ranks between eight and ten in national cotton production,
according to various reports, with Texas, Georgia and Mississippi comprising the top three.
Alabama's industrial
outputs include iron and
steel products (including
cast-iron and steel pipe); paper, lumber,
and wood products; Also,
Alabama produces aerospace and electronic products, mostly in the Huntsville area,
which is home of the NASA
George C. Marshall Space Flight Center and the US Army Missile Command, headquartered at Redstone Arsenal.
Also, the city of Mobile is a busy seaport on the Gulf of Mexico, and with
inland waterway access to the Midwest via the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway.
Alabama levies a 2, 4 or 5 percent personal income tax, depending
upon the amount earned and filing status. 2012), it will connect
Birmingham with Memphis, Tennessee.
Major airports in Alabama include Birmingham International Airport (BHM), Dothan Regional
Airport (DHN), Huntsville
International Airport (HSV), Mobile Regional
Airport (MOB), Muscle
Shoals - Northwest Alabama Regional Airport (MSL), and Tuscaloosa
Regional Airport (TCL).
Alabama is divided into three co-equal branches:
The legislative
branch is the Alabama Legislature, a bicameral assembly composed of the Alabama
House of Representatives, with 105 members, and the Alabama Senate, with 35
members. Other members of executive branch include the cabinet, the
Attorney
General of Alabama, the Alabama Secretary
of State, the Alabama Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries, the
Alabama
State Treasurer, and the Alabama State
Auditor.
The judicial
branch is responsible for interpreting the Constitution and
applying the law in state criminal and civil cases. Due to the
restraints placed in the Alabama Constitution, all but 7 counties
(Jefferson, Lee, Mobile, Madison, Montgomery, Shelby, and
Tuscaloosa) in the state have little to no home rule. Due to the
Legislature's power to override a gubernatorial veto by a mere simple majority
(most state Legislatures require a 2/3 majority to override a
veto), the relationship between the executive and legislative
branches can be easily strained when different parties control both
branches.
During Reconstruction following the American Civil War,
Alabama was occupied by federal troops of the Third Military
District under General
John Pope. The state became part of the "Solid South," a one-party
system in which the Democratic Party became essentially the only political
party in every Southern state. font-size: 95%;">
Presidential elections results
Year
|
Republican
|
Democrat
|
| 2004 |
62.46%1,176,394
|
36.84% 693,933 |
| 2000 |
56.47%944,409
|
41.59% 695,602 |
| 1996 |
50.12%769,044
|
43.16% 662,165 |
| 1992 |
47.65%804,283
|
40.88% 690,080
|
| 1988 |
59.17%815,576
|
39.86% 549,506 |
| 1984 |
60.54%872,849
|
38.28% 551,899 |
| 1980 |
48.75%654,192
|
47.45% 636,730 |
| 1976 |
42.61% 504,070 |
55.73%659,170
|
| 1972 |
72.43%728,701
|
25.54% 256,923 |
1968*
|
13.99% 146,923 |
18.72% 196,579 |
| 1964 |
69.45%479,085
|
30.55% 210,732 |
| 1960 |
42.16% 237,981 |
56.39%318,303
|
*State won
by George
Wallaceof the American Independent Party,
at 65.86%, or 691,425 votes
|
From 1876 through 1956, Alabama supported only Democratic
presidential candidates, by large margins. In the 1968 presidential election, Alabama supported native
son and American Independent Party candidate George Wallace over both
Richard Nixon and
Hubert Humphrey.
In 1976, Democratic candidate Jimmy Carter carried the
state, the region, and the nation, but Democratic control of the
region slipped thereafter. In local politics, by contrast,
Democrats still control many offices, such as their large and long
standing majority in the Alabama Legislature.
In 2004, George W. Shelby County, in suburban Birmingham, and the
city of San
Francisco, California are the closest pair of greatly populated
areas to being political polar opposites. Although it must be said,
the above mentioned black belt counties voted the most Democratic
in the country, giving 97% of the vote to Kerry.
The state's two current U.S. senators are Jefferson B. Shelby, both from the Republican Party.
In the U.S. House of Representatives, the state is represented
by seven members, five of whom are Republicans, and two Democrats.
The Representatives are Jo
Bonner, Terry
Everett, Mike D.
Rogers, Robert
Aderholt, Bud
Cramer, Spencer
Bachus, and Artur
Davis.
Important cities and towns
In order of population
Cities 200,000+
- Birmingham - 233,149
- Montgomery - 200,983
Cities 150,000-200,000
- Mobile -
192,759
- Huntsville - 164,146
Cities 65,000-150,000
- Tuscaloosa - 80,181
- Hoover -
66,346
Cities 50,000-65,000
- Dothan -
61,287
- Decatur
- 54,528
Cities 35,000-50,000
- Auburn -
48,348
- Gadsden
- 37,640
- Florence - 36,258
- Madison
- 35,012
Cities 20,000-35,000
- Bessemer - 29,672
- Phenix
City - 28,936
- Prichard - 27,622
- Homewood - 25,043
- Vestavia Hills - 24,476
- Prattville - 24,303
- Anniston - 23,822
- Opelika
- 23,483
- Alabaster - 22,619
- Enterprise - 21,178
- Mountain Brook - 20,604
- Selma -
20,512
- Northport - 20,106
Metropolitan and Combined Statistical Areas
Also see Alabama's Metropolitan Areas.
