Rooted in Faith and Farming: James Casey Honored with 2025 Georgia Farm Bureau Legacy Award

Polk County |

James Casey says farming was never a question for him—it was a calling rooted deep in family history.

“I was born on a farm, and I never had any intention of doing anything but farm,” said James Casey, 2025 Georgia Farm Bureau Legacy Award winner. “Um, I went to school at the University of Georgia and my daddy really didn’t think I’d come back after I got a degree. But I, I didn’t intend to do anything else but. That’s how I got into it because I was raised in it and never wanted to do anything else but.”

That legacy stretches back generations, all tied to the same land.

“My father was a farmer, and his father was a farmer and uh, uh, both of them farmed right there in the same valley where, you know, where I farmed,” Casey said. “So, I went back to the family farm.”

For his daughter, Joan Mitchell, her father’s dedication to farming has always gone hand in hand with his faith.

“If you know my daddy, then you know what a man of faith he is,” said Joan Mitchell, Casey’s daughter. “So, I’ve seen him, you know, struggle with just trying to keep the farm was always an ongoing thing. Dairy farmers um, unfortunately, don’t make a lot of money. I mean, you got to struggle to just keep afloat.”

She says it was that faith that carried him through difficult times.

“He just has a way. He knows that God’s going to take care of the situation,” Mitchell said. “And I wish I had half of the faith that my daddy does.”

Chad Carlton, Georgia Farm Bureau District 3 Director, says Casey’s commitment went far beyond his own operation.

“Beyond anything else, he, he believes in the mission of Farm Bureau, right?” said Chad Carlton, GFB District 3 Director. “And everything we do and everything he does through the Polk County Farm Bureau was viewed through that lens on how are we going to promote and uh, you know, support agriculture?”

Carlton says Casey’s leadership left a lasting impression.

“So, just having that, having that person leading our county has, has been an inspiration to. Me,” Carlton said.

Mitchell says her father didn’t just talk about supporting agriculture—he lived it.

“My daddy walks the walk,” Mitchell said. “Farm Bureau has always been extremely important to my daddy. Um, he just, he knows how important agriculture is to our world. When I say daddy’s passionate about agriculture, that don’t, that don’t even begin to touch it.”

Carlton says Casey’s dedication was steady and intentional.

“He’s been a steadfast proponent for agriculture all through the years,” Carlton said. “And um, has, has just been the, the best asset for Polk County Farm Bureau.”

One moment, Carlton says, stands out above the rest.

“When he says a prayer at every board meeting, he says help us stay true to what we started out to do,” Carlton said. “And um, that’s something I always try to remember whether I’m in the board meeting or out in the counties is, you know, we have a mission that we started with and we want to always stay true to that. So, he, he’s just instilled that in me.”

For Casey, the recognition is less about himself and more about the people around him.

“I’m pleased with what we’ve accomplished here,” Casey said. “Uh, we’ve had good people to work with. Uh, and I’m very proud of the people that I’ve, I have gotten to come into Farm Bureau and meet them.”

Looking back, he says gratitude defines the journey.

“But uh, but because of my family and everything else that’s happened, Farm Bureau’s a part of it,” Casey said. “I can honestly say I feel like I’m of all men most blessed.”

By: Damon Jones

A Life Rooted in the Land: Walt Pridgen Honored with 2025 Georgia Farm Bureau Achievement Award

Pitts, GA |

Walt Pridgen has spent his entire life in agriculture, following a path shaped by family, tradition, and a deep sense of purpose.

“I’ve been in agriculture my whole life, I guess you could say,” said Walt Pridgen, 2025 Georgia Farm Bureau Achievement Award winner. “Went to college, got an ag degree. Went into equipment sales out of college. Had the opportunity to come back and kind of help dad. So, I came back in 2018 and was farming alongside dad and got the opportunity to kind of build my own operation.”

That return to the family farm marked the beginning of Seven Creek Farms.

“So, I bought a herd of cows,” Pridgen said. “Then the opportunity presented itself to build some chicken houses. So, I was like, well, we’re already in the chicken business, so that kind of makes sense. So, I bought my first herd of cows in 2018 — that’s when Seven Creek Farms started. And then built the chicken houses. I signed the contract to build the chicken house the first part of 2020. So, I’ve been farming poultry since 2020, 2021.”

Even with different ventures along the way, Pridgen says agriculture has always been central to his life.

“I’ve been around agriculture basically my whole life in some capacity,” he said.

For Pridgen, farming carries a responsibility that extends far beyond the fence line.

“Knowing that what I’m doing is feeding somebody,” he said. “I feel like at some point you’re probably going to need a doctor. You’re probably going to need a pharmacist. Depending on how your life shakes out, you may need a lawyer. But you’re going to need a farmer at least once a day. You know — food, fiber, shelter, that kind of thing.”

That understanding fuels his passion not only to farm, but to educate others about agriculture.

“Just being able to make a difference and feed the world and educate people at the same time about why we do what we do,” Pridgen said. “It’s something that I never really intended to do. Being in a position where I can go and talk and do the things that I’ve been able to do wasn’t really in the bingo cards, but it’s just how the deck of cards shook out, and here we are.”

Despite the challenges, Pridgen says there’s nowhere else he’d rather be.

“Farming is hard,” he said. “It would be a lot easier most days to just use the degree that I got, sell fertilizer or chemicals or seeds, or I could be a loan officer at AgSouth or something. But there’s just something about being out here on this place.”

That connection runs deep.

“My family’s been here for 200 years farming the same dirt,” Pridgen said. “Even if I had to go back to town, I’d still try to find a way to be out here doing something. It’s an itch that you just can’t scratch unless you’re scratching it to the level that we’re trying to scratch it here.”

Being recognized with the Georgia Farm Bureau Achievement Award, he says, reflects more than individual effort.

“Being recognized for that award in itself is a pretty big undertaking,” Pridgen said. “But I don’t think I can take all the credit for that myself. Farming is a team effort these days.”

That team includes family, helpers, and Farm Bureau support.

“My dad’s on his operation, and he helps me on mine,” he said. “We’ve got a helper that helps both of us. The people in the local Farm Bureau support me with all the stuff that I do. So as much as it’s an individual award, I kind of feel like it was a win for everybody that’s helped me get to this point.”

After nearly a decade of involvement at a competitive Farm Bureau level, the recognition brought a moment of reflection.

“I’ve been doing Farm Bureau stuff for going on ten-ish years,” Pridgen said. “So it was cool to finally kind of see all that come full circle and give those guys opportunities to see their hard work pay off, because they have just as much to do with it as I do, I feel like.”

By: John Holcomb