Winburn, Donna
Biography
Donna Chamberlain Winburn was born on a farm near Lovilia, Iowa, in 1935 to a farm family whose ancestors had settled Monroe County. She attended a small rural school and graduated from Albia High School in 1953. After graduation, she commuted to an office job at the Maytag Corporation in Newton, Iowa until 1960 when she married Russell Winburn. He had served in the military and farmed with his father. They moved to the farm owned by the elder Winburns north of Grinnell, Iowa, and raised three children. In 1964, they borrowed money from the Federal Land Bank (FLB) to buy a local farm, and in 1973, they borrowed money to purchase a second farm in the area. They also borrowed from the Production Credit Association (PCA), “a sister of the FLB,” to finance year-to-year purchases. When interest rates increased and land values decreased in the early 1980s, the Winburns fought the PCA and FLB to keep their land and assets. They became involved with PrairieFire Rural Action and Iowa Farm Unity Coalition. Donna Winburn ran several meetings protesting the FLB actions in the Marshall area. Following a meeting with Gary Lamb, an assistant to Senator Harkin, Winburn was asked to start a chapter of the Farmers’ Union in Poweshiek County. She is active with the Education Committee of the board of directors of the Farmers’ Union and continues to keep the financial records of the Winburn farm land.
Found in 2 Collections and/or Records:
Voices from the Land: An Oral History Project in Iowa
Oral histories with Iowa farm women conducted as part of the Rural Women's Project of the Iowa Women's Archives.
Winburn, Donna: interview, 9/26/2001
The Donna Winburn interview follows her life chronologically from her childhood on the farm, through several years of working for Maytag Corporation in Newton, Iowa, to her role as wife, mother, and farmer in the 1960s and 1970s. The bulk of the interview consists of her account of her circumstances, experiences, and activism during the 1980s farm crisis. Winburn was the bookkeeper of the family and had a clear grasp of how to deal with bankers and lawyers. She became a public speaker in the 1980s and became active with the Farmers’ Union in the mid 1980s. This interview also recounts her memories of African American children at her high school in the coal mining community of Albia.
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