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Poor agricultural practices and years of sustained drought caused the Dust Bowl.
Plains grasslands had been deeply plowed and planted to wheat. During the years when there was adequate rainfall, the land produced bountiful crops. But as the droughts of the early 1930s deepened, the farmers kept plowing and planting and nothing would grow. The ground cover that held the soil in place was gone. The Plains winds whipped across the fields raising billowing clouds of dust to the skys. The skys could darken for days, and even the most well sealed homes could have a thick layer of dust on furniture. In some places the dust would drift like snow, covering farmsteads. The Dust Bowl
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For eight years dust blew on the southern plains.
It came in a yellowish-brown haze from the South and in rolling walls of black from the North. The simplest acts of life — breathing, eating a meal, taking a walk — were no longer simple. Children wore dust masks to and from school, women hung wet sheets over windows in a futile attempt to stop the dirt, farmers watched helplessly as their crops blew away.
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The Great Depression In October 1929 the stock market crashed, wiping out 40 percent of the paper values of common stock. Even after the stock market collapse, however, politicians and industry leaders continued to issue optimistic predictions for the nation's economy. But the Depression deepened, confidence evaporated and many lost their life savings. By 1933 the value of stock on the New York Stock Exchange was less than a fifth of what it had been at its peak in 1929. Business houses closed their doors, factories shut down and banks failed. Farm income fell some 50 percent. By 1932 approximately one out of every four Americans was unemployed.
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The core of the problem was the immense disparity between the country's productive capacity and the ability of people to consume. Great innovations in productive techniques during and after the war raised the output of industry beyond the purchasing capacity of U.S. farmers and wage earners. The savings of the wealthy and middle class, increasing far beyond the possibilities of sound investment, had been drawn into frantic speculation in stocks or real estate. The stock market collapse, therefore, had been merely the first of several detonations in which a flimsy structure of speculation had been leveled to the ground. Catepillar Sixty farm/agricultural tractor, gasoline powered 40 hp, 20,000 lb, produced
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The presidential campaign of 1932 was chiefly a debate over the causes and possible remedies of the Great Depression. Herbert Hoover, unlucky in entering The White House only eight months before the stock market crash, had struggled tirelessly, but ineffectively, to set the wheels of industry in motion again. His Democratic opponent, Franklin D. Roosevelt, already popular as the governor of New York during the developing crisis, argued that the Depression stemmed from the U.S. economy's underlying flaws, which had been aggravated by Republican policies during the 1920s.
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President Hoover replied that the economy was fundamentally sound, but had been shaken by the repercussions of a worldwide depression -- whose causes could be traced back to the war. Behind this argument lay a clear implication: Hoover had to depend largely on natural processes of recovery, while Roosevelt was prepared to use the federal government's authority for bold experimental remedies. The election resulted in a smashing victory for Roosevelt, who won 22,800,000 votes to Hoover's 15,700,000. The United States was about to enter a new era of economic and political change.
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Great Depression Photo Essay
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Police stand guard outside the entrance to New York's closed World Exchange Bank, March 20, Not only did bank failures wipe out people's savings, they also undermined the ideology of thrift.
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Unemployed men vying for jobs at the American Legion Employment Bureau in Los Angeles during the Great Depression.
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Bud Fields and his family. Alabama. 1935 or 1936
Bud Fields and his family. Alabama or Photographer: Walker Evans.
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Farmer and sons, dust storm, Cimarron County, Oklahoma, 1936
Farmer and sons, dust storm, Cimarron County, Oklahoma, Photographer: Arthur Rothstein. The drought that helped cripple agriculture in the Great Depression was the worst in the climatological history of the country. By 1934 it had dessicated the Great Plains, from North Dakota to Texas, from the Mississippi River Valley to the Rockies. Vast dust storms swept the region.
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Migrant pea pickers camp in the rain. California, February, 1936
Migrant pea pickers camp in the rain. California, February, Photographer: Dorothea Lange. The Farm Security Administration is famous for its small but highly influential photography program, 1935–44, that portrayed the challenges of rural poverty. FSA photography project, and the Grapes of Wrath, are most responsible for creating the image of the Depression in the US.
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The photograph that has become known as "Migrant Mother" is one of a series of photographs that Dorothea Lange made in February or March of 1936 in Nipomo, California. Lange was concluding a month's trip photographing migratory farm labor around the state for what was then the Resettlement Administration.
