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Dust Bowl

The Dust Bowl was the result of a period of severe dust storms that greatly damaged the ecology and agriculture of the American and Canadian prairies during the 1930s. The phenomenon was caused by a combination of natural factors (severe drought) and human-made factors: a failure to apply dryland farming methods to prevent wind erosion, most notably the destruction of the natural topsoil by settlers in the region.[1][2] The drought came in three waves: 1934, 1936, and 1939–1940, but some regions of the High Plains experienced drought conditions for as long as eight years.[3]

A farmer and his two sons during a dust storm in Cimarron County, Oklahoma, April 1936. Iconic photo entitled "Dust Bowl Cimarron County, Oklahoma" taken by Arthur Rothstein.
Map of states and counties affected by the Dust Bowl between 1935 and 1938 originally prepared by the Soil Conservation Service. The most severely affected counties during this period are colored .

The Dust Bowl has been the subject of many cultural works, including John Steinbeck's 1939 novel The Grapes of Wrath, the folk music of Woody Guthrie, and Dorothea Lange's photographs depicting the conditions of migrants, particularly Migrant Mother, taken in 1936.

Geographic characteristics and early history

 
A dust storm approaches Stratford, Texas, in 1935.

The Dust Bowl area lies principally west of the 100th meridian on the High Plains, characterized by plains that vary from rolling in the north to flat in the Llano Estacado. Elevation ranges from 2,500 ft (760 m) in the east to 6,000 ft (1,800 m) at the base of the Rocky Mountains. The area is semiarid, receiving less than 20 in (510 mm) of rain annually; this rainfall supports the shortgrass prairie biome originally present in the area. The region is also prone to extended drought, alternating with unusual wetness of equivalent duration.[4] During wet years, the rich soil provides bountiful agricultural output, but crops fail during dry years. The region is also subject to high winds.[5] During early European and American exploration of the Great Plains, this region was thought unsuitable for European-style agriculture; explorers called it the Great American Desert. The lack of surface water and timber made the region less attractive than other areas for pioneer settlement and agriculture.

The federal government encouraged settlement and development of the Plains for agriculture via the Homestead Act of 1862, offering settlers "quarter section" 160-acre (65 ha) plots. With the end of the Civil War in 1865 and the completion of the first transcontinental railroad in 1869, waves of new migrants and immigrants reached the Great Plains and greatly increased the acreage under cultivation.[6][7] An unusually wet period in the Great Plains mistakenly led settlers and the federal government to believe that "rain follows the plow" (a popular phrase among real estate promoters) and that the region's climate had permanently changed.[8] While initial agricultural endeavors were primarily cattle ranching, the harsh winters' adverse effect on the cattle, beginning in 1886, a short drought in 1890, and general overgrazing, led many landowners to increase the amount of land under cultivation.

Recognizing the challenge of cultivating marginal arid land, the U.S. government expanded on the 160 acres (65 ha) offered under the Homestead Act, granting 640 acres (260 ha) to homesteaders in western Nebraska under the Kinkaid Act (1904) and 320 acres (130 ha) elsewhere in the Great Plains under the Enlarged Homestead Act of 1909. Waves of European settlers arrived in the plains at the beginning of the 20th century. A return of unusually wet weather seemingly confirmed a previously held opinion that the "formerly" semiarid area could support large-scale agriculture. At the same time, technological improvements such as mechanized plowing and mechanized harvesting made it possible to operate larger properties without increasing labor costs.

With insufficient understanding of the ecology of the plains, farmers had conducted extensive deep plowing of the Great Plains' virgin topsoil during the previous decade; this displaced the native, deep-rooted grasses that normally trapped soil and moisture even during periods of drought and high winds. The rapid mechanization of farm equipment, especially small gasoline tractors, and widespread use of the combine harvester contributed to farmers' decisions to convert arid grassland (much of which received no more than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation per year) to cultivated cropland.[9] During the drought of the 1930s, the unanchored soil turned to dust, which prevailing winds blew away in huge clouds that sometimes blackened the sky. These choking billows of dust – named "black blizzards" or "black rollers" – traveled cross-country, reaching as far as the East Coast and striking such cities as New York City and Washington, D.C. On the plains, they often reduced visibility to three feet (1 m) or less. Associated Press reporter Robert E. Geiger happened to be in Boise City, Oklahoma, to witness the "Black Sunday" black blizzards of April 14, 1935; Edward Stanley, the Kansas City news editor of the Associated Press, coined the term "Dust Bowl" while rewriting Geiger's news story.[10][11]

The term "the Dust Bowl" originally referred to the geographical area affected by the dust, but today it usually refers to the event itself (the term "Dirty Thirties" is also sometimes used). The drought and erosion of the Dust Bowl affected 100 million acres (400,000 km2) that centered on the Texas Panhandle and Oklahoma Panhandle and touched adjacent sections of New Mexico, Colorado, and Kansas.[12] The Dust Bowl forced tens of thousands of poverty-stricken families, who were unable to pay mortgages or grow crops, to abandon their farms, and losses reached $25 million per day by 1936 (equivalent to $530 million in 2022).[13][14] Many of these families, often called "Okies" because many of them came from Oklahoma, migrated to California and other states to find that the Great Depression had rendered economic conditions there little better than those they had left.

The combined effects of World War I and the disruption of the Russian Revolution, which decreased the supply of wheat and other commodity crops, increased agricultural prices; this demand encouraged farmers to dramatically increase cultivation. For example, in the Llano Estacado of eastern New Mexico and northwestern Texas, the area of farmland doubled between 1900 and 1920, then tripled between 1925 and 1930.[7] The agricultural methods farmers favored during this period created the conditions for large-scale erosion under certain environmental conditions.[3] The widespread conversion of the land by deep plowing and other soil preparation methods to enable agriculture eliminated the native grasses that held the soil in place and helped retain moisture during dry periods. Furthermore, cotton farmers left fields bare during the winter, when winds in the High Plains are highest, and burned the stubble as a means to control weeds before planting, thereby depriving the soil of organic nutrients and surface vegetation.

Drought and dust storms

 
A dust storm; Spearman, Texas, April 14, 1935
 
Heavy black clouds of dust rising over the Texas Panhandle, Texas, c. 1936

After fairly favorable climatic conditions in the 1920s with good rainfall and relatively moderate winters,[15] which permitted increased settlement and cultivation in the Great Plains, the region entered an unusually dry era in the summer of 1930.[16] During the next decade, the northern plains suffered four of their seven driest calendar years since 1895, Kansas four of its 12 driest,[17] and the entire region south to West Texas[18] lacked any period of above-normal rainfall until record rains hit in 1941.[19] When severe drought struck the Great Plains region in the 1930s, it resulted in erosion and loss of topsoil because of farming practices at the time. The drought dried the topsoil and over time it became friable, reduced to a powdery consistency in some places. Without indigenous grasses in place, the plains' high winds picked up the topsoil and created massive dust storms.[20] The persistent dry weather caused crops to fail, leaving the plowed fields exposed to wind erosion. The Great Plains' fine soil eroded easily and was carried east by strong continental winds.

On November 11, 1933, a very strong dust storm stripped topsoil from desiccated South Dakota farmlands in one of a series of severe dust storms that year. Beginning on May 9, 1934, a strong, two-day dust storm removed massive amounts of Great Plains topsoil in one of the worst such storms of the Dust Bowl.[21] The dust clouds blew all the way to Chicago, where they deposited 12 million pounds (5,400 tonnes) of dust.[22] Two days later, the same storm reached cities to the east, such as Cleveland, Buffalo, Boston, New York City, and Washington, D.C.[23] That winter (1934–35), red snow fell on New England.

On April 14, 1935, known as "Black Sunday", 20 of the worst "black blizzards" occurred across the entire sweep of the Great Plains, from Canada south to Texas. The storms caused extensive damage and appeared to turn day to night; witnesses reported that they could not see five feet (1.5 m) in front of them at certain points. Denver-based Associated Press reporter Robert E. Geiger happened to be in Boise City, Oklahoma, that day. His story about Black Sunday marked the first appearance of the term Dust Bowl; it was coined by Edward Stanley, Kansas City news editor of the Associated Press, while rewriting Geiger's news story.[10][11]

Spearman and Hansford County have been literaly [sic] in a cloud of dust for the past week. Ever since Friday of last week, there hasn't been a day pass but what the county was beseieged [sic] with a blast of wind and dirt. On rare occasions when the wind did subside for a period of hours, the air has been so filled with dust that the town appeared to be overhung by a fog cloud. Because of this long seige of dust and every building being filled with it, the air has become stifling to breathe and many people have developed sore throats and dust colds as a result.

