Harvesting Victory: A World War II Photoessay
Having learned through harsh experience in WWI that voluntary rationing for a larger war effort wasn’t going to be adequate, when WWII began, the US government used the Emergency Price Control Act of January 1942 to grant the Office of Price Administration broad powers to ration food and other commodities. This was done not only to ensure the fighting men had enough food and other supplies, but also to discourage hoarding and encourage the equitable distribution of scarce resources on the home front as well. As we all have learned firsthand this past year when stores nationwide ran out of toilet tissue, meat, and disinfectant, hoarding can quickly create shortages of goods that are normally plentiful.
Under the system of rationing the US government devised, beginning in May 1942, citizens were issued points with which to purchase a limited amount of sugar, meat, coffee, cooking fat, canned fish, cheese, and canned milk. Even babies were issued ration books with points to spend! These points came in the form of ration books with stamps which were combined with money to buy rationed goods.
That’s right, when you ran to the market in wartime, you didn’t only need to bring enough money, you also had to be sure you had your ration book and points to spend as well. Since many foods were limited, home cooks began to experiment with mock meat dishes based around nuts, root vegetables, and legumes, found ways to stretch meat further by combining it with vegetables and grains such as salisbury steak and meatloaf, and even to cut out the “main dish” entirely, basing meals around hearty vegetarian fare like pasta and egg-based dishes. When a lack of cooking fat made baking a challenge, clever cooks substituted in potato, tomato, and applesauce in lieu of butter, oil, oleo, and shortening.
But even as American families sacrificed and home chefs called upon every ounce of their culinary creativity, health educators, armed with newly discovered information about chemicals in foods called “vitamins” that the human body needed for optimal health, were concerned. Was this type of restricted wartime diet nutritious enough? Were Americans on the home front – many of whom were working in critical industries – eating an adequate diet to stay healthy and work to their fullest potential?
Against this backdrop of food insecurity, disaster struck. The Japanese cut off the world’s supply of Malaysian tin, widely used in the manufacture of tin cans. The military desperately needed all the raw tin they could get to manufacture cans to carry food to the battlefront. There was nothing left over for the home front. American families were forced to pay exorbitant prices for fresh produce, or go without fruit and vegetables entirely and risk deficiencies in critically important nutrients like Vitamin A and C.
The solution was clear – Victory Gardens. Victory Gardens, or war gardens as they were often called, were first popularized during the First World War by future president Herbert Hoover, then head of the US Food Administration, as a way for citizens to supplement the war-suppressed food supply. During the Second World War, governments both local and national again encouraged individuals and families to grow their own food. It was believed that a family garden would save not only individual families money and provide them with superior nutrition, but could lower market prices, enabling the government to purchase food for the military men much more cheaply.
The US Department of Agriculture launched a massive program to encourage home gardening, and Americans heeded the call. Not only did families start gardens and plant fruit trees, but some even raised chickens and rabbits to supplement their family’s diet as well.
By May 1943, Victory Gardens were providing American families with 40% of all the produce they ate. The government, in cooperation with private industry, printed off millions of instruction booklets teaching laymen how to plant seeds, how to fertilize and control for pests, even introducing relatively complex agricultural ideas like companion planting and crop rotation. Americans began growing food in any patch of dirt they could find – their backyards, their front yards, even boxes of dirt set out on apartment balconies.
Municipalities got into the act, planting Victory Gardens in town squares from coast to coast, and even in urban locales such as Boston Commons and on New York City’s Park Avenue. Victory Gardens were seen as not only a sound economic idea considering the expense of purchasing fresh produce and meat, but an act of patriotism.
For corporations and public figures, promoting the idea of Victory Gardens was nearly as popular as selling war bonds. Companies like Dr. Pepper based ad campaigns around Victory Gardens, and Frigidaire, Armour Meats, and Lysol handed out cookbooks with every purchase. Batman, Robin, and Superman started a Victory Garden. Donald Duck and his nephews Huey, Dewey, and Louie followed suit. Even First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt got into the act, planting her own Victory Garden on the White House Lawn.
In the meantime, women and teenagers on the home front joined the Land Army, a program designed to provide labor to replace the men who were away fighting the war. In 1942, the United States was facing an agricultural crisis, as crops planted by men who were called up to serve their country, began to ripen and then rot in the field. Women and children with little training came to the rescue, salvaging the harvest of 1942.
