The 1930's were a time of tragedy for Midwestern people who lived in the United States, especially farmers in the Great Plains region. During this time crops perished and winds picked up causing a massive dust storm to begin. In the course of this catastrophe “at least 350,000 Okies loaded their belongings into cars and trucks and headed to California” (Henretta, Hinderaker, Edwards, and Self 688). Californians were opposed to the arrival of these dust bowl refugees because they were competition for California’s already limited job market, the refugees were receiving a large amount of the state’s Federal Relief money, and they were causing problems in society. This essay will start with a little background of the Dust Bowl, explore how Californians …show more content…
These dust bowl refugees thought that California could be their salvation and a lot of them weren’t disappointed because the state distributed “millions of dollars worth of relief supplies to dust bowl refugees,” (“Kern Will Probe” 6) throughout the 1930’s. However, even with these federal relief programs a numerous amount of these refugees still weren’t wealthy by any means and were at a very low point in their lives looking for any opportunity to stay alive. This alarming reality lead many of these refugees to commit crimes for money or just to end up in prison where they would be fed and sheltered. In San Quentin California alone “the states of Arkansas, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas contributed 882 prisoners,” (“Dust Bowl Folks” 2) to their state prison in 3 years. Those refugees accounted for 18 percent of San Quentin State Prison’s total inmate population. In short, this not only put California in a social slump but also an economic crisis. Thus causing many Californians to be aggravated with the reality that thousands of these people were coming to live in their home state. Not only were these refugees coming to their state and committing crime, the state of California and the tax payers were now the ones responsible for feeding and sheltering these criminals. Most importantly, this responsibility wasn’t cheap, “the average cost per year of a prisoner in San Quentin is $215, making a total of $190,512,” (“Dust Bowl Folks” 2) according to the Healdsburg Tribune in 1939. Sadly, even those who didn’t resort to crime and came to California with the best of intentions often only caused problems for Californians. Employment groups and local businesses often had to halt employee hiring. They wanted to try to make sure that Californian citizens were the ones getting the jobs over the refugees. However, with the magnitude of people trying to get jobs and the fact that these
The "dirty thirties," as many called it, was a time when the earth ran amok in southern plains for the better part of a decade. This great American tragedy, which was more devastating environmentally as well as economically than anything in America's past or present, painstakingly tested the spirit of the southern plainsmen. The proud folks of the south refused at first to accept government help, optimistically believing that better days were ahead. Some moved out of the plains, running from not only drought but from the new machine-controlled agriculture. As John Steinbeck wrote in the bestseller The Grapes of Wrath, "it was not nature that broke the people-they could handle the drought. It was business farming, seeking a better return on land investments and buying tractors to pursue it, that had broken these people, smashing their identity as natural beings wedded to the land."(pg. 58) The machines, one-crop specialization, non-resident farming, and soil abuse were tangible threats to the American agriculture, but it was the capitalistic economic values behind these land exploitations that drove the plainsmen from their land and created the Dust Bowl.
The life of a migrant worker in the 1930s were very depressing one. The Great Depression cause many workers to move from place to place for jobs. Most of these migrant workers are alone with no friends or family and unable to trust people. Some Just like George and Lennie from the book Of Mice Of Men travel together. Of Mice and Men is a story about two men the The Great Depression
“We watched as the storm swallowed the light. The sky turned from blue to black, night descended in an instant and the dust was on us…Dust lay two feet deep in ripply waves across the parlor floor, dust blanketed the cookstove, the icebox, the kitchen chairs, everything deep in dust.” -Karen Hesse’s Diary, April, 1935 (Dust Bowl Diary Entries). In the 1930s, a phenomenon called the Dust Bowl swept the people of the Great Plains off their feet. This paper defines the Dust Bowl and its impact on the US economy and American citizens.
The printed work of the Dust Bowl written by Donald Worster tells of the devastating man-made events that occurred between 1929 and 1939. Worster described this time in history as the darkest moment life in the southern plains encountered in the twentieth-century (4) which was a time where drought, poverty, and famine were of concern. Worster also ties the Great Depression with the Dust Bowl and said that the same society produced them both because of the weakness of America (5). He strongly believes that the Dust Bowl was not a disaster created by nature, but a crisis created by man due to capitalism. Dust Bowl gives a powerful stance on how man ignored the limits of the land which led them into the dirty thirties; however, his beliefs cause him to disregard the disaster as the fault of nature, and specifically blamed man.