— Spearman Reporter, March 21, 1935[24]

Much of the farmland was eroded in the aftermath of the Dust Bowl. In 1941, a Kansas agricultural experiment station released a bulletin that suggested reestablishing native grasses by the "hay method". Developed in 1937 to speed up the process and increase returns from pasture, the "hay method" was originally supposed to occur in Kansas naturally over 25–40 years.[25]

After much data analysis, the causal mechanism for the droughts can be linked to ocean temperature anomalies. Specifically, Atlantic Ocean sea surface temperatures appear to have had an indirect effect on the general atmospheric circulation, while Pacific sea surface temperatures seem to have had the most direct influence.[26][27][1]

Human displacement

 
Buried machinery in a barn lot; Dallas, South Dakota, May 1936

This catastrophe intensified the economic impact of the Great Depression in the region.

In 1935, many families were forced to leave their farms and travel to other areas seeking work because of the drought, which had already lasted four years.[28] The abandonment of homesteads and financial ruin resulting from catastrophic topsoil loss led to widespread hunger and poverty.[29] Dust Bowl conditions fomented an exodus of the displaced from the Texas Panhandle, Oklahoma Panhandle, and the surrounding Great Plains to adjacent regions. More than 500,000 Americans were left homeless. More than 350 houses had to be torn down after one storm alone.[30] The severe drought and dust storms left many homeless; others had their mortgages foreclosed by banks, or felt they had no choice but to abandon their farms in search of work.[31] Many Americans migrated west, looking for work. Parents packed up "jalopies" with their families and a few personal belongings and headed west.[32] Some residents of the Plains, especially Kansas and Oklahoma, fell ill and died of dust pneumonia or malnutrition.[22]

 
"Broke, baby sick, and car trouble!"Dorothea Lange's 1937 photo of a Missouri migrant family's jalopy stuck near Tracy, California.[33]

Between 1930 and 1940, about 3.5 million people moved out of the Plains states.[34] In just over a year, over 86,000 people migrated to California. This number is more than the number of migrants to that area during the 1849 gold rush.[35] Migrants abandoned farms in Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Texas, Colorado, and New Mexico, but were often generally called "Okies", "Arkies", or "Texies".[36] Terms such as "Okies" and "Arkies" came to be standard in the 1930s for those who had lost everything and were struggling the most during the Great Depression.[37]

 
A migratory family from Texas living in a trailer in an Arizona cotton field

But not all migrants traveled long distances; most participated in internal state migration, moving from counties that the Dust Bowl badly impacted to other, less affected counties.[38] So many families left their farms and were on the move that the proportion of migrants and residents was nearly equal in the Great Plains states.[34]

An examination of Census Bureau statistics and other records, and a 1939 survey of occupation by the Bureau of Agricultural Economics of about 116,000 families who arrived in California in the 1930s, showed that only 43% of Southwesterners were doing farm work immediately before they migrated. Nearly a third of all migrants were professional or white-collar workers.[39] Some farmers had to take on unskilled labor when they moved; leaving the farming sector commonly led to greater social mobility as there was a far greater likelihood that migrant farmers would later go into semi-skilled or high-skilled fields that paid better. Non-farmers experienced more downward occupational moves than farmers, but in most cases they were not significant enough to bring them into poverty, because high-skilled migrants were most likely to experience a downward shift into semi-skilled work. While semi-skilled work did not pay as well as high-skilled work, most of these workers were not impoverished. For the most part, by the end of the Dust Bowl the migrants generally were better off than those who chose to stay behind.[38]

After the Great Depression ended, some migrants moved back to their original states. Many others remained where they had resettled. About one-eighth of California's population is of Okie heritage.[40]

Government response

 
Resettlement Administration poster by Richard H. Jansen, 1935

Government's greatly expanded participation in land management and soil conservation was an important result of the disaster. Different groups took many different approaches to responding to the disaster. To identify areas that needed attention, groups such as the Soil Conservation Service generated detailed soil maps and took photos of the land from the sky. To create shelterbelts to reduce soil erosion, groups such as the United States Forest Service's Prairie States Forestry Project planted trees on private lands. Groups like the Resettlement Administration, which later became the Farm Security Administration, encouraged small farm owners to resettle on other lands if they lived in drier parts of the Plains.[1]

During President Franklin D. Roosevelt's first 100 days in office in 1933, his administration quickly initiated programs to conserve soil and restore the nation's ecological balance. Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes established the Soil Erosion Service in August 1933 under Hugh Hammond Bennett. In 1935, it was transferred and reorganized under the Department of Agriculture and renamed the Soil Conservation Service. It is now known as the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS).[41]

As part of New Deal programs, Congress passed the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act in 1936, requiring landowners to share the allocated government subsidies with the laborers who worked on their farms. Under the law, "benefit payments were continued as measures for production control and income support, but they were now financed by direct Congressional appropriations and justified as soil conservation measures. The Act shifted the parity goal from price equality of agricultural commodities and the articles that farmers buy to income equality of farm and non-farm population."[42] Thus, the parity goal was to re-create the ratio between the purchasing power of the net income per person on farms from agriculture and that of the income of persons not on farms that prevailed during 1909–1914.

To stabilize prices, the government paid farmers and ordered more than six million pigs to be slaughtered as part of the Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA). It paid to have the meat packed and distributed to the poor and hungry. The Federal Surplus Relief Corporation (FSRC) was established to regulate crop and other surpluses. In a May 14, 1935, address to the AAA, Roosevelt said:

Let me make one other point clear for the benefit of the millions in cities who have to buy meats. Last year the Nation suffered a drought of unparalleled intensity. If there had been no Government program, if the old order had obtained in 1933 and 1934, that drought on the cattle ranges of America and in the corn belt would have resulted in the marketing of thin cattle, immature hogs and the death of these animals on the range and on the farm, and if the old order had been in effect those years, we would have had a vastly greater shortage than we face today. Our program – we can prove it – saved the lives of millions of head of livestock. They are still on the range, and other millions of heads are today canned and ready for this country to eat.[43]

The FSRC diverted agricultural commodities to relief organizations. Apples, beans, canned beef, flour and pork products were distributed through local relief channels. Cotton goods were later included, to clothe needy.[44]

In 1935, the federal government formed a Drought Relief Service (DRS) to coordinate relief activities. The DRS bought cattle in counties that were designated emergency areas for $14 to $20 a head. Animals determined unfit for human consumption were killed; at the beginning of the program, more than 50% were so designated in emergency areas. The DRS assigned the remaining cattle to the Federal Surplus Relief Corporation (FSRC) to be used in food distribution to families nationwide. Although it was difficult for farmers to give up their herds, the cattle slaughter program helped many of them avoid bankruptcy. "The government cattle buying program was a blessing to many farmers, as they could not afford to keep their cattle, and the government paid a better price than they could obtain in local markets."[45]

Roosevelt ordered the Civilian Conservation Corps to plant the Great Plains Shelterbelt, a huge belt of more than 200 million trees from Canada to Abilene, Texas, to break the wind, hold water in the soil, and hold the soil in place. The administration also began to educate farmers on soil conservation and anti-erosion techniques, including crop rotation, strip farming, contour plowing, and terracing.[46][47] In 1937, the federal government began an aggressive campaign to encourage Dust Bowl farmers to adopt planting and plowing methods that conserved the soil. The government paid reluctant farmers a dollar an acre (equivalent to $20 in 2022) to use the new methods. By 1938, the massive conservation effort had reduced the amount of blowing soil by 65%.[44] The land still failed to yield a decent living. In the fall of 1939, after nearly a decade of dirt and dust, the drought ended when regular rainfall finally returned to the region. The government still encouraged continuing the use of conservation methods to protect the Plains' soil and ecology.

