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Great Depression Gardens – Scotland

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Allotments for the unemployed on the Garscube Estate, 10 Jan 1933. The estate belonged to Sir Archibald Campbell (1852-1941). Photo: Glasgow City Council, Glasgow Museums. Larger image here.

Glasgow, Scotland

During the Great Depression of the late 1920s and early 1930s, tens of thousands of Glaswegian men lost their jobs. Although insured workers could claim unemployment benefit it was not equivalent to a living wage; for example in 1931 a man could just claim 15 shillings a week (75p). By 1933 over 120,000 Glaswegians were living on public assistance, and diseases associated with poverty had increased. Allotments offered them the means to improve their diets by growing their own vegetables, and of saving scarce cash for other necessities. The University of Glasgow purchased the Garscube estate in 1948.

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October 4, 2008   No Comments

1915 – School children working in the Logan School garden

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Slightly larger image here.

Photo: ca. 1915
By Stineman, Ralph P., 1871-1955
San Diego Historical Society

See: Developing San Diego: The Images of Ralph P. Stineman, 1910-1915

October 4, 2008   No Comments