In the book to kill a mockingbird,there were problems to face,as a young child,scout was facing problems understanding how the world worked,she faced problems with being poor,not always getting expensive things or what she wanted. During the 1930’s,a whole decade was full of dust bowl’s which were causing people to lose everything and becoming poor.The plains were where the dust bowls started spreading to countries like Kansas,Oklahoma,Texas and New Mexico.The dust bowls would kill off all the crops and leave areas with drought.people would start moving out of the countries and others would stay. This compares with To Kill a Mockingbird because scout wasn’t the person who always got what she want.she was someone who always
In the years leading to 1930, the Great Plains experienced a healthy amount of rain. The drought began in 1930 when the rain ceased. That year proved tough for farmers in the Great Plains, but they had no idea what was yet to come. In 1931, dust storms began to sweep through the Great Plains. Behind the dust, families stayed hidden inside their homes using wet clothes and such to guard the window sills and door frames. The families affected by the Dust Bowl were trapped inside of their homes for the six years of raging dust storms. The Great Depression was a number of years that consisted of workers being laid off, no job openings available, and an overall economic low in the United States. The Great Depression, which started in the years leading up to the drought, resulted in poor living conditions, including little to no income, scarce food, and unclean water. The Dust Bowl amplified those conditions for the affected families. (Steinbeck, Lewis, “Dust Bowl”
During the 1930s, the United States faced various struggles such as The Great Depression- a time in which farmers suffered severely through many challenges. One of the challenges faced by farmers was the Dust Bowl tragedy; a dust storm affecting many farms throughout the midwest. The tragic Dust Bowl was a consequence due to lack of rainfall in the dry prairie lands, decreasing crop growth, and overproduction in farming causing more exposed land. It occurred because of advancements in farming technology, drought in the Great Plains, and the harvesting of grasslands.
The Dust Bowl also known as the dirty thirties was a major crisis that happened in the United States in the 1930's. Drought struck over the Midwest causing their crops to perish and eventually making a majority of the farmers go into poverty. Thus causing them to flee from their homes and their belongings. looking for opportunities elsewhere. Some walked, some took the train, and some drove if they were fortunate enough to afford one. There are many different primary sources that picture this crisis which all lead to the conclusion that it was a devastating era in the Midwest and filled with misfortune. A few primary examples are as follows.
The 1930s were seasons of extensive hardship on the Great Plains. Settlers managed with the Great Depression, as well as with years of droughts that dove an already suffering society into an attack of tireless dust storms that lasted for months. The Dust bowl conveyed an enormous agrarian and monetary hit to the Great Plains and destroyed what was left of the United States Economy during the Great Depression. It continued for a decade, 1930 to 1939, and wrecked ranches and lives all over Texas, Oklahoma panhandles, Colorado, parts of New Mexico, Canada, and Kansas. Monstrous dust storms wrecked pretty much everything from harvests, overwhelming ranches, in such a way it crushed the income and careers of thousands of farmers.
The Great Depression was a horrible time in American history, with as much as one-fourth of the population out of work. One of the hardest hit areas of the population was the agricultural center of the United States in the area that would come to be known as the Dust Bowl. The problems that the people of the Dust Bowl dealt with however were not a result of the Depression as a whole but instead were the result of a combination of bad farming decisions and a horrible drought. Even though the timing makes it seem like the Dust Bowl experience in the 1930’s was a part of the Great Depression as a whole it was a totally different disaster that was occurring at the same time. The experience of the families that lived in the Dust Bowl during the 1930’s cannot be described in any way but as horrible, depressing, and almost hopeless.
