Fifth-Generation Grower Shares Leadership Lessons, Navigates Industry Freeze Challenges
ASPERS, PA. — Slowly driving up the hill through a test block of stone fruit trees, Jennifer Baugher Benton fervently scans the row. She immediately stops her vehicle when something catches her eye: Fruit.
“Oh my, I can’t believe it, this has fruit!” she exclaims and jumps out of the vehicle.
Her excitement for the fruit-laden cherry-plum hybrid carries a little more weight this year.
“It’s a small thing, and won’t pay any bills, but we all love this piece of fruit. It’ll be an especially nice treat to have this year,” she says.
Many specialty crop growers in the state, including her family’s fifth-generation farm, Adams County Nursery, a wholesale fruit tree nursery and orchard business, has suffered significant losses from the April freeze events.
From April 20–21, record-breaking temperatures of 23°F to 30°F swept across several Mid-Atlantic states, including Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia, leaving many orchards expected to yield little to no fruit this season.
“For the next two, maybe three years, we’re going to feel the effects of this freeze for sure,” says Benton.
Benton, who learned about the business from the ground up, starting in sales before ascending to her current role as president of the company, knows their business, as well as those downstream in the industry, will feel the limitations caused by the freeze.
The reduced crop will have a ripple effect across the industry, impacting chemical suppliers, equipment dealers, and tourism, including summer and fall festivals.
“It will affect operations’ abilities to reinvest. It will inhibit growers from establishing new plantings, investing in infrastructure, executing on planned growth opportunities, etc. It’s just an upsetting setback all around,” she says.
As many in the tree fruit industry begin to feel the effects of the killing frost and face financial headwinds, Benton credits PennAg Industries, which Adams County Nursery has been a member of since the early 2000s, for stepping up its advocacy with USDA and the leaders within the Farm Service and Risk Management agencies.
“When Chris Herr called me after the freeze happened, I was a bit surprised but grateful to know he was taking a pulse of what was happening and that he reached out to see what the potential advocacy needs of our industry were going to be,” says Benton. “He understood the necessary steps to gather the wagons and come together as a united voice in meeting with state and federal leadership.”
PennAg has been working alongside the State Horticultural Association of Pennsylvania, sending out industry communications and hosting Industry Roundtables with guests including U.S. Senator McCormick, Pennsylvania Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding, USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA) Administrator Bill Beam, USDA Risk Management Agency Administrator Pat Swanson, USDA’s Risk Management Agency (RMA) Insurance Services Regional Director, Kevin Wooten, and Pennsylvania State FSA Administrator Rick Ebert.
“When we initially joined PennAg, what drew us into membership was the suite of workers comp and farm and agribusiness insurance discounts; its advocacy ability was kind of a second thought, but that has certainly changed,” she says.
In late May, shortly after the second industry roundtable, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins signed a secretarial disaster declaration approving assistance, such as crop insurance payments and damage assessments, for growers in nearly 20 counties in Pennsylvania, including Adams County, home to Benton’s business.
“The reach and movement in the advocacy that PennAg has brought to the table, assisting with getting state and federal leadership to hear us, has been instrumental and a major reason why we will continue our membership,” she adds.








Cultivating Culture
Benton, who grew up on the family farm initially had no intention of joining the family business. She went to college and studied international business. She envisioned working at a large company where she would have opportunities to travel for work.
“It was an opportunity that was right in front of me, but I didn’t see it. I think my parents were intentional about that. If I was to come back, they wanted it to be on my own terms,” she says.
Upon graduation, her uncle Phil approached her and let her know she had a spot there if she was interested. After a few weeks of mulling it over, Benton decided to give it a shot. In the first few months, she hit the ground running, working in sales and learning the business’s customer base and culture before moving into product development. Her time in sales and product development allowed her to build meaningful relationships with the growers they serve.
“It’s funny, when you are that age, 20-something out of college, you want to find where you belong and feel like you’ve chosen a meaningful career. I would say within a year of working here, I felt like a lifer, which is a good feeling to have at that age. Ironically, I probably traveled more within the first five years of my career here than I ever would have in the corporate world,” she adds.
Looking back on those formative years, Benton says she grew especially fond of her time spent out in the field evaluating different varieties and learning.
As the prior generation set the business succession plan in motion and started stepping back from their roles, Benton and her cousins began taking on more management and other responsibilities within the company.
She credits the fourth generation with laying the groundwork for her and her cousins – the fifth generation to take up the reins of the over 120-year-old family enterprise.
“Business is people, and your business’s success depends on relationships, whether that be with your employees, the growers you serve, or the partners you work alongside.” Benton’s day-to-day as president keeps her most often behind a desk, but she still makes time for those relationships.
“This role does have me in a lot of meetings, but I think for any leader, you need to be intentional about your relationships and how that plays into your culture and the direction of the company,” she says.
The business world is continually evolving, and agriculture is no exception. Yet the foundation for both remains the same: it’s about people.
“Any opportunity where you can give your time and focus to your people, is never a wasted opportunity, in my opinion,” Benton adds.




