At the end of the drought, the programs implemented during the tough times helped sustain a friendly relationship between farmers and the federal government.[48]

The President's Drought Committee issued a report in 1935 covering the government's assistance to agriculture during 1934 through mid-1935: it discussed conditions, measures of relief, organization, finances, operations, and results of the government's assistance.[49] Numerous exhibits are included in this report.

Long-term economic impact

In many regions, more than 75% of the topsoil was blown away by the end of the 1930s. Land degradation varied widely. Aside from the short-term economic consequences of erosion, the Dust Bowl had severe long-term economic consequences.

By 1940, counties that had experienced the most erosion had a greater decline in agricultural land values. The per-acre value of farmland declined by 28% in high-erosion counties and 17% in medium-erosion counties, relative to land value changes in low-erosion counties.[25]: 3  Even over the long term, the land's agricultural value often failed to return to pre-Dust Bowl levels. In highly eroded areas, less than 25% of the original agricultural losses were recovered. The economy adjusted predominantly through large relative population declines in more-eroded counties, both during the 1930s and through the 1950s.[25]: 1500 

The economic effects persisted in part because of farmers' failure to switch to more appropriate crops for highly eroded areas. Because the amount of topsoil had been reduced, it would have been more productive to shift from crops and wheat to animals and hay. During the Depression and through at least the 1950s, there was limited relative adjustment of farmland away from activities that became less productive in more-eroded counties.

Some of the failure to shift to more productive agricultural products may be related to ignorance about the benefits of changing land use. A second explanation is a lack of availability of credit, caused by the high rate of failure of banks in the Plains states. Because banks failed in the Dust Bowl region at a higher rate than elsewhere, farmers could not get the credit they needed to obtain capital to shift crop production.[50] In addition, profit margins in either animals or hay were still minimal, and farmers at first had little incentive to change their crops.

Patrick Allitt recounts how fellow historian Donald Worster responded to his return visit to the Dust Bowl in the mid-1970s when he revisited some of the worst afflicted counties:

Capital-intensive agribusiness had transformed the scene; deep wells into the aquifer, intensive irrigation, the use of artificial pesticides and fertilizers, and giant harvesters were creating immense crops year after year whether it rained or not. According to the farmers he interviewed, technology had provided the perfect answer to old troubles, such of the bad days would not return. In Worster's view, by contrast, the scene demonstrated that America's capitalist high-tech farmers had learned nothing. They were continuing to work in an unsustainable way, devoting far cheaper subsidized energy to growing food than the energy could give back to its ultimate consumers.[51]

In contrast with Worster's pessimism, historian Mathew Bonnifield argued that the Dust Bowl's long-term significance was "the triumph of the human spirit in its capacity to endure and overcome hardships and reverses."[52]

A 2023 study in the Journal of Economic History found that while the Dust Bowl had large and enduring impacts on agricultural land, it had modest impacts on average wage incomes.[53]

Influence on the arts and culture

 
Florence Owens Thompson seen in the photo Migrant Mother by Dorothea Lange
 
"Dust bowl farmers of west Texas in town", photograph taken by Dorothea Lange, June 1937, in Anton, Texas.

The crisis was documented by photographers, musicians, and authors, many hired during the Great Depression by the federal government. For instance, the Farm Security Administration hired photographers to document the crisis. Artists such as Dorothea Lange were aided by having salaried work during the Depression.[54] She captured what have become classic images of the dust storms and migrant families. Among her best-known photographs is Destitute Pea Pickers in California. Mother of Seven Children[54] depicted a gaunt-looking woman, Florence Owens Thompson, holding three of her children. This picture expressed the struggles of people caught by the Dust Bowl and raised awareness in other parts of the country of its reach and human cost. Decades later, Thompson disliked the boundless circulation of the photo and resented that she had received no money from its broadcast. Thompson felt it made her perceived as a Dust Bowl "Okie".[55]

The work of independent artists was also influenced by the crises of the Dust Bowl and the Depression. Author John Steinbeck, borrowing closely from field notes taken by Farm Security Administration worker and author Sanora Babb,[56] wrote The Grapes of Wrath (1939) about migrant workers and farm families displaced by the Dust Bowl. Babb's own novel about the lives of the migrant workers, Whose Names Are Unknown, was written in 1939, but was eclipsed and shelved in response to Steinbeck's success, and was not published till 2004.[57][58][59] Many of folk singer Woody Guthrie's songs, such as those on his 1940 album Dust Bowl Ballads, are about his experiences in the Dust Bowl era during the Great Depression, when he traveled with displaced farmers from Oklahoma to California and learned their traditional folk and blues songs, earning him the nickname the "Dust Bowl Troubadour".[60]

Migrants also influenced musical culture wherever they went. Oklahoma migrants, in particular, were rural Southwesterners who carried their traditional country music to California. Today, the "Bakersfield Sound" describes this blend, which developed after the migrants brought country music to the city. Their new music inspired a proliferation of country dance halls as far south as Los Angeles.

The 2003–2005 HBO TV series Carnivàle was set during the dust bowl.

The 2014 science fiction film Interstellar features a ravaged 21st-century America that is again scoured by dust storms (caused by a worldwide pathogen affecting all crops). Along with inspiration from the 1930s crisis, director Christopher Nolan features interviews from the 2012 documentary The Dust Bowl to draw further parallels.[61]

In 2017, Americana recording artist Grant Maloy Smith released the album Dust Bowl – American Stories, inspired by the history of the Dust Bowl.[62] In a review, the music magazine No Depression wrote that the album's lyrics and music are "as potent as Woody Guthrie, as intense as John Trudell and dusted with the trials and tribulations of Tom Joad – Steinbeck and The Grapes of Wrath."[63]

Changes in agriculture and population on the Plains

Agricultural land and revenue boomed during World War I, but fell during the Great Depression and the 1930s.[64][verification needed] The agricultural land most affected by the Dust Bowl was 16 million acres (6.5 million hectares) of land in the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles. These 20 counties that the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Soil Conservation Service identified as the worst wind-eroded region were home to the majority of the Great Plains migrants during the Dust Bowl.[38]

While migration from and between the Southern Great Plain States was greater than migration in other regions in the 1930s, the numbers of migrants from these areas had only slightly increased from the 1920s. The Dust Bowl and Great Depression thus did not trigger a mass exodus of southern migrants, but simply encouraged these migrants to keep moving where in other areas the Great Depression limited mobility due to economic issues, decreasing migration. While the population of the Great Plains did fall during the Dust Bowl and Great Depression, the drop was not caused by extreme numbers of migrants leaving the Great Plains but by of a lack of migrants moving from outside the Great Plains into the region.[38]

