The first sixteen issues were printed in
Craryville, New York. The couple John G. Scott and Jo Ann Wheeler were the editors and primary writers of all sixteen issues of the publication printed there, and they included illustrations by Wheeler in those issues. Scott and Wheeler printed the seventeenth, and final, issue after leaving Craryville to live and teach in the
Ferrer Colony and Ferrer Modern School, where their two children attended school. Scott was a teacher of nature studies for about five years. Wheeler was an art and reading teacher in the Modern Schools for seventeen years. In addition to teaching and publishing the journal
Mother Earth, the couple farmed a small piece of land in
East Taghkanic, New York, following the guidelines of Thoreau's
Walden. The publication included contributions from leading anarchists of the time, including Tom Bell,
Laurance Labadie and Carl Nold. Articles debated political issues of the time, including
Marxism versus
Anarchism,
free schools,
freedom of speech, and workplace organizing through the
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and other unions. Other topics included
organic and
collective farming. The journal described the methods of farming used and way of life in rural upstate New York during the 1930s, and includes discussions from meetings of the
United Farmers Protective Association, the
National Farmers Holiday Association, and similar organizations. ==Ferrer Colony==