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The Dust Bowl And The Great Depression By Margaret Larason

Good Essays

The Dust Bowl and the Great Depression were catastrophic events that occurred in the mid-1930s and affected the Great Plains. One place in particular that suffered was the Oklahoma panhandle. The dust storms were so bad that farmers could not make a living, and the land was almost un-inhabitable. This drove many families to leave the panhandle and flee to places like California. Margaret Larason is a woman who was born in the pan handle before the Dust Bowl and Great Depression, and she even lived through it. She explains how she saw everything happening around her as she had just graduated from school.
This primary source is an oral interview of Margaret Larason. Margaret Larason was born in Catesby, Oklahoma in 1912. Like most families, …show more content…

Today (2001) there are probably a total of five families within a five mile radius of Catesby. In a book titled The Dust Bowl David C. King says that an estimated 300,000 people packed up all of their belongings and crowded onto historic Route 66 towards California. These people came to be called “Okies” no matter where they were from (38). These “Okies” soon found that they were not welcomed in California. They had no money and no place to live, therefore most of them lived miserable lives (43). Larason’s fondest memory of growing up was school, she really liked it.
Larason says, “I have a hard time separating the depression and the dust bowl.” During the depression, crop failures and low prices made it difficult for farmers to make any money. Larason graduated from school in the middle of the depression and she found it hard to get a job. She was always turned away either because she was too young, or because her father already had a job. During the depression employers tried to spread the jobs out as much as possible because they did not have very many to offer.
David C. King describes the dust bowl as a region and moment in the mid-1930s where hundreds of thousands of square miles were ambushed with dust storms after years of drought (6). Larason believes that the storms were caused by over cultivating farm land. When the farmers removed too much grass then cultivated the dirt until it was a fine

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