By Ellen S. Woodward;
Assistant Administrator;
Works Progress Administration
Source: Source: National Archives
- One million undernourished
children have benefited by the Works Progress Administration's
school lunch program. In the past year and a half 80,000,000 hot
well-balanced meals have been served at the rate of 500,000 daily in
10,000 schools throughout the country.
- This work
of rehabilitating underprivileged children is supervised in all
instances by competent WPA workers, who while earning money with
which to clothe and feed their own families, are given an
opportunity for wider training to equip them to take their places in
private employment when the opportunity arises. On March 31, 1937,
the projects employed nearly 12,000 needy economic heads of
families.
- The
School Lunch Program, like all other WPA projects, must be sponsored
by tax-supported public bodies. Boards of Education usually are the
official sponsors of the school lunch programs. Many civic
organizations and individual patrons, however, may, and often do,
render very valuable assistance by cooperating unofficially with the
legitimate sponsors. The active interest of Parent-Teacher
Associations all over the country, has been an important factor in
the universal success with which these projects have met.
- School
lunch projects have aroused such community interest that in some
instances, South Carolina, for example, members of various civic
organizations and other responsible citizens have formed Advisory
Councils, which actively support this work by contributions of food,
equipment, and sometimes money.
- The
school lunch projects were originally intended to serve only
children from relief families, but experience taught that growing
children need a hot mid-day meal irrespective of their financial
condition. It was found also that many children from homes where
there was an adequate supply of certain kinds of food, were not
receiving the proper kind of diet. It has become the policy in many
communities, therefore, to serve a hot lunch to all the school
children who care to partake. Parent-Teacher Associations have been
largely responsible for making arrangements in many instances,
whereby parents of children, who can afford it, contribute food
supplies. This, however, is generally voluntary, and in no case is
any distinction made in the lunch rooms between those who do and
those who do not make a contribution.
- Many of
the children, who are fed on WPA projects, come from homes where
milk is a luxury. In some instances, teachers have reported that
nearly all their pupils who partake of the school lunch, have no
meal during the 24 hours of the day other than that furnished on the
project. For many children, who are required to leave home early in
the morning and travel long distances after school hours to reach
their homes, the WPA lunch constitutes the only hot meal of the day.
In an even greater number of cases, children come to school with
either no breakfast at all or a meager one at best.
- Only
those who have had occasion to witness the type of lunch that many
of the children were bringing to school before the inauguration of
the WPA, can fully understand or appreciate the value of those
projects.
-
Insufficient or improper food takes not only a physical toll, but a
mental toll as well. Children after all are sensitive beings. In
some instances, children, from underprivileged families have been
known to slip away along to eat their lunches in some secluded
spot--ashamed to have the other school children witness their meager
fare.
- In some
of the poorer communities of Georgia, for example, many of the
children brought only cold bread or baked sweet potatoes. Sometimes
a child's lunch consisted of a biscuit and a piece of fried fish. If
any meat at all was included, it was usually fat white meat. Prior
to the inauguration of the WPA school lunch projects, a cold sweet
potato or a poorly cooked biscuit spread with fat constituted the
usual lunch of many children in the rural communities of South
Carolina.
- Before
the institution of the WPA projects, many children, in certain
sections of Colorado, were reported to be bringing for lunch a piece
of corn bread with molasses or a cold pancake. The common kind of
meat found in the children's lunches--when there was meat--was salt
pork. In many of the rural districts the lunches which were brought,
were frozen or half-frozen by noon.
- Even
after the establishment of the WPA project, an effort was made to
have each child in certain Colorado communities bring his or her own
bread from home to supplement the hot dishes. This had to be
discontinued because the bread that the children brought was not fit
to eat. It was dirty, dry and even mouldy.
- South
Carolina, which feeds more than 77,000 children daily in over 2300
public schools, has the largest WPA school lunch program of all the
states, except New York State, in which New York City along foods a
daily average of 37,230 children.
