1930s dust bowl aka the dirty thirties. pre-1930s farming demand rose for wheat during wwi –drove...

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1930s Dust Bowl AKA “The Dirty Thirties”

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Page 1: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

1930s Dust Bowl

AKA “The Dirty Thirties”

Page 2: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

Pre-1930’s Farming

• Demand rose for wheat during WWI– drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time

high

• At the end of the war, prices began to fall– Farmers had to cultivate more land to

compensate for falling prices (possible due to new technology)

– Larger supply of wheat on the market drove prices even lower

Page 3: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

“Sodbusters”

• Sod: thick grasses with deep roots that protected the prairie from wind and rain erosion

• Sodbusters broke the sod up for farming purposes– As a result, wind and soil erosion began to

occur on the prairie

Page 4: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

1930’s Weather

• Harsh blizzards winter 1930-1931

• Below average rain– 1930-1933

• Severe drought– 1934, 1935, and 1936 record years for

drought

Page 5: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

Erosion

• Top soil, now lacking sod to protect it from wind and rain, blew across the prairie.

• Blowing sand made breathing difficult.

Page 6: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

“Black Blizzards”

• Dust rose in enormous black clouds, and became known as black blizzards

Page 7: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

Lyrics from a Woody Guthrie song declared, “The storm was as black as tar and as big as an ocean. It looked like we was all done for.”

Page 8: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the
Page 10: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

The Aftermath…

How would you describe the scenes in these pictures?

What would you do if this was your farm?

Page 11: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

Top soil disintegrated to dust and

drifted. Farms and

homes became

worthless.

Page 12: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

Mass Exodus

• People left in droves, looking for food and work elsewhere

Many headed west working as migrant farm workers

Page 13: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

Temporary Migrant Camps

Page 14: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

Dorothea Lange, Photographer

• Master Photographer from this time period

• Your task: analyze a sampling of Dorothea Lange’s photography

Page 15: 1930s Dust Bowl AKA The Dirty Thirties. Pre-1930s Farming Demand rose for wheat during WWI –drove the prices for wheat crops to an all time high At the

Assignment

• What did farmers learn from the dust bowl?

• What changes did they implement to reverse the damage from the dust bowl?

• Could a Dust Bowl happen again? Why or why not?

• Text pages 430-432, 438-439, 457