See also

References

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  39. ^ Gregory, N. James. (1991) American Exodus: The Dust Bowl Migration and Okie Culture in California. Oxford University Press.
  40. ^ Babb, et al. (2007), On the Dirty Plate Trail, p. 13
  41. ^ Steiner, Frederick (2008). The Living Landscape, Second Edition: An Ecological Approach to Landscape Planning, p. 188. Island Press. ISBN 1-59726-396-6.
  42. ^ Rau, Allan. Agricultural Policy and Trade Liberalization in the United States, 1934–1956; a Study of Conflicting Policies. Genève: E. Droz, 1957. p. 81.
  43. ^ "Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: F.D. Roosevelt, 1935, Volume 4" page 178, Best Books, 1938
  44. ^ a b "Timeline: The Dust Bowl | American Experience | PBS". www.pbs.org. from the original on October 8, 2020. Retrieved October 4, 2020.
  45. ^ Monthly Catalog, United States Public Documents, By United States Superintendent of Documents, United States Government Printing Office, Published by the G.P.O., 1938
  46. ^ Federal Writers' Project. Texas. Writers' Program (Tex.): Writers' Program Texas. p. 16.
  47. ^ Buchanan, James Shannon. Chronicles of Oklahoma. Oklahoma Historical Society. p. 224.
  48. ^ A Cultural History (1999), p.45.
  49. ^ United States. Agricultural Adjustment Administration and Murphy, Philip G., (1935), Drought of 1934: The Federal Government's Assistance to Agriculture June 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine". Accessed October 15, 2014.
  50. ^ Landon-Lane, John; Rockoff, Hugh; Steckel, Richard (December 2009). "Droughts, Floods, and Financial Distress in the United States". NBER Working Paper No. 15596: 6. doi:10.3386/w15596.
  51. ^ Patrick Allitt, A Climate of Crisis: America in the Age of Environmentalism (2014) p 203
  52. ^ Allitt p 211, paraphrasing William Cronin's evaluation of Mathew Paul Bonnifield, Dust Bowl: Men, Dirt and Depression(1979)
  53. ^ Hornbeck, Richard (2023). "Dust Bowl Migrants: Environmental Refugees and Economic Adaptation". The Journal of Economic History. 83 (3): 645–675. doi:10.1017/S0022050723000244. ISSN 0022-0507. S2CID 235678459.
  54. ^ a b "Destitute Pea Pickers in California: Mother of Seven Children, Age Thirty-two, Nipomo, California. Migrant Mother". World Digital Library. February 1936. from the original on January 26, 2013. Retrieved February 10, 2013.
  55. ^ DuBois, Ellen Carol; Dumenil, Lynn (2012). Through Women's Eyes (Third ed.). Bedford/St. Martin's. p. 583. ISBN 978-0-312-67603-2.
  56. ^ "The Dust Bowl – Sanora Babb biography". PBS. from the original on August 19, 2021. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
  57. ^ "Whose Names Are Unknown: Sanora Babb". Harry Ransom Center. from the original on December 8, 2015. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  58. ^ Dayton Duncan, preface by Ken Burns (2012). "Biographies: Sanora Babb". The Dust Bowl: An Illustrated History. PBS. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  59. ^ See:
    • Lanzendorfer, Joy, "The forgotten Dust Bowl novel that rivaled 'The Grapes of Wrath'" December 28, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Smithsonian.com, 2016 May 23.
    • "Sanora Babb" March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, The Dust Bowl: a film by Ken Burns, PBS.org (2012)
    • For the role of Tom Collins of the Farm Security Administration in Steinbeck's novel, see: John Steinbeck with Robert Demott, ed., Working Days: The Journals of The Grapes of Wrath, 1938–1941 (New York, New York: Penguin Books, 1990), pp. xxvii–xxviii April 29, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, 33 (journal entry for 1938 June 24). April 29, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  60. ^ Alarik, Scott. Robert Burns unplugged. March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine The Boston Globe, August 7, 2005. Retrieved on December 5, 2007.
  61. ^ Rosenberg, Alyssa (November 6, 2014). "How Ken Burns' surprise role in 'Interstellar' explains the movie". The Washington Post. from the original on November 8, 2014. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  62. ^ Smith, Hubble (June 1, 2017). "Kingman gets a mention on Dust Bowl album". Kingman Daily Miner. from the original on October 10, 2017. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  63. ^ Apice, John (May 22, 2017). "Expressive Original Songs Steeped In the Dirt & Reality of the Dust Bowl-Depression Era". No Depression. from the original on July 6, 2017. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  64. ^ Hornbeck, Richard (2012). "The Enduring Impact of the American Dust Bowl: Short and Long-run Adjustments to Environmental Catastrophe". American Economic Review. 102 (4): 1477–1507. doi:10.1257/aer.102.4.1477. S2CID 6257886. from the original on August 19, 2021. Retrieved November 9, 2018.

Bibliography

  • Bonnifield, Mathew Paul. (1979) Dust Bowl: Men, Dirt and Depression
  • Cunfer, Geoff. (2008) "Scaling the Dust Bowl" February 26, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, Placing history: How maps, spatial data, and GIS are changing historical scholarship, ESRI Press, Redlands.
  • Gregory, James Noble. American exodus: The dust bowl migration and Okie culture in California (Oxford University Press, 1989)
  • Lassieur, Allison. (2009) The Dust Bowl: An Interactive History Adventure April 10, 2021, at the Wayback Machine Capstone Press, ISBN 1-4296-3455-3
  • Reis, Ronald A. (2008) The Dust Bowl April 29, 2021, at the Wayback Machine Chelsea House ISBN 978-0-7910-9737-3
  • Sylvester, Kenneth M., and Eric S. A. Rupley, "Revising the Dust Bowl: High above the Kansas Grassland", Environmental History, 17 (July 2012), 603–33.
  • Worster, Donald 2004 (1979)Dust Bowl: The Southern Plains in the 1930s April 30, 2021, at the Wayback Machine (25. anniversary ed) Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-517489-5
  • Woody Guthrie, (1963) The (Nearly) Complete Collection of Woody Guthrie Folk Songs, Ludlow Music, New York.
  • Alan Lomax, Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, (1967) Hard-Hitting Songs for Hard-Hit People, Oak Publications, New York.
  • Timothy Egan (2006) The Worst Hard Time December 19, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, Houghton Mifflin Company, New York, hardcover. ISBN 0-618-34697-X.
  • Katelan Janke, (1935) Survival in the Storm: The Dust Bowl Diary of Grace Edwards, Dalhart, Texas, Scholastic (September 2002). ISBN 0-439-21599-4.
  • Sweeney, Kevin Z. (2016). Prelude to the Dust Bowl: Drought in the Nineteenth-Century Southern Plains Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press.

Documentary films

External links

  • "The Dust Bowl", a PBS television series by filmmaker Ken Burns
  • The Dust Bowl (EH.Net Encyclopedia)
  • Black Sunday, April 14, 1935, Dodge City, KS
  • Voices from the Dust Bowl: The Charles L. Todd and Robert Sonkin Migrant Worker Collection, 1940–1941 Library of Congress, American Folklife Center Online collection of archival sound recordings, photographs, and manuscripts
  • The Dust Bowl (Wessels Living History Farm)
  • Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture – Dust Bowl
  • Dust, Drought, and Dreams Gone Dry: Oklahoma Women in the Dust Bowl Oral History Project, Oklahoma Oral History Research Program
  • Voices of Oklahoma interview with Frosty Troy. First person interview conducted on November 30, 2011 with Frosty Troy talking about the Oklahoma Dust Bowl. Original audio and transcript archived with Voices of Oklahoma oral history project.
  • Dust Bowl – Ken Burns playlist on YouTube
  • Dust Bowl – Ken Burns playlist on YouTube

