The Farm,
Twenty Years Later
The original Hippy Commune is still known for its tie-dye
T-shirts together with high technology, and a wisdom born of experience
an interview with Albert Bates, by Robert and Diane
Gilman
One of the articles in Living Together (IC#29) Summer 1991, Page 36
Copyright (c)1991, 1996 by Context Institute
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The Farm began as a communal group of 320 "Hippies," followers
of their prophet, Stephen Gaskin. They were fleeing the hard drugs and tourism
of San Francisco's Haight Ashbury district in a fleet of converted school
buses, finally settling in Tennessee in 1971. Having spent all their communal
money on a downpayment for their new 1,750-acre home, they used the buses
for shelter for years while they worked to build businesses and learned
to, well, farm.
In its twenty year history, The Farm has survived some wild swings
of fortune, swelled and diminished in size - and even developed into an
influential force in Tennessee state politics. It is also a source of much
technological and social innovation: among The Farm's inventions are the
first Doppler fetal pulse detector, a portable ionizing radiation detector,
and passive solar space-heating technology.
Long-time member Albert Bates, who is also the author of Climate
in Crisis, assessed the lessons learned at The Farm over its twenty-year
history. Contact The Farm in Summertown, TN 38483.
Robert: What is the first thing you would say to people who
are interested in developing community?
Albert: The main thing is having a group of people who want to
spend their time - their lives - together. If you have that, all the rest
is detail. If you don't have that, that's where you have to start.
Robert: The Farm swelled at one point to 1,400 people, but
now is back down to 300. What would you say is the ideal size for a self-sustaining
community?
Albert: If you look at prehistoric societies, they were typically
comprised of small clans of twelve to thirty people. That's a size that
seems to have a certain inherent efficiency - tasks can be delegated, or
enough people can combine their strength or skill to come out with something
that's better for the group as a whole than they would have produced as
individuals.
Ninety percent of the intentional communities in this country have been
of this typical clan size. At the Farm, we got off into a slightly different
track. In the sixties, everything was possible, and we just ignored historical
experience and accepted anybody. As a result, it was somewhat chaotic here,
though it did seem to hold together for a number of years.
But once you get to small town or city size, you lose intimacy, and you
gain bureaucracy. One hundred is a good size for a group to become self-sufficient.
That size offers a wide diversity of possible vocations and the ability
to switch between jobs as the inclination moves you. When the average Hutterite
community gets much bigger than 150 or so, for example, they split off into
two smaller groups and grow up to 100 again. One hundred also seemed to
work pretty well with the satellite farms we had.
But I'm not so sure 100 is optimal for The Farm. We're finding here that
our current size - about 300 - is actually too small. We might add 50 or
100 people and be more comfortable, because we need to balance the size
of the child population: how many are in school, what ages, and so on. We
need to be large enough to support the school, a clinic, and other material
needs.
Diane: How has The Farm managed to survive economically over
the years?
Albert: When we first got here in 1971, the idea was to become
farmers. We started with a pair of Belgian mares and a plow, growing sorghum
and making molasses. We sold it under the brand name, "Old Beatnik
Pure Lewis County Sorghum."
That wasn't enough, so people would go out and work in town. Sometimes
we'd end up taking a busload of 60 people to Nashville to work for $1.25
an hour. Gradually, a few more businesses started to spring up. A lot of
them have come and gone, and today we have about 30 businesses. The major
ones include a printing and publishing company, a small electronics firm,
a Mayan goods trading company, a woodworking shop, and lots of vegetarian
food products. We're probably the single largest producer of innoculants
for tempeh in the world. And of course, there's the Dye Works. Tie-dyes
are a kind of traditional craft among Hippies, and we've carried it to its
peak.
There are also three major community-based non-profit organizations:
Plenty USA, which is an alternative foreign policy institution through which
we share our resources with poor people around the world; Rosinante, which
creates projects that challenge the limits of institutions like the American
health care system; and the National Coalition of Alternative Community
Schools, which provides a communications forum for the alternative school
movement in this country.
Diane: What would you say is your greatest strength as a community?
Albert: Our greatest strength, ironically, is just having been
together as long as we have. There's a core population now that carries
knowledge of both our gigantic blunders and our successes, and that keeps
us wise. But in a sense, our history is also our weakness, because having
already tried a lot of things - some of which worked, some of which didn't
- we tend to be less open about possibilities. A younger group of idealistic
young Hippies, just starting out in their teenage delirium, would be less
encumbered by all of the negativism that comes from having failed on several
occasions and settled into patterns.
Robert: What about your greatest challenges?
Albert: Well, the continuing challenge is to figure out how to
marry this hard work, and enterprising vision, to the resources to make
a real difference in the world. It seems that no matter how hard you work,
you don't necessarily get what you deserve. Our challenge is to gain access
to greater resources, because what we've accomplished - and what we can
do to help - is very valuable. The world needs a much bigger dose of it.
We would love to share it, but we don't always have access to the right
resources.
Robert: What else would you put on your list of fundamentals
for community living?
Albert: The most fundamental, essential element, without which
any community would fail, boils down to interpersonal skills. The glue that
holds any group together is the ability to put aside your own personal ego
at times, and to recognize that you have to look out for other people. That
may mean trying to help somebody who's not able to articulate feelings very
well, or it might mean shifting work burdens of one kind or another.
Basically, it's about being able to relate to one another in a close
way, understand each other's aspirations, and assume each other's
goodwill. You have to get beyond your petty little bickerings and find a
sense of common purpose. You might disagree sharply or even get into knock-down-drag-out
disputes, but that's part of the pleasure of living in a close knit group.
Instead of saying, "I hate that guy, I never want to speak to him again
in my life," you all come out recognizing, "Hey this is great!
We really got to argue that one out."
Interpersonal communication skills are the very essence of community.
Without them, any community will fail, and with them, you can do anything.
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