The Dust Bowl of the 1930s lasted about a decade. Its primary area of impact was on the southern Plains. The northern Plains were not so badly affected, but were still affected by the drought, dust and agricultural decline. The agricultural devastation helped to lengthen the Depression whose effects were felt worldwide. The movement of people on the Plains were devastating to the area. People were forced to move out of their homes due to dust filling their houses with dust
In the Southern Great Plains States it was a natural disaster. Farming on the Great Plains was almost impossible. The people couldn’t buy crops because the depression left them poor. In the 1930s the land became a desert because of the drought. Constant winds whipped the dry earth into blinding storms of dust, so much dust that it settled as far away as Boston and New York.
Did you know that some dust storms could be 10,000 feet high? These are the storms faced by the people in the Southern Plains. During the 1930s, America was hit by the Great Depression. Many Americans lost their jobs and were forced into poverty. The Southern Plains were considered to be hit the worst by the Depression. The plains were cornered by the Depression and the Dust Bowl. The Dust Bowl, especially, caused agricultural failures, economic failures, and destroyed the fertile lands of the plains. The Dust Bowl was caused by the overuse of soil, dreadful weather and temperature, and the lack of developed farming system.
If you were alive in the 1930’s you may recall the Dust Bowl era and if you lived in the eastern part of the United States you lived in the storm. The Dust Bowl was the era in which a drought lasted from 1930 to1935. It formed with contributions from humans, it affected the people in the storm dearly.The supply and demand, caused people to lose land, money, and had to live in devastating conditions.
In the 1930’s better known as “the dirty thirties”, the dust bowl effected thousands of framers and their families in the Southwest and the Midwest. The incredible power of dust clouds by wind erosion, over framing and the long drought lead to a turning point in the ways of agriculture and the economy. This is important because this event caused families to migrate to other mostly the west and even led to death and disease.
The Dust Bowl ruined acres and acres of farming land that took thousands of years to produce. “The Dust Bowl of the 1930s lasted about a decade. In fact the agriculture devastation helped to lengthen the Depression whose effects were felt worldwide. The movement of people on the Plains was also profound.” (About The Dust…). When rainfall accumulation dropped, fields started turning into dust. Families from all over were leaving to find better farming land to make a living.
From the 1900’s to 1930’s, many families bought land to make farms. This was also the time that large flat and plain areas like Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado were hit by devastating dust storms.
In the late 1920s, the great grassland planes were filled with agriculture, industries, and cotton plows. The soil that was found in the Southern Plains was rich and full of life but in the early 1930s, everything changed because of poor agriculture practices, droughts and the increasing dust storms that blocked the sunlight. The dust bowl that lasted about a decade it started in early 1930’s it had a great effect on the Southern Plains as well the Northern Plains. The great dust bowl still does have affected on today's the grasslands in mid-American the grassland are now desert and tend to have a lot of droughts. The following states were affected by the dust storms in early 1930’s Denver, Colorado, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Texas and Kansas the Dust Bowl affected the Northern Plains soon after the Southern Plains topsoil was destroyed droughts blew out dust into nearby States covering Sun for days. Agriculture in the states declined dramatically the Dust Bowl did not help the Great Depression the Dust Bowl took away agriculture the products food for half the country at the time, jobs and education were affected it didn't only affect the nation but had affected world worldwide on Industries and trades. Besides the declining of Agriculture, breathing, eating and taking a walk we're no longer simple the dust would cover roads, farms, and crops.
One of the worst droughts occurred during the 1930s in the Southern Great Plains of the Midwest. It was known as the Dust Bowl. During this time, there were high temperatures, a lack of rain, and strong winds. The strong winds created clouds of dust from dry soil and mounds of dust were blown all around. The drought and dust devastated agriculture in the Midwest. The lack of rain killed crops. The dust suffocated livestock. The dust storms forced farmers out of business.
In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee Scout learns not everyone is fortunate, there is more than meets the eye, and do not believe in rumors. Scout learns not everyone is fortunate through her encounters with Walter Cunningham. She learns there is more than meets the eye from Atticus, Mayella, and Aunt Alexandra. Lastly, she learns not to trust rumors from Boo, blacks, and Mrs. Dubose. These lessons teach