The Plymouth Victory was used in 1947 to transport horses to Greece to replenish livestock depleted by the Second World War. Volunteer livestock attendants, called seagoing cowboys, accompanied the animals on ship.
Miller was one of the volunteer livestock attendants, commonly called seagoing cowboys, that tended the horses on board the SS Plymouth Victory. The horses were bound for Greece to replenish livestock depleted after the Second World War.
Caption in album: "Cowboys better halfs referred to as cow girls." Pictured are wives of the men who went as seagoing cowboys to Greece on the Plymouth Victory in 1947. The reunion took place at Refreshing Mountain Camp in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Young people on a trailer being pulled by a tractor. This is possibly a potato digging machine. They are probably a Stirling Crusaders group gathered to harvest potatoes.The farm could be the Edwin Eby or Clayton Moss farm.
Boys and girls in a field at the Orpah and Vernon Woolner farm, harvesting turnips for the Stirling Crusaders program. A sign in the field says "Crusader turnips."
Four boys pose in a turnip field with a sign reading "Crusader turnips." The turnips were grown and harvested as part of the Stirling Crusaders program at the Orpah and Vernon Woolner farm.