- Victory garden - Wikipedia
Victory gardens, also called war gardens or food gardens for defense, were vegetable, fruit, and herb gardens planted at private residences and public parks in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and Germany [1][2] during World War I and World War II
- Victory Gardens on the World War II Home Front
There are at least two known Victory Gardens that have been in continuous use since World War II -- some 80 years after their founding These are the Fenway Victory Gardens in Boston, Massachusetts and the Dowling Victory Garden in Minneapolis, Minnesota
- VICTORY GARDENS INC
Victory Gardens Inc Is One Of The Largest Manufacturers And Supplier Of Bulk Mulch And Topsoil In Montgomery, Bucks, Chester And Delaware Counties Our family-owned business has been producing mulch from yard debris and other organic materials since 1990
- Victory Gardens
Thirty years ago our parents started Victory Greens, a thriving business; and now, three decades later, here we are branching off with Victory Gardens Our story begins exactly where theirs began
- Planning a Victory Garden - The Old Farmers Almanac
What is a Victory Garden? The name comes from the Victory Gardens that were planted across the United States during World Wars I and II Back in 1917, during World War 1, the National War Garden Commission promoted home gardening in order to free up crops to feed soldiers who were fighting overseas
- America’s Patriotic Victory Gardens | HISTORY
By the end of World War I, the campaign promoting home gardens—which by then were referred to as “victory gardens”—had dropped off, but many people continued to maintain them Shortly after the
- WWII Victory gardens from the 1940s: How people planted them, and how . . .
During World War II, victory gardens were a vital part of the home front effort Citizens across the United States and other nations were encouraged to transform their backyards, empty lots, and public spaces into productive gardens
- Victory Gardens: Food for the Fight - The National WWII Museum
Victory gardens had their roots in World War I, when Americans joined the British in growing food to supply Allied troops and civilians in Europe During World War II, however, the USDA designed the Victory Garden campaign to address food and labor shortages on the Home Front
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