Badly wounded feet wouldn’t prevent Roy Ogle from scouting fields of peas with Chris Ray.
Roy — 49 years Chris’s senior — had retired from Clemson three years before Chris arrived on campus as an undergraduate in 1990 to study horticulture. Chris planned to return to the family vegetable farm in Orangeburg County after graduation. A World War II veteran from Tennessee, Roy never intended to come to Clemson at all.
Neither would ever leave.
While generations apart, Roy and Chris share a love of Southern peas, gardening and old-fashioned plant breeding — crossing the flowers of plants with desirable traits and growing them over and over to develop the heartiest, tastiest, most profitable varieties.
The unlikely pair formed a strong bond in the campus farmland affectionately referred to as “the Bottoms,” looking for pea plants most resistant to disease and insects. This land on the southern end of campus, just across Perimeter Road, was once farmed by University founder Thomas Green Clemson. Today, it’s a fertile bed for agricultural research.
A plant breeder, Roy created pea and sweet potato varieties in those fields that remain popular in gardens and roadside stands throughout South Carolina even today — a rarity, an anomaly really, for a career field that’s all about producing new and better varieties.
If you eat peas or sweet potatoes grown in South Carolina or the Southeast, you’ve tasted Roy’s work.
“The greatest compliment I ever received … my wife had introduced me to a senator,” Roy recalls. “He looked at me and said, ‘So you’re Roy Ogle.’ I said, ‘Guilty.’ He said, ‘Your reputation precedes you. I know all about those peas.’ He obviously grew them, you know.
“He said, ‘You know, you are exactly what Thomas Green Clemson expected out of Clemson University. He expected a young professor that would work with students and at the same time help the farmers have a better life.’”