Career
He was the owner of Walnut Acres, in Penns Creek, Pennsylvania. There he produced various food products sold nationally in health food stores and via a mail-order catalog. The foods included free-range chicken.
Peanut, apple, and other butters.
And granola. He was one of the pioneers of the idea of growing food without pesticides or chemical fertilizers. He was born in Lititz, Pennsylvania.
He earned an undergraduate degree at Lebanon Valley College and a master"s degree in mathematics at Yale University. Before starting Walnut Acres, he taught mathematics at Drew University.
He learned about organic farming from Sir Albert Howard while teaching in northern India.
When he returned to the United States, he studied further at the School of Living, in Suffern, New York and Kimberton Farm School in Pennsylvania. While in India, he was involved with Mohandas Gandhi and the Indian independence movement. Her name was Enid Betty Morgan, and she was the daughter of missionaries.
His first big breakthrough in selling organic foods came when Clementine Paddleford, the New York Herald-Tribune food editor, was entranced by the farm"s first product, Apple Essence, an apple butter.
Walnut Acres was started just after World World War World War II In 1994, it had sales of close to $8 million annually. Keene sold the company in 2000.
lieutenant is no longer in business, but certain foods manufactured by the Hain Celestial Group, a natural-foods conglomerate, bear the "Walnut Acres Organic" label.