April 16, 2020
Born during the Great Depression in 1933, Frank Knauer was destined to be a third-generation farmer.
His father and grandfather lived through difficult times when approximately 400,000 farms were lost through foreclosure across the nation. In 1933, Congress passed the Farm Credit Act, making loans available to farmers and creating a banking system for farming cooperatives.
“A story that's come down through my family history is that in 1916, my grandfather must have borrowed a lot of money from the bank,” Frank says. “The board of directors didn’t want to let him have that much money. So, the rumor went around that the board said, ‘Let the old guy have it, we’ll get the farm back next year.’ But what they didn’t know was that my grandfather had four sons to help him on the farm. My grandfather made it and the bank didn’t get the farm.”
Today, Frank and his son, Mike, are still farming the same land, bringing it to four generations.
From farming to NASCAR
Mike bought Transquaking Farms, a Maryland Century Farm, from his dad about five years ago. Laughing, Mike says: “Dad still works on the farm, he just gave me all the bills. Dad won’t stay inside on a rainy day, let alone a good day.”
In high school, Mike knew he wanted to work with his hands, so he studied diesel mechanics at the vocational-technical center.
“That education paid off; we’ve never needed a diesel mechanic on the farm with Mike around,” says Frank, who was a previous board member and past vice president of the Dorchester County Farm Bureau and one of the last two active charter members of the Dorchester Ruritan Club, with over 50 years of service.
NASCAR EXPERIENCE: Mike studied diesel mechanics in high school. He used his experience and landed a job on Jimmie Johnson’s NASCAR pit crew, handling the catch can and collecting overflow fuel for Johnson's No. 48 car.
However, Mike’s career started off quite different from his father’s. He worked as a mechanic for several local companies including Wheatley Trucking. During that time, Mike decided to look for work with NASCAR crews in North Carolina.
In 1995, his first job was with Dave Marcis Race Team near Asheville. Then, in 2001, he landed a job with the Hendrick Motorsports Racing Team in Concord, N.C. He was a member of NASCAR racer Jimmie Johnson’s pit crew, handling the catch can collecting overflow fuel and also the front suspension of Johnson's No. 48 car.
“When I told dad about this opportunity in 2001, he said, ‘Son, if it’s a dream, you need to chase it while you’re young,’” Mike says. “I’m very grateful for the opportunity I had for 15 years, and I’m thankful that dad allowed me to do it. However, every year at the end of racing, I always did a re-evaluation of what I wanted to do and if this was where I wanted to stay. I knew farming was always an option, so in 2010 when my son started playing T-ball and became interested in other activities, I knew it was time to leave NASCAR and return home with my family to the farm. I went from NASCAR to a 1947 Farmall M tractor.”
Growing the partnership
Today, the farm’s production is wheat, soybeans and organic corn, and Frank has never seen himself doing anything else.