Wednesday, January 30, 2013

The Most Depressing Aspect of the Great Depression


"The Dust Bowl"

In the 1930's when everything was already going horribly wrong, dust storms scattered all over the plains of Southeastern Colorado, and Southwest Kansas, making the problems during the Great Depression even worse. "The Dust Bowl" occurred April 14, 1925 thanks to the lack of rain fall that past couple of months. The wind picked up the soil and dirt that was loose and spread it across the nation in various storms, this blew away the top soil, thus ruining the farm land. Many families trapped in their own homes, and land unable to escape the storms, after the storm it was said the dust had found its way into people homes, and it was so think people were digging buckets full of dust out of their homes. Farmer's hoped that the land they have invested so much in would return to normal, but all hope was lost when the rain never fell, thus making them move to the Pacific Coast. This made unemployment problems worse, resulting in making The Great Depression worse. It was all just bad timing.

No comments:

Post a Comment