Under the umbrella of the Emergency Farm Labor Service, between 1943 and 1947, over a million American women were recruited to the Women’s Land Army. Even though many were city dwellers, they received agricultural training and a very low wage (with which they were required to purchase their own clothing and pay for room and board) to work the farms that supplied the troops and citizens with farm goods. Women learned to plant and harvest, drive tractors, shear sheep – whatever they were needed for, they did!
Once the crops were harvested, families pulled together to preserve the harvest, with home canning reaching an all-time peak in popularity between 1941 and 1946. During the war, an amazing 4.1 billion home canned jars of food were put up in homes and community canning centers nationwide. Since sugar – a necessity for many home-canned recipes like pickles, jam, and preserves – was rationed, the government issued a special allowance of 20 extra lbs. of sugar for those who planned to can. Pressure canners, a device used to safely can non-acidic foods prone to botulism like corn, beans, and meat, were made from aluminum – another commodity in short supply. Those who owned pressure canners were urged to share them with their neighbors. The importance of canning for the food supply was so great, that the USDA pressured the War Production Board to relax restrictions on the construction of pressure canners, allowing for 650,000 aluminum canners to be built in 1945, up from only 40,000 in 1944.
The USDA estimates that over the course of the war, over 20 million Victory Gardens were planted, yielding 9-10 million tons of food. In New York City alone, more than 200 million pounds of vegetables were harvested.
The Victory Garden program created some interesting side effects, making gardening and canning into hobbies that many Americans would continue to pursue over the course of their entire lifetime, and popularizing some unusual vegetables that Americans weren’t familiar with. Swiss Chard, kohlrabi, and zucchini which were practically unknown to many Americans before the war, became garden standbys due to how easy they were to grow. They remain popular homegrown veggies to this very day.
While gardening and canning did become less popular once the war ended, many folks who grew up in the post-war generations have happy memories of family members, who lived through wartime, passing down the knowledge they had gathered from growing their Victory Garden – tilling the soil, harvesting the crops, preserving them for the winter, making do with what one has and finding ways to fill in the gaps while still living within one’s means.
On their own, these gestures are impressive, but knowing that these skills were, in many cases, acquired in a valiant attempt to ensure that the brave soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines had their bellies filled when so far away is homegrown nourishment for the soul.
This article was originally published in The Star, the newsletter of the American World War II Orphans’ Network.
I love the pictures.Report
I really enjoy getting to collect the pictures for these essays. Thanks for reading!Report
This is incidentally why I get annoyed when my side compares fighting a pandemic to World War II Homefront efforts. Homefront efforts like victory gardens are social. Since humans are social creatures, Homefront efforts take less of a psychological toll than pandemic fighting methods because these are things you do with other people rather than stay at home. People might hate the rationing but at least you aren’t asking them not to be social and stay away from other people.Report
We’re all in this together! Which is why you need to stay at home and only talk to other people over the phone and it’s selfish to go jogging.Report
I think we’d probably all be better off just viewing issues we encounter as unique events rather than needing to compare them to anything people went through in other places and times.
I would certainly never want to compare my experience psychologically to what anyone else went through in times I did not live through myself.Report
though I’ve also read that a lot of people found their ways around rationing. Kind of like how some of us are staying strictly home and yet there are others who are still eating in restaurants or planning big state dinners…Report
I didn’t know the US had a Land Army! I had read a fair amount about the UK one, and there was a movie about it back in the 90s.
And a lot of these things are great ideas but they also presuppose families where one adult (or maybe a teenager who is fairly capable and mature) is home most of the time to do all the work of gardening and canning. I try to have a small garden every year but it is rarely successful because the time to weed and also chase off pests is time I often don’t have. I’d starve if I had to grow the food to feed myself.
My dad used to talk about “bean burgers” as a meatless replacement burger – he was a kid during WWII. Rather than seeing them as a deprivation or anything, he saw them as something new and different – that may have been how his parents “sold” it to him.
My mom grew up poor and while she was a child during WWII she says she doesn’t remember rationing; probably the poor were on rations all the time and it was only the people who regularly had meat they didn’t hunt or raise themselves who saw it as a hardshipReport
I couldn’t agree more! So much of this stuff we have nostalgia for only works if there’s at least one party who has a fair bit of free time, or at the least a flexible schedule (I work 40 hours but I get to stay home, so I can do a lot more canning/gardening than the average working mom).
Thanks for reading!Report