Iowa President, Humanitarian Hero Honored in West Branch
November 3, 2014
Saturday, October 25, was the 50 th anniversary of President
Herbert Hoover’s state funeral in his boyhood home of West
Branch, Iowa. Hoover is the only Iowa-born United States
President, and the first to be born west of the Mississippi River.
He is also one of Iowa’s – and the world’s – greatest
humanitarian heroes, whose famine-relief initiatives during
World War One and again following World War Two are
credited with saving up to 1.4 billion lives.
As the leader of the Commission for the Relief of Belgium
during World War One, Hoover spearheaded an unprecedented
initiative to purchase and deliver food to over nine million Belgian men, women, and children who
were trapped between the occupying German army and a British naval blockade. Hoover secured
diplomatic privileges for the Commission and negotiated with both sides of the conflict to ensure that
food was safely delivered to starving civilians. His fundraising efforts were such that the Commission
was left with surplus funds after the armistice, which were used to rebuild schools and establish a
Belgian-American cultural exchange program. Following World War Two Hoover again sprang into
action, conducting an assessment of global hunger that resulted in further American leadership to
avert famine.
Remembrance ceremonies on October 25 th included a grave-
site reading of the eulogy delivered at his state funeral 50
years ago and remarks by Iowan dignitaries, including World
Food Prize President Ambassador Kenneth Quinn. Perhaps
the greatest tribute paid to Hoover that day was a 3 ½ hour
meal-packaging event in the high school gymnasium, where
over 250 volunteers packaged 84,024 meals for distribution
to hungry families in Iowa and abroad. Organized on a three-
month timeline by the West Branch Lions Club in partnership
with Outreach, Inc and local businesses, the activity was
described as “something simple that everybody can do”.
West Branch Lion’s Club organizer Mike Quinlan, who climbed a tree as a boy to watch the original
state funeral, captured the spirit of the community, saying: “After serving our country in the armed
forces, serving the hungry and our community is the best thing we can do to honor the legacy of
President Hoover”.
These same Iowa-values once led President Herbert Hoover to declare: "For thousands of years, the
question 'am I my brother's keeper?' has echoed in the conscience of mankind. The American people
were the first in history to accept that obligation as a nation."
Read Ambassador Quinn’s full remarks here. For more information about the West Branch meal-
packaging event, contact Mike Quinlan at [email protected] or at 319.631.4017.
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