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Dustbowl

Dustbowl

Assessment

Presentation

Social Studies

10th - 12th Grade

Hard

Created by

Joseph Anderson

FREE Resource

9 Slides • 1 Question

1

Dust Bowl

By Abigail Klenk

2

​Commodity Prices Plunge

  • For many farmers, their situations went from bad to worse.

  • Debts piled up and crops prices dropped even further.

    • A bushel of wheat went from $2.16 to $0.38

  • Many farmers lost their farms and traveled about the country looking for work.

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3

Tenant Farmers

  • Between 1930-1934, roughly ​one million farmers failed to pay their mortgages and lost their farms

  • Banks foreclosed on their farms and repossessed their farming equipment.

    • Banks sold what they could at public auctions​

  • Ten​ant farmers: farmers who stayed in rural areas working for bigger landowners instead of themselves.

4

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5

Draw

Draw a picture of some 1930s farmers and tractors

6

Drought and Dust

  • Normal rainfall rarely exceeded 20 inches a year.

  • There were no irrigation practices, like rivers dams, to help

  • ​Bad farming practices

    • Farmers plowed under natural grasses to plant winter wheat

    • Plains grasses prevented topsoil from blowing away during droughts​

  • Drought, loose topsoil, and high winds led to the Dust Bowl disaster

7

Dust Bowl

  • High winds kicked up dust storms that blew towards the east​

  • Clouds of dust and dirt could reach 8,000 feet high and move as fast 100 mph.

  • These clouds would block out the sun

  • Cattle and birds died, fish suffocated, covered rivers

  • Dirt seeped into houses, covering everything with a layer of grime and dust.

8

Map of the Dust Bowl

  • ​Dust storms started in the southern Great Plains

    • Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico, and Colorado​

  • "dirty thirties"​

9

Okies

  • Many farm families had no choice but to migrant further west.

  • Although only some came from Oklahoma, these migrants were called Okies.

  • Okies headed to California, Oregon, or Washington to find jobs. Others headed to the Midwestern states

  • 800, 000 people migrated out of

    Texas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and

    Arkansas alone.

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10

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Dust Bowl

By Abigail Klenk

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