The Dust Bowl and the Great Plains in Crisis, 1930-1940
The complete narrative history of the Dust Bowl, 1930–1940 — Black Sunday, the Okies, Hugh Bennett's soil conservation battle, and the Great Plains environmental catastrophe that reshaped America.
On the morning of April 14, 1935, the sky over the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles was clear and warm. Families opened windows they had spent weeks sealing against the dust. By mid-afternoon, a cold front had dropped the temperature forty degrees in an hour, and people on the high plains saw it coming from the north — a wall of darkness stretching from horizon to horizon, thousands of feet high, moving at sixty miles per hour. AP reporter Robert Geiger called it "the dust bowl." The name stuck. What had been a region in crisis became, in language, a place: the Dust Bowl.
This Dust Bowl history follows the full arc of the Great Plains catastrophe across twenty-four chapters — from the native grasslands and Homestead Act settlement that set the trap, through the black blizzards of 1933–1936, the Okie migration west on Route 66, and the New Deal's emergency response, to the legacies that shape the southern plains today. Named throughout: Hugh Bennett, who turned Black Sunday into a congressional mandate for soil conservation; Dorothea Lange, whose FSA photographs gave the disaster a human face; John Steinbeck; Tom Collins of the Weedpatch camp; and the Plains women whose daily endurance kept communities intact through years of darkness and dust.
The Dust Bowl was not primarily an event. It was the revelation of a reality that had always been present — buried under the optimistic statistics of the wetter years. The southern plains had been farmed as though the bad years were exceptional. They were not. That lesson was learned at enormous cost, and it has had to be learned more than once. This Dust Bowl history is about what that learning cost, and what it produced.
For readers of Timothy Egan's THE WORST HARD TIME and Ken Burns's THE DUST BOWL.
Non ci sono ancora recensioni per questo libro.