Background
Isabelle M. Kelley was born on July 27, 1917 in Ellington, Connecticut to Hannah (née O"Connell) and Thomas W. Kelley, but her family soon moved to Simsbury where she completed her secondary schooling.
Isabelle M. Kelley was born on July 27, 1917 in Ellington, Connecticut to Hannah (née O"Connell) and Thomas W. Kelley, but her family soon moved to Simsbury where she completed her secondary schooling.
In 1940, as soon as she graduated, Kelley began working for the United States Department of Agriculture.
When she was appointed to be the director of the Division which oversaw the Food Stamp Program for the United States Department of Agriculture (United States Department of Agriculture), she became the first woman to run a national social program or lead any Division of a federal agency. She has been inducted into the Connecticut Women"s Hall of Fame and the United States Department of Agriculture’s Hall of Heroes. She began studying trends in consumer purchasing and family nutrition.
She was one of the first to understand the connection between health and cognition and pushed forward the Penny Milk Program.
In 1946, she helped launch the National School Lunch Program. In 1961, President Kennedy asked her to participate in a task force to investigate ending hunger and distribution of the food supply.
Initially, she ran a pilot program in eight of the most poverty-effected counties in the United States and studied their nutritional needs as well as the impact on local retailers of instituting a coupon-based program The following year, the program was expanded into 18 states.
The program continued under President Johnson toward a permanent government program
As part of the commission"s work, she became the primary author of the Food Stamp Acting of 1964. The United States Department of Agriculture appointed her in 1964 to be the first Director of the administrative division which oversaw the program, making her the first woman who had directed a national social program or led any Division of a federal agency. Kelley retired in 1973, but continued to advise on policies and programs of the United States Department of Agriculture. Beginning in 1974, she worked for a year and a half at the Graduate School of Georgetown University.
In 1987, she was interviewed in the memoir program of Radcliffe College, as one of the thirty-eight women participants, who had been former employees of the federal government.
Kelley died on November 29, 1997 in Bethesda, Maryland. In 2011, she was posthumously inducted into the Connecticut Women"s Hall of Fame and that same year was brought into the United States Department of Agriculture’s Hall of Heroes.