Home demonstration clubs started before 1911. A similar path was taken by
Susie V. Powell in
Mississippi, who was working with the
Mississippi Federation of Women's Clubs to set up girls' tomato clubs in 1911. Tomato clubs like the ones started by Powell and Trigg were part of a
Progressive Era movement to help improve the quality of life for rural women and bring
home economic concepts into their homes. States like North Carolina found that there was a need to organize the successful tomato clubs at a state level, and hired
Jane S. McKimmon in 1911 to do that work. In 1914, Mrs. Miller Earle was organizing tomato clubs for black girls in
South Carolina. Prior to home demonstration agents working with rural black women, Jeanes teachers from the
Jeanes Supervisor teacher program traveled between farms and taught home economics and agricultural skills. In 1914 the
Smith-Lever Act made national funds available for the home economics, including home demonstration agents. The act provided both legal and financial backing for home demonstration clubs. Out of these funds, many
African American agents were hired and after 1920, when the emergency funds were no longer needed, white agents asked that black agents continue to be hired. In 1918,
Edith Parrott, who supervised home demonstration work in South Carolina, said that while white women could help black families, the work could only be done "properly" if black agents served black families. Negro extension work was funded at a lower rate than programs for white people and black women's extension services received less funding than black men's services. Black demonstration agents were also paid around half of what white women earned for the same work. In some cases, the difference between the salaries of white and black home demonstration agents was even more pronounced. For example, in
Winston County, Mississippi, Olga B. Hughes, the white home demonstration agent received a salary of $150 per month in 1931, while Grace Perryman, her black counterpart, received only $25 per month in the same year.
Connie J. Bonslagel served as Arkansas' state-level agent from 1917 to 1950, and
Mary L. Ray was the Negro District home demonstration agent from c.1918 until 1934. Both served until their deaths. Home demonstration agents serving rural women overlapped with
4-H clubs, including in Montana. In 1951, 540 different home demonstration clubs employed 4H agents. == Notable people ==