Poverty in the United States: 1985
Beecher Linville, 42, a timber cutter in Dawes Hollow, W. Va., in June 1985. At the time, he earned $12,480 a year.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Timber cutter Beecher Linville with his son Billy in Dawes Hollow, W. Va., in 1985.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Gary Muse, center, trades with a couple for goods they aren’t interested in but got from a food bank in Seattle in May 1985.
(Ken Lubas / Los Angeles Times)In 1985, Dorean Sewell talked to The Times about raising three children in a Baltimore low-income on her salary from a fast-food restaurant, as part of a newspaper series on American attitudes about poverty. A new poll by The Times and the American Enterprise Institute revisits those opinions.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Ola Reynolds in 1985, in the Brunswick, Ga., home she moved into after leaving an abusive relationship. She is working at a seafood packing factory.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)In July 1985, Dodie Luster prepares spaghetti while holding her child in her Welch, W. Va., home.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Ada Thompson cooks in her home along Cabin Creek in West Virginia in June 1985. She collects a total of $4,992 a year, including food stamps.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Geraldine Guest at work cleaning a room at the Oleander Motel in Brunswick, Ga., in June 1985.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)In June 1985, Ola Reynolds at the home in Brunswick, Ga., she shared with her five children.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Kenneth Jones plays horseshoes in his Baltimore neighborhood to pass the afternoon in June 1985. Jones is looking for work after losing his job with Amtrak.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Kenneth Jones, who lost his job with Amtrak, in Baltimore in June 1985.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Gilbert Maxwell feeds dinner to his twins, Andre and Andrew, before he leaves for work at the King Shrimp Factory in Brunswick, Ga., in June 1985.
(Iris Schneider / Los Angeles Times)Mary Louise Williams talks about poverty programs she had helped originate in Seattle, and her experience in 1985 of having to be a recipient after losing her job.
(Ken Lubas / Los Angeles Times)A recipient leaves with a shopping bag full of goods from the Central Area Motivation Program food bank in Seattle in May 1985.
(Ken Lubas / Los Angeles Times)People line up in May 1985 for groceries to be given away at Central Area Motivation Program food bank in Seattle.
(Ken Lubas / Los Angeles Times)