Contributions From Black Americans To America’s Food Culture

Honoring Hunger Fighters During Black History Month

February is dedicated as Black History Month, honoring the triumphs and struggles of Black Americans throughout U.S. history. The San Antonio Food Bank seeks to deepen our understanding and perspective on the challenges of those we serve, many of which are rooted in long-standing patterns of social inequities, exclusions, and divisions. 

In recognition of Black History Month, the San Antonio Food Bank, alongside national organizations like Feeding America, honors Black Americans’ influence on the country’s food environments, systems, and policies. Explore the profiles of several individuals and groups who have contributed to American agricultural innovation, anti-hunger policy, and culinary traditions below.

The Honorable Shirley Chisholm (1924 – 2005)
Shirley Chisholm was the first Black American woman to be elected to Congress in 1968. Rep. Chisholm (D-NY) played an essential role in the creation of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), ensuring that low-income mothers could have access to free, healthy food for their young children.

The Black Panther Party’s Free Breakfast Program
In 1969, the Black Panther Party began providing free breakfast to children before school. The breakfast program, called Free Breakfast for School Children, fed thousands of children from 1969 into the 1970s. The Black Panthers’ breakfast program helped contribute to the existence of the current federal free breakfast program.

Booker T. Whatley (1915 – 2005)
Booker T. Whatley is one of the pioneers of sustainable agriculture in the post-World War II era. He created a Clientele Membership Club, which required members to pay a fee in exchange for fresh produce that they would pick themselves. Today, this idea is commonly referred to as community supported agriculture (CSA).

Lloyd Hall (1894 – 1971)
In 1932, Lloyd Hall discovered a method of suppressing food-spoiling nitrogen by combining sodium chloride with sodium nitrate and nitrite. He later developed approaches to preventing food spoilage by using chemicals like lecithin as antioxidants and invented a way of purifying foods from spoiling microbes by using ethylene oxide gas.

George Washington Carver (1861 – 1943)
It would be difficult to make any list of American food pioneers without mentioning George Washington Carver. Carver developed more than 300 uses for peanuts. He helped spread the idea of rotating crops to help combat soil depletion. He also invented 118 products from sweet potatoes, including molasses and postage-stamp glue.

James Hemings (1765 – 1801)
After Thomas Jefferson was appointed commerce minister to France in 1784, he and James Hemings set sail for Paris, which is where Hemings began his cooking career, becoming the first American trained as a French chef. Hemings introduced European-style macaroni and cheese, French fries, crème brûlée, and ice cream to America.

George Crum (1824 – 1914)
Do you like potato chips? Then you have George Crum to thank. A chef, Mr. Crum invented what later became known as “Saratoga Chips” in 1853 while working at the Moon Lake Lodge resort in Saratoga Springs. In 1860, Crum opened a restaurant of his own, which proudly featured a basket of potato chips on every table.

To address food insecurity, which heavily affects Black Health and Wellness, in Black communities, the San Antonio Food Bank is working locally to build a SecureSA and alongside national organizations like Feeding America continue to work towards addressing the root causes of these persistent inequalities.

Source: Hunger + Health, Feeding America

Committed to the priority of stabilizing households with sufficient food to eliminate food insecurity and the risk for hunger, the San Antonio Food Bank has broadened its effort and framework to work upstream on the bigger challenges of poverty in our community. This upstream work will encompass areas like housing, education, and employment and is framed under the banner of Secure San Antonio. Learn more at safoodbank.org/securesa.