Details for First Girl's Tomato Club in Texas

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5331007946

Data

Marker Number 7946
Atlas Number 5331007946
Marker Title First Girl's Tomato Club in Texas
Index Entry Girl's Tomato Club
Address 201 E. Main St.
City Cameron
County Milam
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 693472
UTM Northing 3414584
Subject Codes agriculture, general; women
Marker Year 1983
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location on museum lawn, NW corner of 201 E. Main and S. Fannin St.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The first Girl's Tomato Clubs in Texas were organized in 1912 in Milam County to acquaint young women in rural areas with tomato production and canning techniques. At the request of the United States Department of Agriculture, Mrs. Edna Westbrook Trigg, a local high school principal, agreed to undertake the project. She organized eleven clubs throughout the county, with members ranging in age from ten to eighteen. A similar program for boys, the Corn Clubs, had been instituted in Jack County four years earlier. Each member of the Girl's Tomato Clubs was to produce a tomato crop on one-tenth of an acre of land and then was taught proper canning procedures. The girls exhibited their products at Milano, Rockdale, the 1913 State Fair in Dallas, and the Waco Cotton Palace. So successful were these exhibits that several of the girls started college education funds with the money they raised selling their goods. As the state's first rural girl's organization of its kind, the Tomato Clubs were forerunners of later programs, including 4-H, that were initiated under the supervision of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service. Over time, 4-H has expanded its scope but has maintained the principle objectives of its predecessors.

Location Map

View this record in full map (opens in new tab/window)