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The Dust Bowl

The Dust Bowl. An ecological disaster on the great plains during the great depression. The Dust Bowl .

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The Dust Bowl

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  1. The Dust Bowl An ecological disaster on the great plains during the great depression

  2. The Dust Bowl During the 1930s, a long period of drought and poor soil conservation resulted in an ecological disaster on the great plains. Farmers who had plowed millions of acres of drought stricken land could only watch helplessly as the great plains, quite literally, blew away.

  3. The Great Plains Region Impacted by the Dust Bowl The worst areas of the Dust Bowl are pictured here – the panhandles of Oklahoma and Texas, the western reaches of Kansas, and the eastern portions of Colorado and New Mexico were essentially reduced to bedrock. Families were forced to migrate from the Great Plains just to survive.

  4. The Dust Bowl This map illustrates the impact of the Dust Bowl on other regions – the dry soil literally blackened the skies . It covered the ground, smothering living things – plants, animals, and humans alike. Crops were destroyed by Dust Bowl storms from the plains of South Dakota to the Gulf Coast of Texas, and ships sailing across the Atlantic were coated in a thin filmy layer of dust from the atmosphere.

  5. Clouds of Dust on the Great Plains This image captures much of the problem – the land is arid to begin with, but years of drought reduced the soil to a fine silt, dusty and ready to take flight. When the winds picked up, clouds of dust lifted off, blotting out the sun.

  6. Ecological Devastation Once profitable homesteads were now reduced to unproductive deserts. The families who lived on these farms slowly lost profits, had their homes foreclosed on by banks, and were forced to leave – simply for the sake of survival.

  7. As crops withered away in the fields and farmland was reduced to sandy dunes and bedrock, migrant families were forced to abandon their homesteads. Many families found themselves in a plight similar to this family’s – they had to walk their way off the plains, discern where buried roads were located, and evacuate the region with nothing. A Family in Transit

  8. Escaping the Great Dust Storm Traveling over dirt roads, roads which were often difficult to navigate due to a lack of visibility and shifting dunes, many American families made there escape.

  9. The Dust Bowl in Colorado Those who decided to stay faced clouds of dust which literally darkened the sky – smothering plant life and making the air too dusty to inhale. Families were forced to head indoors or underground just to breathe. Many suffered from asthmatic attacks or lung disease afterwards.

  10. Dust Storms Handicap the Economy Automobile engines were choked by clouds of dust lingering in the air, and small business in the Middle West was crippled as entire communities abandoned the area – migrating west to take menial jobs in the agriculture industry.

  11. Images of the Dust Bowl

  12. Images of the Dust Bowl

  13. Images of the Dust Bowl

  14. Frequently, banks foreclosed on the farms and houses of families who could not afford to pay the mortgage. Their primary source of income – crops – had been devastated. When all else failed, many families decided to pack up all of their possessions, load up an old jalopy of an automobile, and head West. Migrant Families Struggle West – Route 66 and the Okie Migration

  15. Since the first migrant Americans to head west were generally from the devastated areas of the Oklahoma panhandle, migrants were assigned the pejorative label “Okies” as they traveled West. Often, entire communities traveled together, holding on to what they had left – each other. “Okies”

  16. The landscape which these families crossed as they migrated West was just as unforgiving as their former homes. Route 66, a national highway which ran roughly from the Great Lakes Region (Chicago) to Southern California (modern-day Los Angeles) , crossed some of the most barren and treacherous desert land in the United States. The road took its toll on those courageous enough to travel down it. The Landscape – Leaving the Plains

  17. The road took its toll on the old jalopies which attempted to conquer it. It also took a human toll, as thousands of Americans died along the route. Elderly passengers, the sickly or weak, and the unfortunate simply passed away. The storyline of John Steinbeck’s classic American novel The Grapes of Wrath is barely embellished in this regard. Flat Tires, Overheated Cars, and Misery

  18. This was no family vacation, of course. Groups camped on the side of the road, attempting to maintain some form of normalcy for their children. But as the trip progressed, conditions invariable deteriorated. Migrant Families usually camped on the side of the roads.

  19. Migrant Camps and the Photo-Essays of Dorothea Lange Dorothea Lange was a photographer hired by the Works Progress Administration to record the lives of ordinary Americans during an extraordinary times – The Great Depression. Her ability to capture the raw emotion – helplessness, despair, courage, and fortitude – makes her photography especially memorable.

  20. Dorothea Lange’s Photography

  21. A Migrant Family

  22. Often, families sought work where their cars broke down. Then, they followed the crops as they came into season – harvesting lettuce first, then peaches, then cotton, then corn – all depending on the season and the wages a family might earn. While the families hoped to combine resources and save money to buy land, most found that high prices at local stores and the ability of factory farmers to slash wages made it impossible to get ahead. “The Harvest Gypsies”

  23. John Steinbeck – American Novelist The Harvest Gypsies - One of Steinbeck’s first works, this photo-essay dramatized the plight of American workers during the Great Depression The Grapes of Wrath – Perhaps Steinbeck’s greatest work, this novel chronicles the migration of the Joad family from Oklahoma to California during the Great Depression.

  24. The Grapes of Wrath “…the dispossessed were drawn west – from Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico; from Nevada and Arkansas, families, tribes, dusted out, tractored out. Car-loads, caravans, homeless and hungry; twenty-thousand and fifty thousand, and a hundred thousand and two hundred thousand. They streamed over the mountains, hungry and restless, restless as ants, scurrying to find work to do – to lift, to push, to pull, to pick, to cut – anything, burden to bear, for food. The kids are hungry. We got no place to live. Like ants scurrying for work, for food, and most of all for land.”

  25. The Dust Bowl’s Redemption – The Rains of 1939 As with all trying times, the Dust Bowl would come to an end. In the fall of 1939, the rains returned. Although efforts at soil conservation would take decades to succeed, much of the Dust Bowl region has become productive agricultural land again – thanks to American mechanization, fertilization, irrigation, hybrid crop experimentation, and good old fashioned work ethic.

  26. The End of the Great Depression What brought the Great Depression to an end is decidedly more complicated. Many historians give partial credit to Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, which inspired confidence in many Americans, revitalized the banks, and even restored productivity in certain markets. But even in the early 1940s, the USA was no where near the prosperity of the 1920s – and many New Deal programs failed to have the expected positive impact.

  27. The Bombing of Pearl Harbor Everyone agrees on this point, though. The Great Depression came to an immediate end on December 7th, 1941 - the day the Japanese launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. On December 8th, everyone in America had a job to do, and a new chapter in American History began.

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