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  1. Victory Gardens was produced by Lombardo and recorded at Mitch Easter's Chapel Hill Drive-In Studio in Winston-Salem, NC. The album features 10,000 Maniacs members Robert Buck and Jerome Augustyniak as well as special guests Ronnie Lane (Small Faces), Joey Molland and Augie Meyers (Sir Douglas Quintet, Texas Tornados).

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ronnie_LaneRonnie Lane - Wikipedia

    Ronald Frederick Lane (1 April 1946 – 4 June 1997) [1] was an English musician and songwriter who was the bassist and co-founder of the rock bands Small Faces (1965–69) and Faces (1969–73).

  3. May 15, 2020 · The Surprising Backstory of Victory Gardens. In World War I, the Victory Garden movement encouraged people to grow their own food to conserve home-front supplies. But kids’ gardens had planted the roots. via Wikimedia Commons. By: Madeleine Compagnon. May 15, 2020. 3 minutes. The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR.

  4. Victory Gardens in World War I. Sow the Seeds of Victory. As World War I raged on, a crisis beyond warfare and shell shock emerged: Europe was running out of food. Barren from drought and often the scene of battles, fertile farmland across the continent was rapidly disappearing.

  5. 1991 Victory Gardens - Ronnie Lane – vocal ("We Have Nothing") https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victory_Gardens

  6. Apr 4, 2020 · Victory Gardens, originally called war gardens, got started during WWI. The motivation was the need for extra food supplies to feed U.S. allies in Europe and our own soldiers once we entered the war.

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  8. Aug 17, 2021 · Victory Gardens started as a temporary 300-unit housing project on 91 acres of condemned land in Randolph. Comprised of one story, the cinderblock single and two-family homes served the skilled workers who came to contribute to the war effort.