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Dorothea Lange's "Migrant Mother," destitute in a pea picker's camp, because of the failure of the early pea crop. These people had just sold their tent in order to buy food. Most of the 2,500 people in this camp were destitute. By the end of the decade there were still 4 million migrants on the road. Destitute without means of subsistence; lacking food, clothing, and shelter.
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Communism A theory or system of social organization based on the holding of all property in common A classless society in which private ownership is abolished and the means of production and subsistence belong to the community. Gellert, Hugo, Vote Communist poster. During the 1920s the American Communist Party was often a victim at once of government oppression and of its own sectarian struggles, but in the mid-1930s it adopted a "popular front" policy of alliances with liberal organizations. Its membership tripled, but more important still were the thousands of sympathizers who endorsed party-supported causes.
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Demonstration of unemployed, Columbus, Kansas. May 1936
Demonstration of unemployed, Columbus, Kansas. May Photographer: Arthur Rothstein.
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A sharecropper's yard, Hale County, Alabama, Summer 1936
A sharecropper's yard, Hale County, Alabama, Summer Photographer: Walker Evans
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Porch of a sharecropper's cabin, Hale County, Alabama, Summer 1936
Porch of a sharecropper's cabin, Hale County, Alabama, Summer Photographer: Walker Evans. The marginal and oppresive economy of sharecropping largely collapsed during the great Depression. Sharecropping The cropper brought to the farm only his own and his family's labor. Most other requirements—land, animals, equipment, and seed—were provided by the landlord, who generally also advanced credit to meet the living expenses of the cropper family.
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Part of an impoverished family of nine on a New Mexico highway
Part of an impoverished family of nine on a New Mexico highway. Depression refugees from Iowa. Left Iowa in 1932 because of father's ill health. Father an auto mechanic laborer, painter by trade, tubercular. Family has been on relief in Arizona but refused entry on relief roles in Iowa to which state they wish to return. Nine children including a sick four-month-old baby. No money at all. About to sell their belongings and trailer for money to buy food. "We don't want to go where we'll be a nuisance to anybody." Children of migrant workers typically had no way to attend school. By the end of 1930 some 3 million children had abandoned school. Thousands of schools had closed or were operating on reduced hours. At least 200,000 children took to the roads on their own. Summer Photographer: Dorothea Lange.
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During the Great Depression, unemployment was high
During the Great Depression, unemployment was high. Many employers tried to get as much work as possible from their employees for the lowest possible wage. Workers were upset with the speedup of assembly lines, working conditions and the lack of job security. Seeking strength in unity, they formed unions. Automobile workers organized the U.A.W. (United Automobile Workers of America) in General Motors would not recognize the U.A.W. as the workers' bargaining representative. Hearing rumors that G.M. was moving work to factories where the union was not as strong, workers in Flint began a sit-down strike on December 30, The sit-down was an effective way to strike. When workers walked off the job and picketed a plant, management could bring in new workers to break the strike. If the workers stayed in the plant, management could not replace them with other workers. This photograph shows the broken windows at General Motors' Flint Fisher Body Plant during the Flint sit-down strike of
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Strike pickets, New York, New York. Dec. 1937
Strike pickets, New York, New York. Dec Photographer: Arthur Rothstein.
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Unemployed workers in front of a shack with Christmas tree, East 12th Street, New York City. December Photographer: Russell Lee. Tattered communities of the homeless coalesced in and around every major city in the country.
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Part of the daily lineup outside the State Employment Service Office
Part of the daily lineup outside the State Employment Service Office. Memphis, Tennessee. June Photographer: Dorothea Lange.
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Members of the picket line at King Farm strike
Members of the picket line at King Farm strike. Morrisville, Pennsylvania. August Photographer: John Vachon. In contrast to a frequently racist society, several unions were militantly integrationist.
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Relief line waiting for commodities, San Antonio, Texas. March 1939
Relief line waiting for commodities, San Antonio, Texas. March Photographer: Russell Lee.
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Panhandling It is begging on the street Selling apples, Jacksonville, Texas. October, Photographer: Russell Lee. Many tried apple-selling to avoid the shame of panhandling. In New York City, there were over 5,000 apple sellers on the street.
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Young boys waiting in kitchen of city mission for soup which is given out nightly. Dubuque, Iowa. April Photographer: John Vachon. For millions, soup kitchens offered the only food they would eat.
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Why this picture: It’s from Durham It shows racism What is the guy looking at? Hitler’s love life? Durham, North Carolina, May Photographer: Jack Delano. "At the bus station."
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Tenant Farming A tenant farmer is one who resides on and farms land owned by a landlord. Power farming displaces tenants. Texas panhandle, Photographer: Dorothea Lange.
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