The Dust Bowl The Dust Bowl Dust Storm
The Dust Bowl
The Dust Bowl > Dust Storm. A wall of dirt and sand descends upon Spearman, Texas, on August 14, 1935
The Dust Bowl > Dust Storm Approaching Startford, Texas, 1930 s
The Dust Bowl > Pare Lorenz, The Plow That Broke the Plains, 1936
The Dust Bowl > Map of Erosion and Dust on the Plains
Migration > Traveling from South Texas to the Arkansas Delta, 1936
Migration > On the road to California, February 1936
Migration > John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath • Novel published in 1939 • Film in 1940 (closely follows the novel) • Reinforced the belief that migrants fled the dust storms • In fact, they fled for varied reasons, including drought, falling agricultural prices, and mechanization of agriculture • 16, 000 farmers fled dust storms • 400, 000 migrated, from a larger area in the Southwest • Famous scene: farmer confronts a man who is about to level his house, used the plight of farmers to convey a sense of unfocused outrage shared by many others during the Depression - people couldn’t figure out who was to blame for the disaster
FSA > Arthur Rothstein, Steer Skull, Pennington County, South Dakota 1936
FSA > Arthur Rothstein, the same skull on dry sun-baked earth
FSA > Arthur Rothstein, the same skull, cows grazing in the background
FSA > Arthur Rothstein, Farmers and Sons, Cimmaron County, Oklahoma, 1936 (after the dust storm)
FSA > Arthur Rothstein, the same farmer pretending to flee a dust storm
FSA > Arthur Rothstein, the same farmer pretending to flee a dust storm
FSA > Walker Evans, Burroughs Photographs, Hale County, Alabama, 1936
FSA > Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother, March 1936
FSA > Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother series, March 1936
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