Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts

Thursday, March 25, 2010

The Outdoor Girls

in Army Service


The twenty-three titles in the "Outdoor Girls" series (1913-1933) offered young readers a mixture of travel and mystery / adventure stories. The stories' subtitles often reveal a mystery that is at the heart of the plot.

"These are the tales of the various adventures participated in by a group of bright, fun-loving, up-to-date girls who have a common bond in their fondness for outdoor life, camping, travel and adventure." The Stratemeyer Syndicate's series for girls were generally advertised for girls twelve to sixteen. "They are clean, and wholesome and free from sensationalism," the publisher claimed.

-Dr. William K. Finley




An Exhibit
Hodges Reading Room
February 15 - May 15, 2010

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

How Does Your Garden Grow


An exhibit featuring gardening trends from
World War I through the 1970s highlighting
materials in the World War I and
Home Economics Pamphlet Collections

July 6, 2009 – January 4, 2010

EUC Connector

WORLD WAR I


Inspired by the devastating food shortages in Europe, Charles Lathrop Pack promoted gardening on the homefront. The National War Garden Commission was established in March 1917. Pack’s essay “Make Your War Garden a Garden of Victory” describes the genesis of the victory garden program.
WORLD WAR II


During World War II, the Victory Garden was promoted as both a patriotic duty and thrift measure. The Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services was joined by such companies as Kerr Glass Manufacturing to advertise the Food For Victory campaign.
1970s

Throughout the 1970s, the energy crisis, inflation, and political upheaval fueled a desire for thrift and self-sufficiency. The individual, or “Victory Garden” returned and the community garden movement took hold in more urban areas. Even the threat of nuclear war was a motivation to learn how to produce, prepare, and store one’s own food.

Take a moment as you pass through the EUC Connector to discover how the War Garden of World War I became the Victory Garden of World War II and how the events in the 1970s inspired a resurgence of the victory garden as well as the creation of the community garden movement.
You can search within the World War I Pamphlet Collection and Home Economics Pamphlet Collection through the library catalog.