Thursday, December 14, 2023 – VICTORY GARDENS ACROSS THE CITY
FROM THE ARCHIVES
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2023
VICTORY GARDENS
ACROSS THE CITY
ISSUE #1146
EPHEMERAL NEW YORK
“Victory gardens” bloom across the 1940s city
One was planted on Park Avenue. Another bloomed on the grounds of the magnificent Schwab mansion on Riverside Drive. A third sprouted in Midtown in the shadow of the Chrysler Building.
Others were tended to in empty lots on Ludlow Street (above), on Upper East Side apartment terraces, and in the open spaces of Brooklyn and Queens.
These victory gardens, as they were called, grew out of a national push during World War II to help ease food shortages in the states, as so much food from America was going to soldiers abroad and our allies.
New Yorkers answered the call. After the program began in 1943, the city had approximately 400,000 victory gardens, which sprouted up on 600 acres of private land.
The biggest crop: tomatoes, followed by beans, beets, carrots, lettuce, and Swiss chard.
An astonishing 200 million pounds of vegetables were cultivated, according to Amy Bentley and Daniel Bowman Simon, who wrote about victory gardens in Savoring Gotham: A Food Lovers Companion to New York City.
Victory gardens were mostly about food. But they had a civic function as well, rallying communities to work together to aid the war effort.
Mayor Fiorello La Guardia even announcing that one would be started on Rikers Island.
“We have a lot of space there and a lot of guests too, and we won’t need machinery, because we can make them work,” he cheekily told the New York Times.
Experienced gardeners lent a hand showing urban green thumbs the ropes. “New York University, Columbia University, and the New School all offered courses on Victory Gardening, wrote Bentley and Simon.
Department stores like Macy’s opened gardening centers that held lectures, sold seeds, and even offered war bonds to gardeners who produced bumper crops.
When the war ended, the mini-farms appeared to have been left untended. Of course, they weren’t the last urban gardens to pop up in the city.
But with real estate values sky-high, it might be a long time before we ever see vegetables growing on Manhattan avenues again.
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