
A history of organic farming: Transitions from Sir Albert Howard’s
War in the Soil to USDA National Organic Program
J. Heckman
Abstract
The organic farming concept developed in the period prior to 1940 and
was pioneered by Sir Albert Howard (1873-1947). Howard, born and educated
in England, directed agricultural research centers in India (1905-1931)
before permanently returning to England. His years of agricultural research
experiences and observations gradually evolved into a philosophy and
concept of organic farming that he espoused in several books.
Howard’s thinking on soil fertility and the need to effectively
recycle waste materials, including sewage sludge, onto farmland was
reinforced by F.H. King’s book, Farmers of Forty Centuries. Howard
developed a system of composting that became widely adopted. Howard’s
concept of soil fertility centered on building soil humus with an emphasis
on how soil life was connected to the health of crops, livestock, and
mankind.
Howard argued that crop and animal health was a birthright and that
the correct method of dealing with a pathogen was not to destroy the
pathogen but to see what could be learned from it or to ‘make
use of it for tuning up agricultural practice’.
The system of agriculture advocated by Howard was coined ‘organic’
by Walter Northbourne to refer to a system ‘having a complex but
necessary interrelationship of parts, similar to that in living things’.
Lady Eve Balfour compared organic and non-organic farming and helped
to popularize organic farming with the publication of The Living Soil.
Jerome Rodale, a publisher and an early convert to organic farming,
was instrumental in the diffusion and popularization of organic concepts
in the US.
Both Howard and Rodale saw organic and non-organic agriculture as
a conflict between two different visions of what agriculture should
become as they engaged in a war of words with the agricultural establishment.
A productive dialogue failed to occur between the organic community
and traditional agricultural scientists for several decades.
Organic agriculture gained significant recognition and attention in
1980, marked by the USDA publication Report and Recommendations on Organic
Farming. The passage of the Federal Organic Foods Production Act in
1990 began the era of accommodation for organic farming in the USA,
followed by another milestone with official labeling as USDA Certified
Organic in 2002.
Organic agriculture will likely continue to evolve in response to
ongoing social, environmental, and philosophical concerns of the organic
movement.
Source
Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems: 21(3); 143-150 2006 DOI: 10.1079/RAF2005126.
Accepted 20 August 2005 Review Article
Posted April 2007