Join our Mailing List
Home > About Us > Who we are > History
About Us
Who we are
History
Client Stories
Staff
Board of Directors
Employment
Special Programs
Contact Us
Join Mailing List
Find Services
Other Resources
How to Help
Photo Gallery
News
Advocacy
Newsletter Archive
FAQ
DISTRIBUTION CENTERS

Grays Harbor

King

Yakima County

MAILING ADDRESSES

PO Box 12272
Seattle, WA 98102

PO Box 297
Yakima, WA 98907

STREET ADDRESSES

711 Cherry St.
Seattle, WA 98104

22220 W. Valley Hwy.
Kent, WA 98032

911 3rd St.
Yakima, WA 98901

History
It was 1967, and around the nation, social, political, and racial tensions simmered and occasionally boiled over. A group of Seattle community leaders formed The Ecumenical Metropolitan Ministry (EMM), an interfaith organization committed to identifying and addressing the primary problems of the poor and disadvantaged.  

Hunger, the EMM learned, was one of the biggest problems in Seattle and beyond. People had insufficient resources to feed themselves and their families. In response, the ministry founded Northwest Harvest, originally viewed as a short-term solution to help fill the gaps.  

But history had other plans. The long-term need for Northwest Harvest was sealed in 1970, when the Boeing Company began a round of layoffs that would cost 60,000 jobs over 18 months. The faces of the hungry were no longer limited to the poor and homeless, as thousands of formerly middle class people, now out of work, wondered how they would feed their families. They had no money to buy food, but their assets—homes, cars, boats— disqualified them for government assistance. With so many unemployed, there was no market for the belongings they tried to sell.

With social service agencies already stretched beyond their limits, the EMM rose to the challenge, working closely with other organizations to collect food to respond to the crisis. Northwest Harvest became a separate, secular entity and grew from a Seattle resource into a statewide hunger relief agency, distributing food to a network of independent food banks around Washington State.

Decades after the Boeing unemployment crisis, the need for emergency food assistance remains. Today, Northwest Harvest is still Washington's own statewide hunger relief agency, securing approximately 24 million pounds of food each year for distribution through a network of more than 300 partner food banks, meal programs and elementary schools.

UPCOMING EVENTS

March 10
KIRO Every Day is Baby Day

May 06
WSAJ Fight for Justice-Fight Hunger Food Drive

> See all events
NWH IN THE NEWS

February 02
The Olympian: State to look into hatchery surpluses

February 02
The Seattle Times: Hunger Action Week shows difficulty of diet on $12 a day

> See all news

RECENT NEWSLETTERS

Winter 2009
Fall 2009
Summer 2009

Spring 2009



Northwest Harvest Home  |  About Us  |  Events  |  Donate  |  Volunteer  |  Our Partners  |  Sitemap  |  Legal & Privacy