dust, bowl, other, uses, disambiguation, result, period, severe, dust, storms, that, greatly, damaged, ecology, agriculture, american, canadian, prairies, during, 1930s, phenomenon, caused, combination, natural, factors, severe, drought, human, made, factors, . For other uses see Dust Bowl disambiguation The Dust Bowl was the result of a period of severe dust storms that greatly damaged the ecology and agriculture of the American and Canadian prairies during the 1930s The phenomenon was caused by a combination of natural factors severe drought and human made factors a failure to apply dryland farming methods to prevent wind erosion most notably the destruction of the natural topsoil by settlers in the region 1 2 The drought came in three waves 1934 1936 and 1939 1940 but some regions of the High Plains experienced drought conditions for as long as eight years 3 A farmer and his two sons during a dust storm in Cimarron County Oklahoma April 1936 Iconic photo entitled Dust Bowl Cimarron County Oklahoma taken by Arthur Rothstein Map of states and counties affected by the Dust Bowl between 1935 and 1938 originally prepared by the Soil Conservation Service The most severely affected counties during this period are colored The Dust Bowl has been the subject of many cultural works including John Steinbeck s 1939 novel The Grapes of Wrath the folk music of Woody Guthrie and Dorothea Lange s photographs depicting the conditions of migrants particularly Migrant Mother taken in 1936 Contents 1 Geographic characteristics and early history 2 Drought and dust storms 3 Human displacement 4 Government response 5 Long term economic impact 6 Influence on the arts and culture 7 Changes in agriculture and population on the Plains 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Documentary films 12 External linksGeographic characteristics and early history nbsp A dust storm approaches Stratford Texas in 1935 The Dust Bowl area lies principally west of the 100th meridian on the High Plains characterized by plains that vary from rolling in the north to flat in the Llano Estacado Elevation ranges from 2 500 ft 760 m in the east to 6 000 ft 1 800 m at the base of the Rocky Mountains The area is semiarid receiving less than 20 in 510 mm of rain annually this rainfall supports the shortgrass prairie biome originally present in the area The region is also prone to extended drought alternating with unusual wetness of equivalent duration 4 During wet years the rich soil provides bountiful agricultural output but crops fail during dry years The region is also subject to high winds 5 During early European and American exploration of the Great Plains this region was thought unsuitable for European style agriculture explorers called it the Great American Desert The lack of surface water and timber made the region less attractive than other areas for pioneer settlement and agriculture The federal government encouraged settlement and development of the Plains for agriculture via the Homestead Act of 1862 offering settlers quarter section 160 acre 65 ha plots With the end of the Civil War in 1865 and the completion of the first transcontinental railroad in 1869 waves of new migrants and immigrants reached the Great Plains and greatly increased the acreage under cultivation 6 7 An unusually wet period in the Great Plains mistakenly led settlers and the federal government to believe that rain follows the plow a popular phrase among real estate promoters and that the region s climate had permanently changed 8 While initial agricultural endeavors were primarily cattle ranching the harsh winters adverse effect on the cattle beginning in 1886 a short drought in 1890 and general overgrazing led many landowners to increase the amount of land under cultivation Recognizing the challenge of cultivating marginal arid land the U S government expanded on the 160 acres 65 ha offered under the Homestead Act granting 640 acres 260 ha to homesteaders in western Nebraska under the Kinkaid Act 1904 and 320 acres 130 ha elsewhere in the Great Plains under the Enlarged Homestead Act of 1909 Waves of European settlers arrived in the plains at the beginning of the 20th century A return of unusually wet weather seemingly confirmed a previously held opinion that the formerly semiarid area could support large scale agriculture At the same time technological improvements such as mechanized plowing and mechanized harvesting made it possible to operate larger properties without increasing labor costs With insufficient understanding of the ecology of the plains farmers had conducted extensive deep plowing of the Great Plains virgin topsoil during the previous decade this displaced the native deep rooted grasses that normally trapped soil and moisture even during periods of drought and high winds The rapid mechanization of farm equipment especially small gasoline tractors and widespread use of the combine harvester contributed to farmers decisions to convert arid grassland much of which received no more than 10 inches 250 mm of precipitation per year to cultivated cropland 9 During the drought of the 1930s the unanchored soil turned to dust which prevailing winds blew away in huge clouds that sometimes blackened the sky These choking billows of dust named black blizzards or black rollers traveled cross country reaching as far as the East Coast and striking such cities as New York City and Washington D C On the plains they often reduced visibility to three feet 1 m or less Associated Press reporter Robert E Geiger happened to be in Boise City Oklahoma to witness the Black Sunday black blizzards of April 14 1935 Edward Stanley the Kansas City news editor of the Associated Press coined the term Dust Bowl while rewriting Geiger s news story 10 11 The term the Dust Bowl originally referred to the geographical area affected by the dust but today it usually refers to the event itself the term Dirty Thirties is also sometimes used The drought and erosion of the Dust Bowl affected 100 million acres 400 000 km2 that centered on the Texas Panhandle and Oklahoma Panhandle and touched adjacent sections of New Mexico Colorado and Kansas 12 The Dust Bowl forced tens of thousands of poverty stricken families who were unable to pay mortgages or grow crops to abandon their farms and losses reached 25 million per day by 1936 equivalent to 530 million in 2022 13 14 Many of these families often called Okies because many of them came from Oklahoma migrated to California and other states to find that the Great Depression had rendered economic conditions there little better than those they had left The combined effects of World War I and the disruption of the Russian Revolution which decreased the supply of wheat and other commodity crops increased agricultural prices this demand encouraged farmers to dramatically increase cultivation For example in the Llano Estacado of eastern New Mexico and northwestern Texas the area of farmland doubled between 1900 and 1920 then tripled between 1925 and 1930 7 The agricultural methods farmers favored during this period created the conditions for large scale erosion under certain environmental conditions 3 The widespread conversion of the land by deep plowing and other soil preparation methods to enable agriculture eliminated the native grasses that held the soil in place and helped retain moisture during dry periods Furthermore cotton farmers left fields bare during the winter when winds in the High Plains are highest and burned the stubble as a means to control weeds before planting thereby depriving the soil of organic nutrients and surface vegetation Drought and dust storms nbsp A dust storm Spearman Texas April 14 1935 nbsp Heavy black clouds of dust rising over the Texas Panhandle Texas c 1936After fairly favorable climatic conditions in the 1920s with good rainfall and relatively moderate winters 15 which permitted increased settlement and cultivation in the Great Plains the region entered an unusually dry era in the summer of 1930 16 During the next decade the northern plains suffered four of their seven driest calendar years since 1895 Kansas four of its 12 driest 17 and the entire region south to West Texas 18 lacked any period of above normal rainfall until record rains hit in 1941 19 When severe drought struck the Great Plains region in the 1930s it resulted in erosion and loss of topsoil because of farming practices at the time The drought dried the topsoil and over time it became friable reduced to a powdery consistency in some places Without indigenous grasses in place the plains high winds picked up the topsoil and created massive dust storms 20 The persistent dry weather caused crops to fail leaving the plowed fields exposed to wind erosion The Great Plains fine soil eroded easily and was carried east by strong continental winds On November 11 1933 a very strong dust storm stripped topsoil from desiccated South Dakota farmlands in one of a series of severe dust storms that year Beginning on May 9 1934 a strong two day dust storm removed massive amounts of Great Plains topsoil in one of the worst such storms of the Dust Bowl 21 The dust clouds blew all the way to Chicago where they deposited 12 million pounds 5 400 tonnes of dust 22 Two days later the same storm reached cities to the east such as Cleveland Buffalo Boston New York City and Washington D C 23 That winter 1934 35 red snow fell on New England On April 14 1935 known as Black Sunday 20 of the worst black blizzards occurred across the entire sweep of the Great Plains from Canada south to Texas The storms caused extensive damage and appeared to turn day to night witnesses reported that they could not see five feet 1 5 m in front of them at certain points Denver based Associated Press reporter Robert E Geiger happened to be in Boise City Oklahoma that day His story about Black Sunday marked the first appearance of the term Dust Bowl it was coined by Edward Stanley Kansas City news editor of the Associated Press while rewriting Geiger s news story 10 11 Spearman and Hansford County have been literaly sic in a cloud of dust for the past week Ever since Friday of last week there hasn t been a day pass but what the county was beseieged sic with a blast of