Marion County 4-H Foundation Inc.

Marion County 4-H Foundation Inc. The Foundation was originally formed back in 1980. In 2015, we re-vitalized the Foundation with a new board and fresh ideas.

The Marion County 4-H Foundation was re-established on April 25, 2015 to provide funding and support for 4-H programs in Marion County, Florida, including scholarships, camps, and youth leadership opportunities. The State and local funding that used to help pay for 4H programs has disappeared. The need is greater than ever to keep our local 4H programs going. If 4-H has been important to you or yo

ur family, we need your help to insure our future leaders have 4H programs to provide the basic education and training opportunities that have helped our community for many generations. If you attended 4-H Camp, 4-H Legislature, State Congress, County Events, participated on local, state or national judging teams, showed animals at the Youth Fair or a number of other activities: we invite you to support our Marion County 4-H Foundation. After all, we all pledged to โ€œMake the Best Better". We are looking for sponsors, prize donations and silent auction items. The Marion County 4-H program involves over 1700 members in more than 34 clubs and impacts over 3000 students annually through school enrichment programs. All of these youth benefit from the funds raised by the Marion County 4-H Foundation. Foundation funds purchase project support materials, fund leadership training, summer camp programs, citizenship and leadership conferences, and assist in expenses associated with state and national competition. The Marion County 4-H Foundation, Inc. is designated as exempt from Federal Income Tax under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

Congratulations to the Marion County Forestry judging teams! Huge shout out to Todd S. Dailey for his dedication to coac...
05/25/2026

Congratulations to the Marion County Forestry judging teams! Huge shout out to Todd S. Dailey for his dedication to coaching this team.

Congratulations to the 2026 Marion County 4-H Forestry Judging Teams! This past Saturday, our youth competed in the State 4-H Forestry Contest at the UF Austin Cary Forest in Gainesville, FL. Marion County was represented by an individual junior member, and a junior, intermediate, and senior team, each consisting of four youth competitors, and we are thrilled to announce that ALL THREE teams placed 1st in their respective age divisions! ๐ŸŽ‰

We could not be prouder of these youth and the countless hours they dedicated to studying and preparing for this competition.

๐ŸŒฟ Junior Team โ€“ Malachi โ€“ 2nd High Individual, Joshua- 3rd High Individual, Marcella, Emmett
๐ŸŒฟ Junior Individual Competitor- MJ
๐ŸŒฟ Intermediate Team โ€“ Eleanor- 1st Place Individual, Caleb- 3rd Highest Individual, Callie, Jax
๐ŸŒฟ Senior Team โ€“ Forest- 1st Place Individual, Calista- 2nd Highest Individual, Madison, Gracelynn

Forest also placed 3rd in the Nature Poetry Contest!

An extra congratulations to our Senior Team for earning the opportunity to compete at the National Forestry Contest this July in Weston, West Virginia! A huge thank you to Mr. Todd for dedicating your time, leadership, and knowledge to coaching these outstanding youth, and to Ms. Brittany for assisting with preparation and support along the way. ๐ŸŒฒ ๐Ÿ’š๐Ÿ€

All because someone had a vision was was willing to think outside the box!
05/12/2026

All because someone had a vision was was willing to think outside the box!

She was sitting at the back of the room.
December 1909. A teachers' conference in Columbia, South Carolina. A government official at the front was describing a new federal program โ€” young farm boys across the South were being given seed, land, and instruction in modern agriculture. They were producing harvests two and three times larger than their own fathers. It was, by any measure, a success.
The woman at the back was twenty-seven years old. Her name was Marie Cromer. She taught at a one-room schoolhouse in Aiken County โ€” the only teacher, the only principal.
She raised her hand.
But what are we doing for the farm girls?
That question is recorded in the meeting notes. And it may be the most consequential sentence ever spoken at a teachers' conference in American history.
Marie had watched her female students โ€” girls aged nine to twenty โ€” drop out of school every spring because their families needed their labor in the fields. They had no shoes in summer. They were expected to marry by sixteen, bear children every two years, and own nothing the law allowed a husband to own instead. Their brothers would one day inherit what little land the family had. They would not.
She came home and built something.
On her own initiative, she organized the Aiken County Girls' Tomato Club โ€” the first organization of its kind in the United States. Each girl who joined received a packet of tomato seeds, a one-tenth-acre plot on her family's farm, and something more radical than either: instruction in keeping a financial ledger, and the right to keep every single cent she earned.
In the spring of 1910, forty-seven girls enrolled.
They planted. They watered. They weeded. They harvested. They canned. They sold.
And they kept the money.
The prize that first season was a scholarship to Winthrop College. Marie didn't have the $140 to fund it herself, so she wrote to a wealthy polo enthusiast from New York who wintered in Aiken County. He funded it.
By late summer, a girl named Katie Gunter had canned 512 jars of tomatoes from her tenth of an acre and cleared a $40 profit. The scholarship was hers.
Within a few years, the best-performing girls were clearing $70 and $80 from that same tenth of an acre โ€” more than many of their fathers earned sharecropping cotton for an entire year.
The clubs spread. Virginia. Alabama. Georgia. Mississippi. Tennessee. By 1913, over twenty thousand girls were enrolled across fifteen Southern states.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture appointed Marie one of the first women ever assigned to agricultural field work in the federal civil service.
A girl wrote about the experience in 1915:
"The work was long and sometimes tiresome. But I now have a bank account of sixty dollars."
In 1915. In rural South Carolina. A teenage girl. A bank account. In her own name.
The Nineteenth Amendment โ€” giving women the right to vote โ€” would not arrive for another five years.
In 1914, the federal Smith-Lever Act folded the tomato clubs, the corn clubs, and related programs into a single national cooperative extension service. That combined program was given a name in 1924.
You know it as 4-H.
Marie Cromer went on to establish the first home economics curriculum in Aiken County. In 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower formally recognized her at the National 4-H Camp in Washington, D.C., as one of the founders of the organization.
She died on June 14, 1964, at home in Eureka, South Carolina. She was eighty-one years old.
There is a small historical marker on Highway 191.
Today, approximately six million American children are enrolled in 4-H. It is the largest youth-development organization in the United States.
Marie Cromer never gave a speech.
She raised her hand at the back of a conference room.
She asked one question.
And the country spent the next hundred and fifteen years answering it.

Well deserved recognition for some of Marion Countyโ€™s greatest.These two have given so much to the 4H programs for many ...
04/25/2026

Well deserved recognition for some of Marion Countyโ€™s greatest.
These two have given so much to the 4H programs for many years. We appreciate their continued commitment to 4H programs.

Congratulations! Well done!
04/20/2026

Congratulations! Well done!

Congrats to our livestock judging teams!
03/06/2026

Congrats to our livestock judging teams!

Great job to our livestock judging team!
12/16/2025

Great job to our livestock judging team!

https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZP8UHgfEf/
12/02/2025

https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZP8UHgfEf/

12.6K likes, 177 comments. โ€œ4-H kids, thereโ€™s something special about them.๐ŸคŽ Written and read by Leslie Meansโ€

Address

2232 NE Jacksonville Road
Ocala, FL
34471

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+13526718400

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