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Still, Armstrong said he never felt the need to turn it into an industrial-sized operation, even if that meant taking on work as a crop insurance adjuster to make ends meet. His ancestors and offspring have done the same. His grandfather was a county commissioner and his son's wife worked for 30 years as a schoolteacher. Armstrong kept working the farm until last year, when he finally sold it to his son, Stuart, now 61 years old. Whether the next generation will maintain the family farm is unclear. Henry Armstrong's two daughters both moved to Oregon and have no inclination to return. Stuart Armstrong's daughter lives in Seattle. The best chance at carrying on the family legacy is Henry Armstrong's 20-year-old grandson, Alan. At a recent Montana Farmer's Union convention, the Armstrong family was honored for its many years farming in the state. Armstrong brought Alan and later said the event had piqued his grandson's interest. "But right now he's searching around. He's started school," he said. Armstrong recalled his own urge to strike out and build a different life, when he was still a teenager. It came after World War II when he had served stateside as a Marine in San Diego and North Carolina. "When I came home the farming didn't look all that great to me. I really wasn't a farmer to start with," he said. "But I decided, my dad's getting older and it looked like the thing to do. I finally learned to like it." ___ On the Net: Montana Historical Society: http://www.his.state.mt.us/ Montana Farm Bureau: http://www.mfbf.org/
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