The Journey of a Beginning Farmer :: As a child I spent most of my life in town living with my mom, but whenever I visited my Dad and his side of the family it was on the farm. From my earliest memories I have always wanted to be a farmer (except when I wanted to be a cowboy). Now, I am trying to fulfill that dream. This will be a journal of that journey :: my research, my joys, my frustrations, and all of the things that go along with the beginning farmer.
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Monday, May 25, 2009
Victory Gardens
In honor of Memorial Day today I found this very short video on Victory Gardens. You can read more about Victory Gardens on Wikipedia, but if you have any historical facts and on them I would love to hear them!
I've been a student of Victory Gardens for quite a while, and have amassed electronic copies of WWII vintage posters on them.
As interesting as they are, I think the World War One effort is even more interesting. The Victory Garden of WWII was an interesting effort, but the gardens of WWI actually had an air of desperation about them, as there were very genuine concerns that there were going to be severe food shortages. I have a collection of electronic variants of the WWI posters as well.
World War One also saw the employment of women, and boys, in farm fields. This reflected, in part, the fact that there was much less mechanization in the Great War, so women and boys had to be mobilized to replace the men who had gone to war. I have some WWI vintage posters from the US and Canada on that.
When I get a chance, I'll post the posters to my own blog and then link back the link back here. Unfortunately, I'm spending this Memorial Day down in my office, so I best do that later.
I've been a student of Victory Gardens for quite a while, and have amassed electronic copies of WWII vintage posters on them.
ReplyDeleteAs interesting as they are, I think the World War One effort is even more interesting. The Victory Garden of WWII was an interesting effort, but the gardens of WWI actually had an air of desperation about them, as there were very genuine concerns that there were going to be severe food shortages. I have a collection of electronic variants of the WWI posters as well.
World War One also saw the employment of women, and boys, in farm fields. This reflected, in part, the fact that there was much less mechanization in the Great War, so women and boys had to be mobilized to replace the men who had gone to war. I have some WWI vintage posters from the US and Canada on that.
When I get a chance, I'll post the posters to my own blog and then link back the link back here. Unfortunately, I'm spending this Memorial Day down in my office, so I best do that later.
For a modern day Victory Garden project, check out www.freedomgardens.org
ReplyDeleteJudy
I uploaded a collection of Victory Garden and War Garden posters, and some associated posters, on my blog. The URL for the post is here:
ReplyDeletehttp://yeomanlawyer-yeoman.blogspot.com/2009/05/victory-gardens.html
Hope folks will find them interesting!