February 2013 | Section A
Will Swope sits on the first tractor he ever drove, a John Deere 8440. BELOW: Will and his father, Matt, walk on the family farm, where Matt grew up in the 1970s.
FAMILY FARMS
| story By brenda showalter // photos by josh marshall |
T
he Swope family considers its farming enterprise a small operation by today’s standards, but 22-year-old Will Swope hopes he can expand on the current 400 acres he works with his father, Matt Swope, in northwestern Bartholomew County. Someday, Will would like to fulfill his dream of working full time as a farmer, a passion that first attracted him at a young age. “I remember getting off of the school bus and hopping on the tractor,” he says. “I knew right then that’s what I wanted to do for the rest of my life.” Will remembers conversations with his high school guidance counselor about possible career paths, and he always came back to an unwavering desire to be a farmer. Will’s mother, Kim, admires her son’s determination to follow in the family footsteps that also included Matt’s father and stepmother, Joe and Roxann Swope, and Matt’s mother and stepfather, Nancy and Ed Hoeltke. Matt also is the great-great-grandson of M.O. Reeves, one of the Reeves brothers in Bartholomew County who founded and operated Reeves Pulley Co. and
Reeves and Co., which made farm implements. “The farming tradition goes all the way back to them,” says Joe Swope, who spent some time farming, but also owned the former Columbus Industries Inc., a manufacturing company.
Extra Hours
Kim and Matt acknowledge the growing number of farms that span thousands of acres, but they still see a place for the family farm and hope they can continue. “It’s very competitive for young people today,” says Kim, who did not grow up on a farm but has learned to love the life. “Now I can’t imagine anything else.” Matt and Kim, married for 26 years, make their home in a rural area not far from Edinburgh Premium Outlets. Within about 5 miles of their home, Matt and Will farm the 400 acres, mostly of corn, soybeans, wheat and green beans. Work has to be done primarily in the late afternoons, evenings and weekends because they both have other fulltime jobs. Matt is an equipment operator for Case Construction in Columbus, and Will works at Columbus Silgas Farm Services in Taylorsville. Kim, an execu-
tive assistant at First Financial Bank in Columbus, also helps shuttle 15-year-old daughter, Hadlee, a Columbus East High School sophomore, to many of her activities, including FFA, 4-H, dance, swimming and tennis. On their own farm, Matt and Will have to work plenty of extra hours, making use of the headlights on the farm equipment after
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the swopes Family: Father, Matt; mother, Kim; son, Will; daughter, Hadlee Farm: 400 acres in northwestern Bartholomew County Crops: Mostly corn, soybeans, green beans and wheat