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VII B1. Special emergency loans

 File — Box: 1.4/31
Identifier: I.4

Scope and Content Note

From the Sub-Series:

The fourth subseries covers the period 1957 to 1977. Materials include memoranda, published materials, clippings (including items from the Federal Register and the Congressional Record), press releases, and correspondence. This is by far the largest subseries in the Documentary Files, actively gathered by ARH staff over a period of 20 years. In addition to all the materials listed in the outline, there are original office files and copies of correspondence gathered from officials during the 1960s.

Section I documents the economic conditions in the United States between 1957 and 1977. This includes price levels and changes in farm income. Section II covers the purchase of agricultural products for domestic use, covering the methods and plans to foster purchasing, including the Food Stamp Program.

Production is documented by Section III. Materials tell of governmental involvement with acreage and marketing controls, agricultural labor (especially migrant labor), and supplies of various materials for farm production. Section IV recounts price policies of the period. USDA programs like loans, incentive payments, and other kinds of price support are documented. There are also materials on outside proposals and recommendations to supplement already-existing programs. These other plans include the National Agricultural Relations Act and changes in parity.

Land use and resource conservation are the topics of Section V. There are materials on changes in land use and governmental programs to aid conservation efforts. Some methods documented are wind erosion programs, cropland retirement, reclamation and irrigation, and flood control.

Section VI covers agricultural surpluses and surplus management. The causes and effects of surpluses on farmers, prices, and consumption are dealt with, followed by plans to dispose of surpluses. Some of these plans are donations to school lunch programs and disposition abroad.

Section VII documents emergency relief and disaster plans of the USDA. These include emergency loans of money, equipment, and materials to help farmers bounce back from natural disasters, as well as special projects for flood, hurricane, wind erosion, and drought victims.

Materials on marketing and distribution are found in Section VIII, including records on marketing techniques, and government programs for agriculture-oriented industries such as inspection, grading, and regulation of food preservatives. Food promotion campaigns (both governmental and non-governmental) are also covered. The distribution section has materials on programs like school lunches, export control, and donations to low-income groups. Special consumer programs such as conservation of agricultural production and rationing are also documented.

Section IX documents the international aspects of food and agriculture, including the trade of agricultural commodities, international governmental and non-governmental food organizations, international conferences on such topics as conservation, land reform, and water, the agricultural programs of numerous countries, and the effects of world food and population problems on American agriculture.

Changes in rural and farm life are covered in Section X. Standard benchmarks for comparisonsuch as social security, taxation, health, and education are addressed. Other subjects such as minorities, and farmers' attitudes and opinions are also included.

Section XI concerns the administration of the USDA. There is documentation of legislation, presidential executive orders, and departmental orders concerning the USDA. There are materials on the organizations and agencies within the USDA, including those dealing with agricultural stabilization, agricultural credit, and economic research. The role of the USDA in relation to states, counties, various organized agricultural groups, and the national executive, is also covered.

Addenda From the Sub-Series:

Additional files of John A. Baker are found in the addenda section. The material in these files were accumulated while Baker was Assistant Secretary for Rural Development and Conservation (1962-1969), and contain mostly photocopies of correspondence, memoranda, reports, notes, charts, and clippings. These materials were stored in a separate set of cabinets from the rest of subseries 4, and were filed according to a unique classification outline created by Gladys Baker, a member of the Agricultural and Rural History Section staff. This classification scheme is similar to the general outline for the subseries, so to avoid confusion, these additional Baker files have been placed after the rest of the subseries, and the boxes have been numbered A-1, A-2, etc.

Major topics in Baker's files include natural resources, rural-urban balance, rural development, family farms, and anti-poverty programs.

Dates

  • Creation: 1957 - 1977

Conditions Governing Access

Materials created by agencies or employees of the United States government are in the public domain. Unless specified otherwise, the copyright interests in materials acquired or collected by government employees from outside sources have not been transferred to NAL or to the U.S. government.

Contact Special Collections for access.

Language of Materials

English

Repository Details

Part of the National Agricultural Library Special Collections Repository

Contact:
National Agricultural Library
10301 Baltimore Avenue
Room 309
Beltsville Maryland 20705 USA
301-504-5876