MSAs 1,000,000+
- Birmingham-Hoover-Cullman Combined Statistical
Area - 1,129,721
MSAs 500,000 - 1,000,000
- Mobile-Daphne-Fairhope Combined Statistical Area -
567,625
- Huntsville-Decatur Combined Statistical Area -
510,088
MSAs 300,000 - 500,000
- Huntsville Metropolitan Area - 342,376
- Montgomery Metropolitan Area - 333,055
MSAs 150,000 - 300,000
- Tuscaloosa Metropolitan Area - 164,875
MSAs 100,000 - 150,000
- Decatur Metropolitan Area - 145,867
- Florence-Muscle
Shoals Metropolitan Area - 142,950
- Dothan Metropolitan Area - 136,594
- Auburn-Opelika Metropolitan Area - 115,092
- Anniston-Oxford Metropolitan Area - 112,240
- Gadsden
Metropolitan Area - 104,000
Education
Colleges and Universities
- Alabama A&M University
- Alabama State University
- Andrew Jackson University
- Athens State University
- Auburn
University
- Auburn University Montgomery
- Birmingham School of Law
- Birmingham-Southern College
- Bishop State Community College
-
Calhoun Community College System
- Decatur-Main Campus
- Huntsville/Cummings Research
Park
- Redstone Arsenal
- Capps
College
- Concordia College-Selma
- Cumberland School of Law
- Faulkner University
- Heritage Christian University
- Huntingdon College
- Jacksonville State University
-
Jefferson State Community College System
- Jefferson State Community College at
Jefferson Campus
- Jefferson State Community College at
Shelby Campus
- Jefferson State Community College at Pell
City Campus
- Judson
College
- Miles
College
- Oakwood
College
- Regions University
- Remington College
- Samford University
- Selma
University
- Southeastern Bible College
|
- Spring Hill College
- Stillman College
- Strayer University
- Talladega College
-
Troy University System (formerly "Troy State
University System")
- Main
Campus (Troy)
- Troy University at Dothan
- Troy University at
Montgomery
- Troy University at Phenix
City
- Tuskegee University
- United States Sports Academy
-
University of Alabama System
- Main Campus (Tuscaloosa)
- University of Alabama at
Birmingham
- University of Alabama in
Huntsville
- University of Mobile
- University of Montevallo
- University of North Alabama
- University of South Alabama
- University of West Alabama
- Virginia College
- Wallace State Community College
|
Miscellaneous topics
¹ The phrase The Heart of Dixie is required by state law to be included on
standard state vehicle license plates, but has recently been
reduced to a very small size and eclipsed by the phrase Stars
Fell on Alabama.
The rock band Lynyrd
Skynyrd had a hit with the song, 'Sweet Home
Alabama'.
See also
- Famous
Alabamians
- Music of
Alabama
- Scouting
in Alabama
- List of symphonies of Alabama
- The
Alabama Theatre
Cultural sites
- Birmingham Astronomical Society
- Birmingham Paleontological Society
- USS
Alabama
- U.S. Space & Rocket Center/U.S. Space Camp
Huntsville
- Old State
Bank
- McEntire
House
- Vulcan
Park
- Birmingham Civil Rights Institute
- The
Betsy Ann Riverboat Montgomery
Events
- Alabama Shakespeare Festival
- Alabama Jubilee Hot Air Balloon
Classic
- Spirit of America Festival
- Mobile Bay
Jubilee
- Mardi
Gras
- Alabama Sports Festival
- City Stages Music
Festival
- Regions Charity Classic (formerly the Bruno's Memorial
Classic)
- Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival
Sports Teams
- Huntsville
Stars(a Southern League baseball team)
- Birmingham
Barons (a Southern League baseball team)
- Montgomery
Biscuits (a Southern League baseball team)
- Mobile
BayBears (a Southern League baseball team)
- Tennessee Valley Vipers (an AF2 team)
- Birmingham Steeldogs (an AF2 team)
- Huntsville
Havoc (Southern Professional Hockey League
team)
- Birmingham Magicians (an ABA basketball team)
- Alabama
Renegades (National Women's Football Association (NWFA))
- Alabama
Hawks (Huntsville) (1968-1969) (Continental
Football League)
- Birmingham Americans 1974/Birmingham Vulcans
1975 (World
Football League)
- Birmingham Stallions (1983-1985) (USFL)
- Birmingham
Fire (1991-1992) (World
League of American Football)
- Birmingham Barracudas (1995) (Canadian Football
League)
- Huntsville Channel Cats/Huntsville Tornado (1995-2003)
(a minor-league professional ice hockey team)
- Birmingham Thunderbolts (2001) (XFL)
- Mobile
Revelers (2001-03) (NBA Development League)
- Huntsville
Flight (2001-05) (NBA Development League)
List of Venues:
- Bryant-Denny Stadium
- Joe W.
Davis Stadium
- Hoover Metropolitan Stadium
- Jordan-Hare Stadium
- Montgomery Riverwalk Stadium
- Hank Aaron
Stadium
- Von Braun
Center
- Birmingham Jefferson Convention
Complex
- Fair Park
Arena
- Legion
Field
- Mobile
Civic Center
- Rickwood
Field
- Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail
- Point Mallard Aquatic Center
- Talladega Superspeedway and the The International Motorsports Hall of Fame &
Museum
References
Bibliography
- Atkins, Leah Rawls, Wayne Flynt, William Warren Rogers, and
David Ward.
User Comments Add a comment…