Victory Gardens & Backyard Chickens: When Self-Sufficiency Wasn’t a Trend, It Was Survival

Today, there’s a certain charm to the idea of growing your own food.

A small garden.  A few herbs.

Maybe some tomatoes if everything goes well and the weather cooperates.

It feels intentional. Peaceful. Even a little trendy.

But for many of our ancestors?

Self-sufficiency wasn’t a lifestyle choice.

It was the only choice.

Because long before grocery stores were convenient—and long before supply chains could be trusted to show up exactly when needed—families relied on something much closer to home:

Their own backyards.

And in those backyards, you’d often find two things:

  • A garden
  • A few chickens

Victory Gardens (Before They Were Called That)

While the term “Victory Garden” became especially popular during World War I and World War II, the concept existed long before that.

Families grew food because they had to.

Gardens provided:

  • vegetables
  • herbs
  • fruits
  • staples for daily meals

They weren’t optional.

They were essential.

During wartime, governments actively encouraged people to grow food at home to support national efforts and reduce pressure on public food supplies.

But even outside of war?

The principle remained the same:

Grow what you can. Use what you have.


Historic Victory Garden with vegetables growing in backyard
Home gardens helped families provide food, especially during times of uncertainty. (Gardening to Victory)

What Did People Actually Grow?

Gardens weren’t about aesthetics.

They were about output.

Which meant planting foods that were:

  • practical
  • reliable
  • filling

Common garden crops included:

  • potatoes
  • carrots
  • beans
  • cabbage
  • corn
  • onions
  • squash
  • tomatoes

These weren’t random choices.

They were foods that:

  • stored well
  • fed families efficiently
  • could be preserved for later use

And if you’re thinking:

That sounds familiar…

It should.

Because this directly connects to meals we see in [#104 Dinner Is Served: 1900s Menus and the Lost Art of the Jell-O Mold] and traditions like [#108 The Sunday Dinner: When Meals Were Family Reunions].

What people grew shaped what people ate.


Backyard Chickens: The Original Grocery Store

If the garden handled vegetables…

Chickens handled everything else.

Backyard chickens provided:

  • eggs (consistently)
  • meat (occasionally)
  • and, let’s be honest… a lot of personality

Keeping chickens meant having a steady source of protein without needing to:

  • travel
  • purchase frequently
  • rely entirely on external supply

Eggs, especially, were incredibly valuable.

They could be:

  • eaten fresh
  • used in cooking
  • traded
  • preserved

And because chickens required daily care, they became part of the household routine.

Not just a resource.

A responsibility.


Backyard chickens in early 1900s rural home setting
Backyard chickens provided a reliable source of food and required daily care. (Silver Homestead)

The Rhythm of Backyard Life

Gardens and chickens weren’t one-time efforts.

They required consistency. Daily attention. Seasonal planning.

Which meant life followed a rhythm:

  • planting
  • tending
  • harvesting
  • preserving

Alongside:

  • feeding animals
  • collecting eggs
  • maintaining supplies

This rhythm fits perfectly with what we’ve seen in:

  • [#84 Wash Day Wednesdays]
  • [#90 The Saturday Night Bath Tradition]
  • [#86 Iceboxes, Ice Men, and the Battle Against Spoiled Milk]

Because once again:

Daily life wasn’t flexible.

It was structured.

Built around what needed to be done.


When Self-Sufficiency Was the Safety Net

One of the most important things to understand about pre-modern living is this:

Backyard food production wasn’t just convenient.

It was security.

If something went wrong—jobs, supply, cost—families still had:

  • food growing
  • eggs available
  • something to rely on

This was especially important during:

  • economic hardship
  • wartime
  • supply shortages

Because while stores could run out…

Your backyard usually didn’t.

(Assuming everything went well… which it didn’t always, but still.)

This idea of planning around limited resources also shows up in [#86 Iceboxes, Ice Men, and the Battle Against Spoiled Milk], where households had to carefully manage what they had.


Let’s Be Honest… This Was a Lot of Work

It’s easy to romanticize backyard gardens and chickens.

And yes—there’s something simply satisfying about it.

But it was also:

  • time-consuming
  • physically demanding
  • dependent on weather
  • occasionally unpredictable

Plants didn’t always grow.

Chickens didn’t always cooperate.

And maintaining everything required ongoing effort and continuous pressure.

This wasn’t:

“a relaxing weekend activity”

This was:

“part of how we eat this week”


What Genealogists Can Learn from This

Gardens and backyard animals might not show up directly in records.

But they shape everything around them.

They influence:

  • diet
  • routines
  • labor distribution
  • household structure
  • economic stability

They also help explain:

  • why certain foods appear frequently
  • how families survived difficult periods
  • how communities functioned

Because when you understand what people grew…

You understand how they lived.


Basket of harvested vegetables representing early 1900s home gardening
Growing food was only part of the process—preserving it ensured it lasted. (Vintage Photos Of People Tending To Their Gardens 1930s-1960s)

Somewhere Between Survival and Simplicity

I think what stands out most about this way of life is how close everything was.

Food wasn’t:

  • shipped
  • packaged
  • or distant

It was:

  • grown
  • cared for
  • gathered

Right outside the door.

And while that required more effort…

It also created a direct connection between:

Work
Food
Daily life

In a way that feels kind of distant today.


Final Thoughts

Victory gardens and backyard chickens weren’t trends.  They weren’t hobbies.

They were systems.

Reliable, necessary, and deeply tied to everyday survival.

And while we may not rely on our backyards in quite the same way today…

There’s something worth remembering about a time when:

Food came from effort.  From planning.  From patience.

And sometimes…

From a chicken that absolutely had opinions about being involved.


🔗 Related Rabbit Holes

  • [#104 Dinner Is Served: 1900s Menus and the Lost Art of the Jell-O Mold]
  • [#108 The Sunday Dinner: When Meals Were Family Reunions]
  • [#86 Iceboxes, Ice Men, and the Battle Against Spoiled Milk]
  • [#84 Wash Day Wednesdays: The Most Exhausting Day of the Week]

📚 Sources & Further Reading