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the world and yourself by raising some of the food you eat. "
- Bolton Hall, Three Acres And Liberty
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ARC Identifier: 516284 "YOUR VICTORY
GARDEN COUNTS MORE THAN EVER!" , 1941 - 1945 Still Picture
Records LICON, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S),
National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College
Park, MD
"Help
Your Country and Yourself by Raising Your Own Vegetables."
An Excerpt from: Three Acres And Liberty by Bolton
Hall (Published by The MacMillan Company, New York. 1918)
As we will likely have to send to Europe in coming years as
much or even more food than we did last year, there is only
one way to avoid a shortage among our own people, that is
by raising a great deal more than usual. To do this we must
plant every bit of available land. (Of course, we can't; the
owners won't let us. Ed.)
If
you have a back yard, you can do your part and help the world
and yourself by raising some of the food you eat. The more
you raise the less you will have to buy, and the more there
will be left for some of your fellow countrymen who have not
an inch of ground on which to raise anything.
"Don't Waste Food
While Others Starve" (ca. 1917-1919)United
States Food Administration Poster - Contributor: L.C. Clinker.
Artist: M.J. Dwyer. Source:
National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College
Park, MD (NWDNS-4-P-145)
If there is a vacant lot in your neighborhood, see if you
cannot get the use of it for yourself and your neighbors,
and raise your own vegetables. An hour a day spent in this
way will not only increase wealth and help your family, but
will help you personally by adding to your strength and well-being
and making you appreciate the Eden joy of gardening. An hour
in the open air is worth more than a dozen expensive prescriptions
by an expensive doctor.
The only tools necessary for a small garden are a spade or
spading fork, a hoe, a rake, and a line or piece of cord.
First of all, clear the ground of all rubbish, sticks, stones,
bottles, etc. (especially whisky bottles).
Choose
the sunniest spot in the yard for your garden.
Dig up the soil to a depth of 6 to 10 inches, using a spade
or spading fork.
(Deeper for parsnips and some other roots. Ed.) Break up all
the lumps with the spade or fork. If you live in a section
where your neighbors have gardens, you might club together
to hire a teamster for a day to do the plowing and harrowing
for you all, thus saving a large amount of labor.
Secretary Plowing Boston Commons to promote
Victory Gardens Program, April 11, 1944 (Image ID 7769(161)
Signal Corp, US Army Photo Courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt
Library Digital Archives)
After your garden has been well dug, it must be fertilized
before any planting is done. In order to produce large and
well-grown crops it is often necessary to fertilize before
each planting. Very good prepared fertilizers can be bought
at seed stores, but horse or cow manure is much better, as
it lightens the soil in addition to supplying plant food.
Use street sweepings if you can get them.
The manure should be well dug into the ground, at least to
the full depth of the top soil. The ground should then be
thoroughly raked, as seeds must be sown in soil which has
been finely powdered.
Lay out the garden, keeping the rows straight with a line.
Straight rows are practically a necessity, not only for easier
culture but for economy in space.
"You can use the land you have to grow the
food you need" is one of the "Make America Strong"
Poster Set (Poster number 7, 1941 - 1945). Created by the Office
for Emergency Management, War Information Domestic Operations
Branch. ARC Identifier: 514945 National Archives at College
Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD
After
you have marked all of your rows, the next step is opening the
furrow. (A furrow is a shallow trench.) That is done with the
hoe. (Best and quickest with a wheel hoe. Ed.) After the furrow
is opened, it is necessary that the seed be sown and immediately
covered before the soil has dried In covering the seeds the
soil must be firmly pressed down with the foot. This is important.
In buying seed it is best to go to some well-established seed
house, or, if that can't be done, to order by mail rather
than to take needless chances. With most kinds of seeds a
package is sufficient for a twenty-foot row.
Begin
to break up the hard surface of the soil between the plants
soon after they appear, using a hand cultivator or hoe, and
keep it loose throughout the season. This kills weeds; it
lets in air to the plant roots and keeps the moisture in the
ground.
By constantly stirring the top soil after your plants appear,
the necessity of watering can be largely avoided except in
very dry weather. An occasional soaking of the soil is better
than frequent sprinkling. Water your garden either very early
in the morning or after sundown. It is better not to water
when the sun is shining hot.
ARC Identifier: 196478 Frequent watering of
the Victory Garden is necessary during the early stages of growth.
, ca. 02/1943 Franklin D. Roosevelt Library (NLFDR), 4079 Albany
Post Road, Hyde Park, NY
The planting scheme can be altered to suit your individual
taste. For instance, peas and cabbage are included because
almost everybody likes to have them fresh from their garden;
but they occupy more space in proportion to their value than
beets and carrots. Therefore a small garden could be made
more profitable by omitting them altogether, or cutting them
down in amount and increasing the amount of carrots, beets,
and turnips planted; or any of the vegetables mentioned which
may not be in favor with the family can be left out.

Victory garden, Fort Stevens, Oregon, 1944
(ARC Identifier: 299689 National Archive and Records Administration's
Pacific Alaska Region, 6125 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA.)
The kind of season we have would change the date of planting.
In raising vegetables, as in everything else, one should use
one's common (or garden variety of) sense. A good rule is
to wait until the ground has warmed up a bit. Never try to
work in soil wet enough to be sticky, or muddy; wait until
it dries enough to crumble readily.
Gardening is not a rule of thumb business. Each gardener must
bring his plants up in his own way in the light of his own
experience and in accordance with the conditions of his own
garden. A garden lover who has a bit of land will speedily
learn if his eyes and his mind, as well as his hands, are
always busy, no matter how meager his knowledge at the beginning.
Access more
of the text of Three Acres And Liberty by Bolton Hall
in the Project
Gutenberg Etext #4509.
| Some businesses provided garden plots and
soil preparation services as a way of helping their employees
get started growing their own produce. "Best Garden"
Prizes of War Bonds and War Stamps were even offered as
an added incentive. |

ARC Identifier: 534116 Victory Garden Plots Free For Employees
, ca. 1942 - ca. 1943 Still Picture Records LICON, Special
Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives
at College Park, 8601Adelphi
Road, College Park, MD.
|
| Food Rationing was in effect during the
War years. Government posters that encouraged the Planting
of a Victory Garden also reminded citizens that "A
Garden Will Make Your Rations Go Further". |
ARC Identifier: 513818 PLANT A VICTORY
GARDEN. OUR FOOD IS FIGHTING , 1941 - 1945 Still Picture
Records LICON, Special Media Archives Services Division
(NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi
Road, College Park, MD.
|
|
Growing a Victory Garden demanded more than just saying
a little rhyme and hoping for the best while putting seeds
in the ground.
One for the blackbird,
one for the crow,
one for the cutworm,
and one to grow.
- A Traditional American saying
Like all gardens, the Victory Garden needed cultivating,
fertilizing, weeding, watering, and protection from voracious
pests. Posters were made even to remind gardeners to spray
the bugs.
|
ARC Identifier: 515408 SHOOT TO KILL
- PROTECT YOUR VICTORY GARDEN , 1941 - 1945 Still Picture
Records LICON, Special Media Archives Services Division
(NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi
Road, College Park, MD.
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