The documentary, Dust Bowl: The Southern Plains in the 1930s by Donald Worster paints a surreal mosaic of life on the Great Plains during the dirty thirties. He does this by illustrating various causations and correlations as well as specific rural towns in the Dust Bowl that exhibit them, and public institutions whose objective was the restoration of the Great Plains to a fertile state as before the coming of the Capitalistic agriculturist that wreaked havoc on the ecosystem. Worster then uses the above as a fulcrum to his main argument, “…there was in fact a close link between the Dust Bowl and the Depression – that the same society produced them both, and for similar reasons. (p.5) He further goes on to explain that the crisis in the Great Plains was primarily caused by man and not nature (Worster, p.13). This was primarily due to the fact that man had never truly lived in equilibrium with the land on the high plains; they exploited the prairies to produce beyond their capacity, thus causing severe environmental breakdown. The fault was not all the agriculturists of course, part of the blame, as Worster points out, is rooted culturally in our capitalistic, industrialized values and ideals. One spokesman stated, “We are producing a product to sell, and that profitability of that product depended on pushing the land as far as it could go.” (Worster, p.57) To fully illuminate the problems at hand, he uses Cimarron County in the Oklahoma panhandle, and Haskell County,
The Mexican Migrant Farm Workers’ community formed in Southern California in the 20th century because of two factors that came together: farming emphasized by migrations like the Okie farmers from the East and Mexicans “imported” to the U.S. because of the need for cheap labor as a replacement of Americans during World War II. The migrant labor group formed after an already similar group in the U.S had been established in California, the American farm workers from the East, known as the Okies. The Dust Bowl of the 1930s caused the movement of the Okies to the West and was followed by the transition from American dominant farm labor to Mexican migrant labor. The Okies reinforced farming in California through the skills they took with them,
In the 1930s, there was a period of time known as the Dirty Thirties, or in other words the Dust Bowl. This period of time consisted of severe dust storms that significantly damaged the economy and agriculture of the U.S and Canadian prairies. The many causes of this crisis is one that has been discussed and debated for many years. However, the main cause of this entire debacle is indeed due to the horrendous drought that destroyed everything in sight. In addition, the other causes included overproduction and improper farming by farmers, high heat and winds, and lastly the unfortunate plague of grasshoppers.
In the early 1930s through the 1936, a massive event called the Dust Bowl occurred also known as the Dirty Thirties, dramatically affected areas within Oklahoma, Kansas, and Northern Texas due to extensive windstorms. This event forced numerous people to evacuate their hometowns. The Dust Bowl had a significant impact on society, it caused farmers to have no control of their agriculture because of the dried up land. Once the land dried up there was no way to renovate or replace the soil. This dilemma lead to more citizens to depend on the government for help, financially.
The 1930s are a decade marked by devastation; the nation was in an economic crisis, millions of people were going hungry, and jobless. America was going through some dark times. But if you were living in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas (or any of those surrounding states) you had bigger things on your mind than being denied the money in your bank account. From 1935-1939 Winds and dust storms had left a good portion of our country desolate; however our author takes a slightly different, though no less valid, opinion on the matter. In his book Dust Bowl: The Southern Plains in the 1930s Donald Worster blames mans inappropriate interference with nature that allowed these massive storms of dust that happen. "My
If I was part of one of the families living on the Southern plains during this time, I think I would have stayed. I would have tried to stay just to say that I had made it through the Dust Bowl, and could share my experience with many others. I would have also liked to see how it was like being in the Last Man Standing club. Next, if I was part of one of the families, I would have probably thought that the dust storms were going to end soon enough, and it would have been a waste to move then. It would probably be very nerve-wracking, stressful, and depressing to see the people leaving each day, but I think it would still be worth staying. Finally, I think you would become mentally stronger and braver since you would try to survive in one of
During the late 1920s farmers had rick and great soil up until the dust bowl which was when a whole city known for farming was covered in a blanket of black and nasty dust. When this first occurs people thought it would blow past within a few weeks but that never happened. As more and more dust storms came to the area people began to wonder if it was worth it to stay in a farming town that was no longer ok for farming. The population of the city dropped by 59% over the 7 year span which is insane to think considering that the population was small to be gain with. After a long 7 year battle with the weather and Mother Nature the sky's opens up and begs in to spray water and in that moment they knew it would all be
In the 1930’s better known as “the dirty thirties”, the dust bowl effected thousands of framers and their families in the Southwest and the Midwest. The incredible power of dust clouds by wind erosion, over framing and the long drought lead to a turning point in the ways of agriculture and the economy. This is important because this event caused families to migrate to other mostly the west and even led to death and disease.
Farmers were the most affected people in the dust bowl because their land got destroyed. Also they were in a serious amount of debt because that had to buy more land and expensive machinery. The crops they put in there land got more experience over the years so that meant the debt got worst. It was also very to keep up with their monthly payments in mortgages. They ended up losing their land to banks, called foreclosure. Farm families abandoned their homes and became migrant laborers in the western countries.
In the near future, mankind’s survival is threatened by a crop blight that brings society back to the days of The Dust Bowl. Food is in short supply, dust storms are a debilitating and frustrating norm, and the advancement of technology and education has been stunted by the need for more farmers to till the ever-eroding soil. It is within this agrarian society that we find our protagonist, Cooper, a frustrated former pilot/engineer that feels caged in by the limitations of this desperate, earth-bound society. Cooper lives on a farm with his two children, Murph and Tom, who couldn’t be more disparate. Tom, the elder son, is stoic and practical with a flare for farming and an appreciation for the status quo. Murph, the younger daughter, is fiery
The 1930s were a time of hardship for many across the United States. Not only was the Great Depression making it difficult for families to eat every day, but the Dust Bowl swept through the plains states making it nearly impossible to farm the land in which they relied. John Steinbeck saw how the Dust Bowl affected farmers, primarily the tenant farmers, and journeyed to California after droves of families. These families were dispossessed from the farms they had worked for years, if not generations (Mills 388). Steinbeck was guided by Tom Collins, the real-life model for the Weedpatch camp’s manager Jim Rawley, through one of the federal migrant worker camps. He was able to see for himself,