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Victory Gardens Handbook pages 40-42


 

Gardening e-book:
War Gardens, Victory Gardens


 

 "All of the publications of the Extension Service are obtainable from the Agricultural Extension Representative in the county, popularly called the County Agent. Copies may be obtained in quantity from the County Agent by Victory Garden Committees, for distribution among all gardeners desiring this information.
  "Circular letters, designed chiefly for rural and farm gardeners, but useful for others, will be available for distribution from the office of the County Agent and will be sent from that office to individuals or lists of persons whose names and addresses are sent by Victory
Garden Committees.
  "As for meetings, the County Agricultural and Home Economics Extension Representatives and the Extension Specialists in vegetable gardening, soil management, and disease and insect control are available as speakers, as far as their time permits. Speakers for series of meetings should be chosen among other qualified persons, such as vocational agriculture or home economics high school supervisors, and experienced commercial or home gardeners with speaking ability. The County Agent usually is acquainted with such persons and will be glad to make suggestions on this and all other phases of garden information. Victory Garden Committees will find his advice very helpful in planning the entire program."
  Certain county and local Victory Garden Committees added additional sub-committees, and these were brought to the attention of other Committees throughout the State, to be adopted, applied with modifications, or not, as local conditions seemed to make advisable. One plan of sub-committee organization thus brought to the attention of other Committees on March 3, 1943 (Bulletin No. 32C), was that evolved in Blair County, where Mr. Glenn Bressler is Chairman. The sub-committees set up were the following, with their respective functions:

1. "Sub-committee on Procurement of Land.
This sub-committee will advise gardeners on the suit-ability of land for gardening and will compile a list of plots available for allocation to gardeners who do not have suitable land at their own disposal.
2. "Sub-committee on Registration, Assignment of Plots, and Soil Preparation.
This sub-committee will register all Victory Gardeners, particularly those desiring land for gardens, will assign plots, and will advise and assist in preparation of land for planting.
3. "Sub-committee on Insect and Disease Control and Succession Cropping.
This sub-committee will stimulate interest and activity in these phases and will bring together information thereon.
4. "Sub-committee on Conservation and Canning.
This sub-committee will promote conservation of products and bring together information on this subject."

  The most recent instructions on organization of the Victory Garden program in Pennsylvania, which completes this organization as it is functioning at present, was the following:

OFFICIAL NAME OF VICTORY GARDEN CONSERVATION CENTERS

  "The official name of any centers where conservation of Victory
Garden products may be effectuated for community or individual use is—The Victory Garden Food Conservation Kitchen.
 

ORGANIZATION—STATE AND REGIONAL
Canning and Conservation

  "The State has been divided into three regions to facilitate the food conservation program.
  The counties included in each of the three regions are as follows:
Eastern—Philadelphia, Delaware, Chester, Montgomery, Lancaster, Lehigh, Berks, Bucks, Northampton, Monroe, Pike, Wayne, Susquehanna, Bradford, Dauphin, Lackawanna, Lebanon, Wyoming, Sullivan, Luzerne, Carbon, Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Schuylkill.
Central—York, Adams, Cumberland, Perry, Juniata, Snyder, Union, Lycoming, Tioga, Potter, Clinton, Centre, Mifflin, Huntingdon, Franklin, Fulton, Bedford, Blair, Somerset, Cambria, Clearfield, Cameron, McKean, Elk, Indiana, and Jefferson.
Western—Fayette, Westmoreland, Armstrong, Clarion, Forest,
Warren, Venango, Erie, Crawford, Mercer, Lawrence, Butler, Beaver, Allegheny, Washington, and Greene.
  "The regional chairmen are directly responsible to the Victory Garden Committee of the State Council of Defense.

ORGANIZATION—COUNTY AND LOCAL

  "The chairmen of the Sub-Committee on Food Conservation of counties and localities within the county, as has been stated previously, must be members of a county or local Victory Garden Committee, and they must function in this capacity solely, when assuming the responsibility of the Food Conservation Committee chairmanship.
  "The chairman should be a volunteer worker, who will devote her time for the next several months primarily to the Food Conservation program. Professionally or commercially employed home economists should be encouraged to assist with the program as members of the Food Conservation Committee; but they should not be made chairmen of the committees.
  "Any county or local organization may co-operate in the Victory Garden Food Conservation program; but none should be permitted to take over the program. The Victory Garden Committee of the State Council of Defense has been officially designated as the sponsor of a State-wide Victory Garden Food Conservation program.
  "It is intended that personnel, equipment, and other help be given by the State Council of Defense to the respective communities, and further that a unified, strong food conservation program be carried out in every county of the Commonwealth.

EQUIPMENT, PERSONNEL, AND FINANCIAL SUPPORT OF VICTORY GARDEN FOOD CONSERVATION KITCHENS

  "The State Council of Defense is assuming the financial responsibility for the purchase of canning retorts which will be loaned to the different counties for the duration of the war, and for the employment of conservation kitchen supervisors who will serve either full or part time in the different counties of the state, during the canning season. These aids to the Victory Garden Food Conservation program will be supplied to all counties which are fully organized in accordance with the recommendations issued by the State Council of Defense to the County and Local Victory Garden Committees. The retorts have a 33-jar capacity. They are already manufactured. Since December the State Council of Defense has been working to obtain retorts or pressure cookers, and now the order is in the hands of the War Production Board, awaiting final approval which it is hoped will be forthcoming immediately.
  "County and local committees must arrange for all local expenses of operation of the kitchens, such as fuel, salt, lighting, water supply and waste disposal, necessary travel of the supervisor, and other similar expenses. Jars, sugar, jar tops and rings, and other supplies for preserving foods for community use must be furnished by local agencies; similar supplies for family use should be brought by the housewives themselves.
  "Fire houses, halls of Granges and fraternal orders, kitchens of Sunday Schools, and the like are preferable to school kitchens as Victory Garden Food Conservation Kitchens, because the latter will not remain fully available throughout the canning season, after the resumption of school in September.
  "The State Victory Garden Committee anticipates that the Food Conservation kitchens will provide ideal conditions under which Victory Gardeners in towns and suburban areas particularly will be able to reduce spoilage and other difficulties (including shortage of equipment, inefficient use of fuel, and over-heating of living quarters) encountered by relatively inexperienced home canners."

 

cover of Victory Gardens Handbook of the Victory Garden Committee
click for larger photo

Victory Gardens
Handbook of the
Victory Garden Committee
War Services, Pennsylvania
State Council of Defense

April, 1944

TABLE OF CONTENTS

page v
page vi
page vii

 

 

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