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4-H is a U.S.-based network of youth organizations whose mission is "engaging youth to reach their fullest potential while advancing the field of youth development". [1] Its name is a reference to the occurrence of the initial letter H four times in the organization's original motto head, heart, hands, and health, which was later incorporated into the fuller pledge officially adopted in 1927.
Tom Stocksdale, a 4-H alumnus, was the speaker at Wayne County 4-H Legacy Dinner. He spoke on the importance of living out the 4-H Pledge and the FFA Creed. Cocktails, dinner and auction
Albert Belmont Graham (1868–1960) was born near Lena, Ohio. He was a country schoolmaster and agriculture extension pioneer at Ohio State University. [1] Graham taught at an integrated rural school in Brown Township, Miami County. Later, Graham worked at the United States Department of Agriculture as the Federal Extension Director.
" The Ohio 4-H Global Immersion trip is a testament to Ohio 4-H's dedication to shaping well-rounded leaders who are prepared to thrive in an increasingly interconnected world," said Kirk Bloir ...
My grandmother founded 4-H; when I consider its pledge, I see its principles in the Harris-Walz campaign, writes Seth Watkins.
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis raised a calf while a member. [1]4-H alumni have participated in many fields. One out of every seven adults in the U.S. is a former 4-H member. . Participation in 4-H events and activities, the value of projects completed, and the challenges and responsibilities experienced in 4-H have contributed to the personal and leadership development of 4-H
Aug. 20—NEWBERRY — The official theme of this year's South Carolina 4-H Congress was "Once Upon a Time in a 4-H Fairy Tale," but the stories told that night might have been titled "A Tale of ...
Emerson White began his teaching career at the age of seventeen when he was both a student and an instructor at Twinsburg Academy in Ohio. [1]: 285 After graduating without a degree from Cleveland University in 1851, he was the principal of a few schools in the Cleveland area before serving as superintendent in Portsmouth, Ohio, from 1856 through 1861.