- All
school children, who desire the hot lunch in South Carolina, are
permitted to partake. Sponsors and co-sponsors make contributions of
everything from money to beef on the hoof, and the parents of
children, who can afford to do so, also contribute small amounts of
food or money. Parents' weekly contribution for a child may be a box
of cocoa, a can of tomatoes, a quart of milk--or if they contribute
money, it is usually 10 cents--2 cents a day.
- School
attendance has increased and classroom work has improved in every
school in South Carolina where the school lunch project operates.
Satisfactory gains in weight have been noted in previously
undernourished school children. In Greenville County, for example,
children, who were weighed at the beginning of the project, have
been weighed again at the end of each five-week period. The records
showed an average gain in weight of from three to eight pounds per
child for the first five-week period.
- Teachers
in Decatur County, Georgia, declare that the school attendance for
children, who are fed on three WPA school lunch projects, has
increased 80 percent as a result of the wholesome, well-balanced,
nourishing noonday meals which are served daily in the schools.
- Through
the cooperation of the Decatur County Health Commissioners, a weight
chart was made for each child, and records have been taken at
regular intervals. The average increase in weight has been shown to
be from two to five pounds per month. Higher marks also have been
made, some children being promoted to A--or high section of their
classes--for the first time since they entered school. Greater
general alertness, better deportment, and an improved attitude
toward teachers and classmates are among the many manifested gains.
- A school
lunch project in Bryan County, Georgia, employed three WPA workers
to prepare and serve hot mid-day meals to 200 children. The food was
furnished by the local community through donations, supplemented by
supplies from the Surplus Commodities Division.
- Henry
Ford, who has displayed an active interest in the health and welfare
of his neighbors in Bryan County where he has an estate, has taken
over on his own payrolls the three workers formerly paid by the WPA.
He also has supplied the school lunch project with seventeen dozen
each of certain dishes, spoons, and other tableware and has
furnished tables and chairs, so that all the children may sit down
together for their noonday meal.
- In many
Vermont towns, responsible groups of people, including the
Parent-Teacher Associations and service and civic clubs, have
cooperated with the WPA to provide a valuable hot lunch project and
have been rewarded by watching the steady mental and physical
development of the children fed.
- Weight
records on Vermont projects taken at the beginning of the school
lunch project and again at the close, show an average gain of from
two to four pounds per child. Teachers also report an increase in
energy, greater accomplishment in school work, and a marked
improvement in the general appearance of the pupils.
-
Educators, health officers and state officials in Minnesota agree
that increased. weight, great concentration in the classroom and
fewer absences from school are some of the immediate gains resulting
to children who are being fed on the WPA school lunch projects. They
state that the hot lunch is of particular value to the children of
unemployed parents whose food budget has been reduced to a minimum,
or below the amount required for proper growth and health
protection. For many of the children in Minnesota and elsewhere, the
school lunch is not only the best, but sometimes the only adequate
meal of the day.
- To
further this work of overcoming malnutrition and preventing its
further progress, certain public tax-supported bodies in Minnesota
have sponsored allied projects for which the WPA has supplied the
labor. In some instances, milk stations provide mid-morning lunches
for the needy; and in several poor districts, where children are
known to leave home on almost empty stomachs milk and graham
crackers are served at school before the beginning of classes.
- In New
York City alone, one WPA project employs 2,346 persons who serve
free lunches to thousands of pupils in over 1,000 schools. Health
records show uniformly marked improvement in the children's physical
condition, and scholastic records show a parallel upward trend.
Teachers state that pupils, who once exhibited sullen
unresponsiveness, have become alert, interested, and in many cases,
above the average in intelligence.
- Dr.
Louise Stanley, Chief of the Bureau of Home Economics, U. S.
Department of Agriculture, expressing, in a recent letter to the
Director of the Division of Women's and Professional Projects, her
appreciation of the work performed under the school lunch program,
declared:
I have been very
much impressed with what this has meant in making available to
school children much-needed food .... The meals, where I have
seen them, have been attractive, well-served, and palatable, and
have contributed much in setting food standards and good food
habits for the children.
- Through
the daily service of warm, nourishing food, prepared by qualified,
needy women workers, the WPA is making it possible for many
underprivileged children of the present to grow into useful, healthy
citizens of the future.
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