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Texas | Columns | "They shoe horses, don't they?"

Home Demonstration in Texas

From Tomatoes to Environmental Issues:
The evolution of the Texas Association for Family and Community Education

by Luke Warm

This seldom-mentioned state service which has undergone several changes in name over the years is frequently omitted from local newspaper coverage. The organization had its humble beginnings in Milam County in 1912 when Edna Westbrook Trigg started teaching girls’ “tomato clubs.” The quaint name stats their original purpose – which had been the canning and preserving of tomatoes.

Like the course of “home economics” that was once taught in high schools across the country, the emphasis of home demonstration was on homemaking skills. By-products of the meetings included lifelong friendships and a good excuse to get away from home for a few hours. Meetings were often held in community buildings, and many clubs were given space in the county courthouse to conduct business.

Agricultural demonstrations in Texas had been introduced as early as 1903, but in 1914 the U.S. Congress passed the Smith-Lever Act which officially sanctioned “demonstration work” and allowed programs to be funded by matching local money with state and federal funds.

After Mrs. Trigg's pioneering work in Milam County, other female county agents were hired to work with the rural female population. Vegetable gardening, canning, bread-making and animal husbandry were typical topics for demonstration clubs.

By 1914, a Texas superintendent had been appointed, and topics expanded to include sewing, “home improvement and management” and the somewhat vague heading of “family living.”

During WWI emphasis shifted to canning and preservation due to the food-conservation programs that were then in place.

Post-war programs were under the direction of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service. County agents increased during the 1920s and in 1926 county home demonstration councils were established to coordinate local membership with and statewide programs. That same year, county agents started using the still-new radio to broadcast instruction and techniques.

There were 152 clubs statewide in 1917, with a membership of just under 2,000 women enrolled. By 1934 there were nearly 49,000 women enrolled in 2,268 clubs on the county or community level.

Genevea Meadows Essary, Cochran County Home Demonstration Agent
Genevea Meadows Essary, Cochran County Home Demonstration Agent, in her office in the courthouse at Morton. Note: My mother [photo above] was the home demonstration agent in Morton, Texas, from 1937-1939. She married my father in 1939, and then taught school. Morton was also my home until 1949.” – Gary Essary, Zionsville, Indiana
1926 Cochran County Courthouse, Morton,Texas old photo
The 1926 Cochran County Courthouse
before the 1968 remodeling

Photo courtesy texasoldphotos.com

In 1937 more than 14,000 rural Black women were home demonstration agents.

For all the early successes, it wasn’t until WWII when "victory gardens" and "victory canning" pushed membership in home demonstration clubs to its zenith.

Besides the simple straightforward goal of production, classes also emphasized results like the sense of well-being and stability that a well-managed household provided.

Many agents had home economics or general teaching experience, but found that they sometimes encountered resistance to their programs, either in the form of county officials who downplayed the importance, or locals who felt the money could be better spent on other projects.

After a majority of Texans moved to the cities after WWII, membership underwent a decrease in membership.

The 1972 national meeting was held in Dallas and in 1979 the name of the program became the Texas Extension Homemakers Association with local participation referred to as “Extension Homemaker clubs.”

In 1984 membership was reported to be 28,686. Emphasis shifted from domestic skills to such issues as the “war on drugs” and safety issues such as children's car seats.

The program was changed again in 1994 when it became the Texas Association for Family and Community Education. Newer programs now include environmental issues.

1994 membership was down to 12,000 statewide but this recent figure now includes male enrollment.


© John Troesser
"They shoe horses, don't they?"

November 24 , 2007 Guest Column


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