Our History
In the Spring of 1978 Reverend Ken and Jean Horne, Reverend Ray and Marian
Buchanan, and Reverend Jeff and Susan Allen, and their families, began praying
daily for God’s guidance in beginning a shared ministry. Out of this period of
intentional prayer a plan for an intentional Christian community dedicated to
helping resolve the problem of world hunger is developed. This plan was
presented to Bishop Kenneth Goodson of the Virginia Annual Conference of United
Methodist Church in the Spring of 1979.
Bishop Goodsen appointed Ken and Ray to a "special appointment beyond the local
church" so they could found The Society of St. Andrew in Big Island, Virginia.
On June 8, 1979 Ken and Jean Horne and Ray and Marian Buchanan, and their
children, moved into a farmhouse in Bedford County, Virginia. Their goal was to
live in Christian community in order to model a lifestyle of Christian
responsibility.
From 1979-1982 the Horne and Buchanan families shared all things in common as
they modeled a simple lifestyle that rejected consumerism. They grew their own
vegetables and raised sheep, chickens, and rabbits, etc. At the same time, Ray
and Ken led workshops on responsible lifestyles and hunger issues.
By October, 1982 the two families had learned that the “simple lifestyle” was
not so simple. The Hornes moved from the farm to a home in Bedford, Virginia.
While Ken and Ray continued to lead workshops, they begin to consider taking
regular church appointments again. However, at a hunger awareness workshop the
led at Franktown United Methodist Church on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, a
farmer named Butch Nottingham questioned Ken and Ray about the facts they
presented regarding food waste. From the discussion that followed, the Potato
Project was born. On June 3, 1983 George Wooten of W. E. Bailey Produce,
Chadbourn, NC, donated a tractor-trailer load of sweet potatoes to the Society
of St. Andrew. This first load of salvaged sweet potatoes was delivered to the
Central Virginia Food Bank in Richmond.
Since that first load in 1983 the Society of St. Andrew’s Potato Project has
distributed aver 330,000,000 pounds of food to America’s hungry. During this
period, until 1990, the ministry operated out of a converted sheepshed on the
farm in Big Island. A new building was constructed in 1990 to house the growing
ministry. Also in 1990, as an offshoot of the Potato Project, The Society of St.
Andrew began the Seed Potato Project to offer a hand-up to impoverished
communities who wish to grow their own produce.
In 1985 the Society of St. Andrew launched Harvest of Hope, a gleaning and study
camp for youth. The first event was held at Camp Occahannock-on-the-Bay, on
Virginia’s Eastern Shore and was led by Rev. Rhonda VanDyke Colby. A major
component of Harvest of Hope is field gleaning. As more and more people became
exposed to gleaning, they wanted to introduce it to their own churches. As a
result, the gleaning network was established in Virginia in 1988. Since then,
gleaning has expanded dramatically.
In 1992 we opened a regional office in North Carolina, followed by regional
offices in Texas and Florida in 1994 and 1995, respectively. In 1998 we launched
the Hunger Relief Advocate Initiative in partnership with the General Commission
on United Methodist Men that has led to gleaning operations today in more than
20 states. In 2004 we opened a regional office in Alabama and in 2006 we
opened an office in Mississippi.
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