Ohio History Journal

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SOURCES FOR OHIO WORLD WAR HISTORY IN THE

SOURCES FOR OHIO WORLD WAR HISTORY IN THE

PAPERS OF THE FOOD ADMINISTRATION

IN THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES

By ALMON R. WRIGHT

 

Twenty-one years ago, on August 1O, 1917, an executive

order drafted by a native Ohioan, Robert A. Taft, and signed

by President Woodrow Wilson, launched the United States upon

a gigantic program of food conservation.1 Many volumes have

been written concerning the military campaigns and the diplomatic

entanglements of the period of the great war. The historian

and his reading public are turning from these phases of the con-

flict to the less spectacular, but no less vital, participation of the

civilian population. It is a significant fact that the first large

collection of documents to be classified in The National Archives

pertains to this side of World War history. In January, 1936,

the records of the Food Administration were moved to the

new archive of the Nation where they now lie ready for

the scholar's use.

Among the hundreds of file cases and boxes which contained

this collection, one group of boxes attracted special notice. These

were the smoothly finished boxes of oak in which the papers of

the Ohio Food Administration were forwarded to Washington

in the spring of 1919. As a consequence of the careful pack-

ing and the substantial character of the containers, these records

successfully withstood the perils of seven years of confinement

in the White House garage. The volume of those papers which

were shipped amounts to enough to fill possibly twenty-five four

drawer filing cases. For the most part, these represent the admin-

istration at Columbus; the remainder constitute the residue of the

papers of the county administrations and of certain town organiza-

tions. The records from the counties and towns are disappoint-

ing, since they are incomplete and since the local agents frequently

1 Robert A. Taft to Almon R. Wright, March 4, 1938.

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