MARIANNA — The Cotton Research Station at Marianna may bear Lon Mann’s name, but the place belonged to Claude Kennedy.
“He loved his station. It was personal for him,” said Chuck Culver, director of external relations for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.
Kennedy, retired resident director of the station, passed away April 3. He was 82. The station is part of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, the research arm of the Division of Agriculture.
Kennedy, with his radiant smile and outstretched hands, would welcome visitors and instantly make them feel at home. More often than not, a first-time visitor would get a tour and offer of lunch, regardless of what else was on Kennedy’s calendar that day.
“Claude was a true Southern gentleman who took his job very seriously,” said Deacue Fields, vice president-agriculture for the University of Arkansas System. Fields said Kennedy was one of the first people he met on becoming dean of the Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences.
“In May of 2018, in my first couple of weeks, he gave me a tour of the station,” Fields said. “I recall how much pride he took in the accomplishments of the center and its history. When you visited the station, you got a history lesson and he took a lot of time and pride in explaining all that the station meant to agriculture and the community.”
Nathan Slaton, assistant director of the Agricultural Experiment Station, said that “Claude was more than the resident director at the Lon Mann Cotton Research Station. He loved agriculture and was the resident historian and welcoming committee for anyone who visited the station. His contributions to the Cotton Research Station will be fondly remembered and his southern charm and hospitality and will be dearly missed.”
Kennedy grew up on a Lee County farm near Marianna and later ran the family farm raising cotton, soybeans and beef cattle. He earned a bachelor of science in agronomy at Tennessee A&I in Nashville, Tennessee.
In 1987, Kennedy was called by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C., to serve as the Southeast area director for the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service. He served through the Reagan and George H.W. Bush presidencies, administering farm programs in an area that included 12 states and U.S. territories in the Caribbean.
Kennedy returned home to Arkansas in August 1993 to work as a research specialist for what was then known as the Cotton Branch Experiment Station, working on soybean performance testing for the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station. In January 1995 he moved from the division’s research arm to its outreach component, the Cooperative Extension Service. There Kennedy worked as an extension agent serving agriculture and the community.
In July 2000, Kennedy was appointed resident director of the Cotton Research Station. His job was more than just cotton, being involved in crop research activities on soybeans, wheat, corn cultivars and grain sorghum in support of Division of Agriculture scientists.
The Cotton Research Station was established in 1925 making it one of the oldest stations in the Division of Agriculture. In September 2005 the station was renamed the Lon Mann Cotton Research Station. It consists of more than 600 acres of farmland located about three miles north of Marianna.