wind and dirt On rare occasions when the wind did subside for a period of hours the air has been so filled with dust that the town appeared to be overhung by a fog cloud Because of this long seige of dust and every building being filled with it the air has become stifling to breathe and many people have developed sore throats and dust colds as a result Spearman Reporter March 21 1935 24 Much of the farmland was eroded in the aftermath of the Dust Bowl In 1941 a Kansas agricultural experiment station released a bulletin that suggested reestablishing native grasses by the hay method Developed in 1937 to speed up the process and increase returns from pasture the hay method was originally supposed to occur in Kansas naturally over 25 40 years 25 After much data analysis the causal mechanism for the droughts can be linked to ocean temperature anomalies Specifically Atlantic Ocean sea surface temperatures appear to have had an indirect effect on the general atmospheric circulation while Pacific sea surface temperatures seem to have had the most direct influence 26 27 1 Human displacement nbsp Buried machinery in a barn lot Dallas South Dakota May 1936This catastrophe intensified the economic impact of the Great Depression in the region In 1935 many families were forced to leave their farms and travel to other areas seeking work because of the drought which had already lasted four years 28 The abandonment of homesteads and financial ruin resulting from catastrophic topsoil loss led to widespread hunger and poverty 29 Dust Bowl conditions fomented an exodus of the displaced from the Texas Panhandle Oklahoma Panhandle and the surrounding Great Plains to adjacent regions More than 500 000 Americans were left homeless More than 350 houses had to be torn down after one storm alone 30 The severe drought and dust storms left many homeless others had their mortgages foreclosed by banks or felt they had no choice but to abandon their farms in search of work 31 Many Americans migrated west looking for work Parents packed up jalopies with their families and a few personal belongings and headed west 32 Some residents of the Plains especially Kansas and Oklahoma fell ill and died of dust pneumonia or malnutrition 22 nbsp Broke baby sick and car trouble Dorothea Lange s 1937 photo of a Missouri migrant family s jalopy stuck near Tracy California 33 Between 1930 and 1940 about 3 5 million people moved out of the Plains states 34 In just over a year over 86 000 people migrated to California This number is more than the number of migrants to that area during the 1849 gold rush 35 Migrants abandoned farms in Oklahoma Arkansas Missouri Iowa Nebraska Kansas Texas Colorado and New Mexico but were often generally called Okies Arkies or Texies 36 Terms such as Okies and Arkies came to be standard in the 1930s for those who had lost everything and were struggling the most during the Great Depression 37 nbsp A migratory family from Texas living in a trailer in an Arizona cotton fieldBut not all migrants traveled long distances most participated in internal state migration moving from counties that the Dust Bowl badly impacted to other less affected counties 38 So many families left their farms and were on the move that the proportion of migrants and residents was nearly equal in the Great Plains states 34 An examination of Census Bureau statistics and other records and a 1939 survey of occupation by the Bureau of Agricultural Economics of about 116 000 families who arrived in California in the 1930s showed that only 43 of Southwesterners were doing farm work immediately before they migrated Nearly a third of all migrants were professional or white collar workers 39 Some farmers had to take on unskilled labor when they moved leaving the farming sector commonly led to greater social mobility as there was a far greater likelihood that migrant farmers would later go into semi skilled or high skilled fields that paid better Non farmers experienced more downward occupational moves than farmers but in most cases they were not significant enough to bring them into poverty because high skilled migrants were most likely to experience a downward shift into semi skilled work While semi skilled work did not pay as well as high skilled work most of these workers were not impoverished For the most part by the end of the Dust Bowl the migrants generally were better off than those who chose to stay behind 38 After the Great Depression ended some migrants moved back to their original states Many others remained where they had resettled About one eighth of California s population is of Okie heritage 40 Government response nbsp Resettlement Administration poster by Richard H Jansen 1935Government s greatly expanded participation in land management and soil conservation was an important result of the disaster Different groups took many different approaches to responding to the disaster To identify areas that needed attention groups such as the Soil Conservation Service generated detailed soil maps and took photos of the land from the sky To create shelterbelts to reduce soil erosion groups such as the United States Forest Service s Prairie States Forestry Project planted trees on private lands Groups like the Resettlement Administration which later became the Farm Security Administration encouraged small farm owners to resettle on other lands if they lived in drier parts of the Plains 1 During President Franklin D Roosevelt s first 100 days in office in 1933 his administration quickly initiated programs to conserve soil and restore the nation s ecological balance Interior Secretary Harold L Ickes established the Soil Erosion Service in August 1933 under Hugh Hammond Bennett In 1935 it was transferred and reorganized under the Department of Agriculture and renamed the Soil Conservation Service It is now known as the Natural Resources Conservation Service NRCS 41 As part of New Deal programs Congress passed the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act in 1936 requiring landowners to share the allocated government subsidies with the laborers who worked on their farms Under the law benefit payments were continued as measures for production control and income support but they were now financed by direct Congressional appropriations and justified as soil conservation measures The Act shifted the parity goal from price equality of agricultural commodities and the articles that farmers buy to income equality of farm and non farm population 42 Thus the parity goal was to re create the ratio between the purchasing power of the net income per person on farms from agriculture and that of the income of persons not on farms that prevailed during 1909 1914 To stabilize prices the government paid farmers and ordered more than six million pigs to be slaughtered as part of the Agricultural Adjustment Act AAA It paid to have the meat packed and distributed to the poor and hungry The Federal Surplus Relief Corporation FSRC was established to regulate crop and other surpluses In a May 14 1935 address to the AAA Roosevelt said Let me make one other point clear for the benefit of the millions in cities who have to buy meats Last year the Nation suffered a drought of unparalleled intensity If there had been no Government program if the old order had obtained in 1933 and 1934 that drought on the cattle ranges of America and in the corn belt would have resulted in the marketing of thin cattle immature hogs and the death of these animals on the range and on the farm and if the old order had been in effect those years we would have had a vastly greater shortage than we face today Our program we can prove it saved the lives of millions of head of livestock They are still on the range and other millions of heads are today canned and ready for this country to eat 43 The FSRC diverted agricultural commodities to relief organizations Apples beans canned beef flour and pork products were distributed through local relief channels Cotton goods were later included to clothe needy 44 In 1935 the federal government formed a Drought Relief Service DRS to coordinate relief activities The DRS bought cattle in counties that were designated emergency areas for 14 to 20 a head Animals determined unfit for human consumption were killed at the beginning of the program more than 50 were so designated in emergency areas The DRS assigned the remaining cattle to the Federal Surplus Relief Corporation FSRC to be used in food distribution to families nationwide Although it was difficult for farmers to give up their herds the cattle slaughter program helped many of them avoid bankruptcy The government cattle buying program was a blessing to many farmers as they could not afford to keep their cattle and the government paid a better price than they could obtain in local markets 45 Roosevelt ordered the Civilian Conservation Corps to plant the Great Plains Shelterbelt a huge belt of more than 200 million trees from Canada to Abilene Texas to break the wind hold water in the soil and hold the soil in place The administration also began to educate farmers on soil conservation and anti erosion techniques including crop rotation strip farming contour plowing and terracing 46 47 In 1937 the federal government began an aggressive campaign to encourage Dust Bowl farmers to adopt planting and plowing methods that conserved the soil The government paid reluctant farmers a dollar an acre equivalent to 20 in 2022 to use the new methods By 1938 the massive conservation effort had reduced the amount of blowing soil by 65 44 The land still failed to yield a decent living In the fall of 1939 after nearly a decade of dirt and dust the drought ended when regular rainfall finally returned to the region The government still encouraged continuing the use of conservation methods to protect the Plains soil and ecology At the end of the drought the programs implemented during the tough times helped sustain a friendly relationship between farmers and the federal government 48 The President s Drought Committee issued a report in 1935 covering the government s assistance to agriculture during 1934 through mid 1935 it discussed conditions measures of relief organization finances operations and