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- Hosts of "The Victory Garden" Television Program, 1993 - WGBH-TV launched <em>Crockett's Victory Garden</em> in April 1975. Russell Morash produced the show, and home gardeners relished the sage advice of gardeners Jim Crockett, Bob Thomson, and others over the years. A segment on cooking for gardeners became a regular feature when chef Marian Morash, Russell's wife, joined the series. <em>The Victory Garden</em> (under other titles) ended its 40-year run in 2015.

- 1993
- Collections - Artifact
Hosts of "The Victory Garden" Television Program, 1993
WGBH-TV launched Crockett's Victory Garden in April 1975. Russell Morash produced the show, and home gardeners relished the sage advice of gardeners Jim Crockett, Bob Thomson, and others over the years. A segment on cooking for gardeners became a regular feature when chef Marian Morash, Russell's wife, joined the series. The Victory Garden (under other titles) ended its 40-year run in 2015.
- "The Victory Garden Cookbook," 1982 -

- 1982
- Collections - Artifact
"The Victory Garden Cookbook," 1982
- Russell and Marian Morash of the Television Program "The Victory Garden," circa 1991 - WGBH-TV launched <em>Crockett's Victory Garden</em> in April 1975. Russell Morash produced the show, and home gardeners relished the sage advice of gardeners Jim Crockett, Bob Thomson, and others over the years. A segment on cooking for gardeners became a regular feature when chef Marian Morash, Russell's wife, joined the series. <em>The Victory Garden</em> (under other titles) ended its 40-year run in 2015.

- circa 1991
- Collections - Artifact
Russell and Marian Morash of the Television Program "The Victory Garden," circa 1991
WGBH-TV launched Crockett's Victory Garden in April 1975. Russell Morash produced the show, and home gardeners relished the sage advice of gardeners Jim Crockett, Bob Thomson, and others over the years. A segment on cooking for gardeners became a regular feature when chef Marian Morash, Russell's wife, joined the series. The Victory Garden (under other titles) ended its 40-year run in 2015.
- Norm Abram, Marian Morash, Julia Child, and Steve Thomas in Promotional Image for "This Old House: Milton," 1998 - WGBH-TV launched <em>This Old House</em> in 1979. Each season features the host and crew in a home repair. In 1998, Steve Thomas, host, and Norm Abram, carpenter, worked with two distinguished chefs and TV personalities, Julia Child and Marian Morash, to create a dream kitchen for a house in Milton, Massachusetts, built in 1724.

- 1998
- Collections - Artifact
Norm Abram, Marian Morash, Julia Child, and Steve Thomas in Promotional Image for "This Old House: Milton," 1998
WGBH-TV launched This Old House in 1979. Each season features the host and crew in a home repair. In 1998, Steve Thomas, host, and Norm Abram, carpenter, worked with two distinguished chefs and TV personalities, Julia Child and Marian Morash, to create a dream kitchen for a house in Milton, Massachusetts, built in 1724.
- "The Victory Garden Fish and Vegetable Cookbook," 1993 -

- 1993
- Collections - Artifact
"The Victory Garden Fish and Vegetable Cookbook," 1993
- "The Victory Garden," 1994 - WGBH-TV launched <em>Crockett's Victory Garden</em> in April 1975. Russell Morash produced the show, and home gardeners relished the sage advice of gardeners Jim Crockett, Bob Thomson, and others over the years. A segment on cooking for gardeners became a regular feature when chef Marian Morash, Russell's wife, joined the series. <em>The Victory Garden</em> (under other titles) ended its 40-year run in 2015.

- 1994
- Collections - Artifact
"The Victory Garden," 1994
WGBH-TV launched Crockett's Victory Garden in April 1975. Russell Morash produced the show, and home gardeners relished the sage advice of gardeners Jim Crockett, Bob Thomson, and others over the years. A segment on cooking for gardeners became a regular feature when chef Marian Morash, Russell's wife, joined the series. The Victory Garden (under other titles) ended its 40-year run in 2015.