With a family history in agriculture that spans four generations back to the Mississippi Delta, Charles Hannah knew he wanted to enter the field as he prepared to return home from Afghanistan in 2009. But with all his family’s farming enterprises gone, he was stuck looking for an entry point into a generational career. When he stumbled upon an ad for the BattleGround to Breaking Ground Skills Training Program years later, he didn’t hesitate to apply. “That ad changed my life trajectory,” Hannah said.
Developed in 2016 through a partnership between the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture Beginning Farmer Rancher Development Program, BattleGround to Breaking Ground set out to combat the aging farmer population and teach interested beginning farmers and ranchers the basics of agriculture business. Since inception, the program has transformed from a one-day workshop to a four-phase, year-long program that allows participants to receive hours of hands-on training and develop their business plans. Another grant from the USDA in 2019 allowed AgriLife to develop an offshoot program specifically for transitioning military members through a Department of Defense Skillbridge Program. In 2022, the program accepted its first cohort.
A Groundbreaking Gift
Designed specifically for transitioning military members who are in their final 180 days of service, the Skills Training Program provides participants a bridge into farming and ranching. Because it’s a job training program, the military releases these soon-to-be veterans to complete their training while they are still earning a paycheck from the Department of Defense.
“Recognizing that many veterans come from rural areas and want to return home after their service, we developed this program to help them find meaningful employment that enables them to continue serving their country in a new avenue,” said Erin Kimbrough ’13, BattleGround’s program manager. “The program facilitates new career pathways for transitioning military and others, guiding them toward their next steps in life while also strengthening the communities they call home.”