results of the government s assistance 49 Numerous exhibits are included in this report Long term economic impactIn many regions more than 75 of the topsoil was blown away by the end of the 1930s Land degradation varied widely Aside from the short term economic consequences of erosion the Dust Bowl had severe long term economic consequences By 1940 counties that had experienced the most erosion had a greater decline in agricultural land values The per acre value of farmland declined by 28 in high erosion counties and 17 in medium erosion counties relative to land value changes in low erosion counties 25 3 Even over the long term the land s agricultural value often failed to return to pre Dust Bowl levels In highly eroded areas less than 25 of the original agricultural losses were recovered The economy adjusted predominantly through large relative population declines in more eroded counties both during the 1930s and through the 1950s 25 1500 The economic effects persisted in part because of farmers failure to switch to more appropriate crops for highly eroded areas Because the amount of topsoil had been reduced it would have been more productive to shift from crops and wheat to animals and hay During the Depression and through at least the 1950s there was limited relative adjustment of farmland away from activities that became less productive in more eroded counties Some of the failure to shift to more productive agricultural products may be related to ignorance about the benefits of changing land use A second explanation is a lack of availability of credit caused by the high rate of failure of banks in the Plains states Because banks failed in the Dust Bowl region at a higher rate than elsewhere farmers could not get the credit they needed to obtain capital to shift crop production 50 In addition profit margins in either animals or hay were still minimal and farmers at first had little incentive to change their crops Patrick Allitt recounts how fellow historian Donald Worster responded to his return visit to the Dust Bowl in the mid 1970s when he revisited some of the worst afflicted counties Capital intensive agribusiness had transformed the scene deep wells into the aquifer intensive irrigation the use of artificial pesticides and fertilizers and giant harvesters were creating immense crops year after year whether it rained or not According to the farmers he interviewed technology had provided the perfect answer to old troubles such of the bad days would not return In Worster s view by contrast the scene demonstrated that America s capitalist high tech farmers had learned nothing They were continuing to work in an unsustainable way devoting far cheaper subsidized energy to growing food than the energy could give back to its ultimate consumers 51 In contrast with Worster s pessimism historian Mathew Bonnifield argued that the Dust Bowl s long term significance was the triumph of the human spirit in its capacity to endure and overcome hardships and reverses 52 A 2023 study in the Journal of Economic History found that while the Dust Bowl had large and enduring impacts on agricultural land it had modest impacts on average wage incomes 53 Influence on the arts and culture nbsp Florence Owens Thompson seen in the photo Migrant Mother by Dorothea Lange nbsp Dust bowl farmers of west Texas in town photograph taken by Dorothea Lange June 1937 in Anton Texas The crisis was documented by photographers musicians and authors many hired during the Great Depression by the federal government For instance the Farm Security Administration hired photographers to document the crisis Artists such as Dorothea Lange were aided by having salaried work during the Depression 54 She captured what have become classic images of the dust storms and migrant families Among her best known photographs is Destitute Pea Pickers in California Mother of Seven Children 54 depicted a gaunt looking woman Florence Owens Thompson holding three of her children This picture expressed the struggles of people caught by the Dust Bowl and raised awareness in other parts of the country of its reach and human cost Decades later Thompson disliked the boundless circulation of the photo and resented that she had received no money from its broadcast Thompson felt it made her perceived as a Dust Bowl Okie 55 The work of independent artists was also influenced by the crises of the Dust Bowl and the Depression Author John Steinbeck borrowing closely from field notes taken by Farm Security Administration worker and author Sanora Babb 56 wrote The Grapes of Wrath 1939 about migrant workers and farm families displaced by the Dust Bowl Babb s own novel about the lives of the migrant workers Whose Names Are Unknown was written in 1939 but was eclipsed and shelved in response to Steinbeck s success and was not published till 2004 57 58 59 Many of folk singer Woody Guthrie s songs such as those on his 1940 album Dust Bowl Ballads are about his experiences in the Dust Bowl era during the Great Depression when he traveled with displaced farmers from Oklahoma to California and learned their traditional folk and blues songs earning him the nickname the Dust Bowl Troubadour 60 Migrants also influenced musical culture wherever they went Oklahoma migrants in particular were rural Southwesterners who carried their traditional country music to California Today the Bakersfield Sound describes this blend which developed after the migrants brought country music to the city Their new music inspired a proliferation of country dance halls as far south as Los Angeles The 2003 2005 HBO TV series Carnivale was set during the dust bowl The 2014 science fiction film Interstellar features a ravaged 21st century America that is again scoured by dust storms caused by a worldwide pathogen affecting all crops Along with inspiration from the 1930s crisis director Christopher Nolan features interviews from the 2012 documentary The Dust Bowl to draw further parallels 61 In 2017 Americana recording artist Grant Maloy Smith released the album Dust Bowl American Stories inspired by the history of the Dust Bowl 62 In a review the music magazine No Depression wrote that the album s lyrics and music are as potent as Woody Guthrie as intense as John Trudell and dusted with the trials and tribulations of Tom Joad Steinbeck and The Grapes of Wrath 63 Changes in agriculture and population on the PlainsAgricultural land and revenue boomed during World War I but fell during the Great Depression and the 1930s 64 verification needed The agricultural land most affected by the Dust Bowl was 16 million acres 6 5 million hectares of land in the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles These 20 counties that the U S Department of Agriculture s Soil Conservation Service identified as the worst wind eroded region were home to the majority of the Great Plains migrants during the Dust Bowl 38 While migration from and between the Southern Great Plain States was greater than migration in other regions in the 1930s the numbers of migrants from these areas had only slightly increased from the 1920s The Dust Bowl and Great Depression thus did not trigger a mass exodus of southern migrants but simply encouraged these migrants to keep moving where in other areas the Great Depression limited mobility due to economic issues decreasing migration While the population of the Great Plains did fall during the Dust Bowl and Great Depression the drop was not caused by extreme numbers of migrants leaving the Great Plains but by of a lack of migrants moving from outside the Great Plains into the region 38 See also1936 North American heat wave Desertification Goyder s Line semiarid area of Australia Global warming List of environmental disasters Monoculture Ogallala Aquifer Palliser s Triangle semiarid area of Canada Semi arid climate Tragedy of the commons U S Route 66 notable Dust Bowl migration route to California Navajo Livestock Reduction simultaneous program to prevent overgrazing and erosionReferences a b c McLeman Robert A Dupre Juliette Berrang Ford Lea Ford James Gajewski Konrad Marchildon Gregory June 2014 What we learned from the Dust Bowl lessons in science policy and adaptation Population and Environment 35 4 417 440 doi 10 1007 s11111 013 0190 z PMC 4015056 PMID 24829518 Ben Cook Ron Miller Richard Seager Did dust storms make the Dust Bowl drought worse Columbia University Archived from the original on November 2 2018 Retrieved November 9 2018 a b Drought A Paleo Perspective 20th Century Drought National Climatic Data Center Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved April 5 2009 A History of Drought in Colorado lessons 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August 24 2010 Archived from the original on November 25 2012 Retrieved November 23 2012 a b Mencken H L 1979 Raven I McDavid Jr ed The American Language One Volume Abridged ed New York Alfred A Knopf p 206 ISBN 978 0 394 40075 4 Hakim Joy 1995 A History of Us War Peace and all that Jazz New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 509514 2 Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved December 22 2018 page needed 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 Bust America The Story of Us A amp E Television Networks 2010 OCLC 783245601 Northern Rockies and Plains Average Temperature October to March National Climatic Data Center Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 17 2014 Northern Rockies and Plains Precipitation 1895 2013 National Climatic Data Center Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 17 2014 Kansas Precipitation 1895 to 2013 National Climatic Data Center Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 17 2014 Texas Climate Division 1 High Plains Precipitation 1895 2013 National Climatic Data Center Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 17 2014 The Weather of 1941 in the United States PDF National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved September 14 2023 Cronin Francis D Beers Howard W January 1937 Areas of Intense Drought Distress 1930 1936 PDF Research Bulletin United States Works Progress Administration Division of Social Research U S Works Progress Administration Federal Reserve Archival System