Isabelle M. Kelley
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Isabelle M. Kelley (27 July 1917 – 29 November 1997) was an American
social work Social work is an academic discipline and practice-based profession concerned with meeting the basic needs of individuals, families, groups, communities, and society as a whole to enhance their individual and collective well-being. Social work ...
er who was the primary architect of the Federal Food Stamp Program. When she was appointed to be the director of the Division which oversaw the Food Stamp Program for the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), she became the first woman to run a national social program or lead any Division of a federal agency. She has been inducted into the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame and the USDA’s Hall of Heroes.


Early life and education

Isabelle M. Kelley was born on July 27, 1917, in Ellington, Connecticut, to Hannah (née O'Connell) and Thomas W. Kelley, but her family soon moved to Simsbury where her parent ran an inn. She completed her secondary schooling there then enrolled in Agricultural Economics, at the University of Connecticut graduating in 1938 (the first woman to do so in the subject) and went on to attain a master's degree in food economics from Iowa State University.


Career

In 1940, as soon as she graduated, Kelley began working for the USDA. She began studying trends in consumer purchasing and family nutrition. She was one of the first to understand the connection between health and cognition and pushed forward the Penny Milk Program. The program gave milk to school children for one penny and Kelley received the USDA’s
Superior Honor Award The Superior Honor Award is an award of the United States Department of State. Similar versions of the same award exist for the former U.S. Information Agency, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, and USAID. It is presented to groups or individ ...
for her administration of the initiative. In 1946, she helped launch the National School Lunch Program. In 1961, President
Kennedy Kennedy may refer to: People * John F. Kennedy (1917–1963), 35th president of the United States * John Kennedy (Louisiana politician), (born 1951), US Senator from Louisiana * Kennedy (surname), a family name (including a list of persons with t ...
asked her to participate in a task force to investigate ending hunger and distribution of the food supply. Initially, she ran a pilot program in eight of the most poverty-effected counties in the US and studied their nutritional needs as well as the impact on local retailers of instituting a coupon-based program. The following year, the program was expanded into 18 states. The program continued under President Johnson toward a permanent government program. As part of the commission's work, she became the primary author of the Food Stamp Act of 1964. The USDA appointed her in 1964 to be the first Director of the administrative division which oversaw the program, making her the first woman who had directed a national social program or led any Division of a federal agency. The Food Stamp programme was supporting six million Americans withitn five years of its foundation. Kelley retired in 1973, but continued to advise on policies and programs of the USDA. Beginning in 1974, she worked for a year and a half at the Graduate School of Georgetown University. In 1987, she was interviewed in the memoir program of
Radcliffe College Radcliffe College was a women's liberal arts college in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and functioned as the female coordinate institution for the all-male Harvard College. Considered founded in 1879, it was one of the Seven Sisters colleges and he ...
, as one of the thirty-eight women participants, who had been former employees of the federal government. Kelley died on November 29, 1997, in Bethesda, Maryland.


Commemoration

In 2011, she was posthumously inducted into the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame and that same year was brought into the USDA’s Hall of Heroes. In January 2019, Kelley was featured in the New York Times '' Overlooked'' series obituaries on remarkable people whose deaths initially went unreported in newspaper.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kelley, Isabelle M 1917 births 1997 deaths University of Connecticut alumni American social workers People from Ellington, Connecticut People from Simsbury, Connecticut Iowa State University alumni