for Economic Research FRASER pp 1 23 Archived from the original on August 10 2018 Retrieved October 15 2014 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Murphy Philip G July 15 1935 The Drought of 1934 PDF A Report of The Federal Government s Assistance to Agriculture U S Drought Coordinating Committee Federal Reserve Archival System for Economic Research FRASER Archived from the original on August 10 2018 Retrieved October 15 2014 a b Surviving the Dust Bowl PBS 1998 Archived from the original on February 18 2017 Retrieved September 19 2011 Stock Catherine McNicol 1992 Main Street in Crisis The Great Depression and the Old Middle Class on the Northern Plains p 24 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4689 9 Miller Bill March 21 1935 Nearly week siege of dust storm in county Spearman Reporter Spearman Texas hdl 10605 99636 a b c Hornbeck Richard 2012 The Enduring Impact of the American Dust Bowl Short and Long run Adjustments to Environmental Catastrophe American Economic Review 102 4 1477 1507 doi 10 1257 aer 102 4 1477 S2CID 6257886 Archived from the original on August 19 2021 Retrieved November 9 2018 Schubert Siegfried D Suarez Max J Pegion Philip J Koster Randal D Bacmeister Julio T March 19 2004 On the Cause of the 1930s Dust Bowl Science 303 5665 1855 1859 Bibcode 2004Sci 303 1855S doi 10 1126 science 1095048 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 15031502 S2CID 36152330 Archived from the original on June 6 2021 Retrieved June 6 2021 Seager Richard Kushnir Yochanan Ting Mingfang Cane Mark Naik Naomi Miller Jennifer July 1 2008 Would Advance Knowledge of 1930s SSTs Have Allowed Prediction of the Dust Bowl Drought Journal of Climate 21 13 3261 3281 Bibcode 2008JCli 21 3261S doi 10 1175 2007JCLI2134 1 ISSN 0894 8755 A Cultural History of the United States The 1930s San Diego California Lucent Books Inc 1999 p 39 Schama Simon Hobkinson Sam 2008 American Plenty BBC OCLC 884893188 First Measured Century Interview James Gregory PBS Archived from the original on July 18 2018 Retrieved March 11 2007 Babb Sanora Dorothy Babb and Douglas Wixson On the Dirty Plate Trail Edited by Douglas Wixson Autin Texas University of Texas Press 2007 p 20 A Cultural History 1999 p 19 Fender Stephen 2011 Nature Class and New Deal Literature The Country Poor in the Great Depression Routledge p 143 ISBN 9781136632280 Archived from the original on August 19 2021 Retrieved September 23 2020 a b Worster Donald 1979 Dust Bowl The Southern Plains in the 1930s Oxford University Press p 49 Worster Donald Dust Bowl The Southern Plains in the 1930s New York Oxford University Press 2004 p 50 First Measured Century Interview James Gregory PBS Archived from the original on July 18 2018 Retrieved March 11 2007 Worster 2004 Dust Bowl p 45 a b c d Long Jason Siu Henry 2018 Refugees from Dust and Shrinking Land Tracking the Dust Bowl Migrants The Journal of Economic History 78 4 1001 1033 doi 10 1017 S0022050718000591 ISSN 0022 0507 S2CID 38804642 Gregory N James 1991 American Exodus The Dust Bowl Migration and Okie Culture in California Oxford University Press Babb et al 2007 On the Dirty Plate Trail p 13 Steiner Frederick 2008 The Living Landscape Second Edition An Ecological Approach to Landscape Planning p 188 Island Press ISBN 1 59726 396 6 Rau Allan Agricultural Policy and Trade Liberalization in the United States 1934 1956 a Study of Conflicting Policies Geneve E Droz 1957 p 81 Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States F D Roosevelt 1935 Volume 4 page 178 Best Books 1938 a b Timeline The Dust Bowl American Experience PBS www pbs org Archived from the original on October 8 2020 Retrieved October 4 2020 Monthly Catalog United States Public Documents By United States Superintendent of Documents United States Government Printing Office Published by the G P O 1938 Federal Writers Project Texas Writers Program Tex Writers Program Texas p 16 Buchanan James Shannon Chronicles of Oklahoma Oklahoma Historical Society p 224 A Cultural History 1999 p 45 United States Agricultural Adjustment Administration and Murphy Philip G 1935 Drought of 1934 The Federal Government s Assistance to Agriculture Archived June 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine Accessed October 15 2014 Landon Lane John Rockoff Hugh Steckel Richard December 2009 Droughts Floods and Financial Distress in the United States NBER Working Paper No 15596 6 doi 10 3386 w15596 Patrick Allitt A Climate of Crisis America in the Age of Environmentalism 2014 p 203 Allitt p 211 paraphrasing William Cronin s evaluation of Mathew Paul Bonnifield Dust Bowl Men Dirt and Depression 1979 Hornbeck Richard 2023 Dust Bowl Migrants Environmental Refugees and Economic Adaptation The Journal of Economic History 83 3 645 675 doi 10 1017 S0022050723000244 ISSN 0022 0507 S2CID 235678459 a b Destitute Pea Pickers in California Mother of Seven Children Age Thirty two Nipomo California Migrant Mother World Digital Library February 1936 Archived from the original on January 26 2013 Retrieved February 10 2013 DuBois Ellen Carol Dumenil Lynn 2012 Through Women s Eyes Third ed Bedford St Martin s p 583 ISBN 978 0 312 67603 2 The Dust Bowl Sanora Babb biography PBS Archived from the original on August 19 2021 Retrieved May 2 2021 Whose Names Are Unknown Sanora Babb Harry Ransom Center Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved December 22 2015 Dayton Duncan preface by Ken Burns 2012 Biographies Sanora Babb The Dust Bowl An Illustrated History PBS Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 13 2016 See Lanzendorfer Joy The forgotten Dust Bowl novel that rivaled The Grapes of Wrath Archived December 28 2017 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian com 2016 May 23 Sanora Babb Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Dust Bowl a film by Ken Burns PBS org 2012 For the role of Tom Collins of the Farm Security Administration in Steinbeck s novel see John Steinbeck with Robert Demott ed Working Days The Journals of The Grapes of Wrath 1938 1941 New York New York Penguin Books 1990 pp xxvii xxviii Archived April 29 2021 at the Wayback Machine 33 journal entry for 1938 June 24 Archived April 29 2021 at the Wayback Machine Alarik Scott Robert Burns unplugged Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Boston Globe August 7 2005 Retrieved on December 5 2007 Rosenberg Alyssa November 6 2014 How Ken Burns surprise role in Interstellar explains the movie The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 8 2014 Retrieved November 8 2014 Smith Hubble June 1 2017 Kingman gets a mention on Dust Bowl album Kingman Daily Miner Archived from the original on October 10 2017 Retrieved June 11 2017 Apice John May 22 2017 Expressive Original Songs Steeped In the Dirt amp Reality of the Dust Bowl Depression Era No Depression Archived from the original on July 6 2017 Retrieved June 11 2017 Hornbeck Richard 2012 The Enduring Impact of the American Dust Bowl Short and Long run Adjustments to Environmental Catastrophe American Economic Review 102 4 1477 1507 doi 10 1257 aer 102 4 1477 S2CID 6257886 Archived from the original on August 19 2021 Retrieved November 9 2018 BibliographyBonnifield Mathew Paul 1979 Dust Bowl Men Dirt and Depression Cunfer Geoff 2008 Scaling the Dust Bowl Archived February 26 2021 at the Wayback Machine Placing history How maps spatial data and GIS are changing historical scholarship ESRI Press Redlands Gregory James Noble American exodus The dust bowl migration and Okie culture in California Oxford University Press 1989 Lassieur Allison 2009 The Dust Bowl An Interactive History Adventure Archived April 10 2021 at the Wayback Machine Capstone Press ISBN 1 4296 3455 3 Reis Ronald A 2008 The Dust Bowl Archived April 29 2021 at the Wayback Machine Chelsea House ISBN 978 0 7910 9737 3 Sylvester Kenneth M and Eric S A Rupley Revising the Dust Bowl High above the Kansas Grassland Environmental History 17 July 2012 603 33 Worster Donald 2004 1979 Dust Bowl The Southern Plains in the 1930s Archived April 30 2021 at the Wayback Machine 25 anniversary ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 517489 5 Woody Guthrie 1963 The Nearly Complete Collection of Woody Guthrie Folk Songs Ludlow Music New York Alan Lomax Woody Guthrie Pete Seeger 1967 Hard Hitting Songs for Hard Hit People Oak Publications New York Timothy Egan 2006 The Worst Hard Time Archived December 19 2019 at the Wayback Machine Houghton Mifflin Company New York hardcover ISBN 0 618 34697 X Katelan Janke 1935 Survival in the Storm The Dust Bowl Diary of Grace Edwards Dalhart Texas Scholastic September 2002 ISBN 0 439 21599 4 Sweeney Kevin Z 2016 Prelude to the Dust Bowl Drought in the Nineteenth Century Southern Plains Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press Documentary films1936 The Plow That Broke the Plains 25 minutes directed by Pare Lorentz 1998 Surviving the Dust Bowl 52 minutes season 10 episode of American Experience documentary tv series 2012 The Dust Bowl 240 minutes 4 episodes directed by Ken BurnsExternal links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dust Bowl The Dust Bowl photo collection The Dust Bowl a PBS television series by filmmaker Ken Burns The Dust Bowl EH Net Encyclopedia Black Sunday April 14 1935 Dodge City KS Voices from the Dust Bowl The Charles L Todd and Robert Sonkin Migrant Worker Collection 1940 1941 Library of Congress American Folklife Center Online collection of archival sound recordings photographs and manuscripts The Dust Bowl Wessels Living History Farm Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Dust Bowl Dust Drought and Dreams Gone Dry Oklahoma Women in the Dust Bowl Oral History Project Oklahoma Oral History Research Program Voices of Oklahoma interview with Frosty Troy First person interview conducted on November 30 2011 with Frosty Troy talking about the Oklahoma Dust Bowl Original audio and transcript archived with Voices of Oklahoma oral history project Dust Bowl Ken Burns playlist on YouTube Dust Bowl Ken Burns playlist on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dust Bowl amp oldid 1194486807, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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