Dust storm approaching during the Dust Bowl |
The Dust Bowl of the 1930s was not only a weather disaster, but also an economical disaster. The terrible drought that caused the Dust Bowl coincided with the worse depression in U.S. history, the Great Depression. Dust so thick would completely block the sun and cause streetlights to come in the middle of the day.
The Dust Bowl was one of the worst natural disasters and agricultural disasters in American history. When the rains stopped and the drought and winds came, the crops did not grow and the top soil blew away.
Some of the dust storms were so bad they
were called “black blizzards”. The dust was so thick that dust from Kansas would darken the daytime skies in Boston and New York City. The Dust Bowl was so bad that the entire
decade was nicknamed the dirty 30s.
The Causes of the Dust Bowl
The Dust Bowl was
caused by several different factors that all seemed to come together at the
same time. The reasons for this disaster didn’t just happen overnight, they had
been building up for at least a decade. Over planting of crops during World War
I, the government said to plant more and the farmers did.
After World War I,
things were great, the prices for crops were good and the rains came. In order
to plant more crops, farmers were buying new land and equipment on credit. New
technologies were developed that farmers used to tear up land even faster.
The
farmers didn’t rotate crops nor did they leave areas of native grasses, they
just dug up everything and planted crops. Some people started saying this is
all wrong. The ground is now upside down. And it was. The native grasses were
now underneath and the dirt on top.
This area of the United States was primarily in the Great Plains states, from the Rocky Mountains eastward to the high plains. Early
travelers called this the Great American Desert and it was labeled that way on early U.S. maps.
The entire area was mainly covered in
native grasses. These grasses had been there for thousands of years, keeping
the soil healthy and in place.
In 1931 there was a
record wheat harvest, which depressed the price of wheat. In order to make
payments on land and machinery on time and to make up for the lower price of
wheat, farmers had to plant more and more which meant tearing up the land
further.
Farmers were warned
by Native American Indians and also old time cattle ranchers that had known
that land for many years, not to tear up the native grasses.
But the farmers
had to by now and continued to plow under even more native grasslands and plant
crops. Soil conservation practices had to be abandoned so that extra crops
could be planted to meet payments as the price fell for wheat and other crops.
The Facts of the Dust Bowl
By the early 1930s
the Great Depression had hit the country and at this same time a severe drought
had started in the Great
Plains. The rains
didn’t come anymore as expected. In the high plains, the 1930s were known as
the Dirty 30s.
The Soil
Conservation Service described the area of the severe drought as in western Kansas, eastern Colorado, the Oklahoma panhandle and the Texas panhandle.
There were 14
severe dust storms in 1932 and in 1933 there were 38 of them reported. In 1937
there were 134 dust storms. These dust storms were called black blizzards.
By 1934, The
Yearbook of Agriculture announces that 100 million acres have lost all or most
of their topsoil, another 125 million acres are about to and 35 million acres
cannot grow crops of any kind.
On May 9,
1934, a major dust
storm started over the northern plains of Montana and the Dakotas and by night it had reached Chicago dumping an estimated 6,000 tons of dust.
By
the next morning the dust had reached Boston and New York where the streetlights came on at midday and cars had to use headlights. The dust
storm was 1,800 miles wide.
Sunday, April 14, 1935 was the worst dust storm, being called
Black Sunday. The day after this storm, an AP reporter used the term “Dust
Bowl” for the first time.
April 19, 1935 in Washington D. C., a group of senators
were in a meeting about the situation in the Plains states. Bored and not
paying attention, one of them looked outside and said that it is getting dark
outside as the sun disappeared behind the cloud of dust that started 2,000
miles to the west five days earlier on Black Sunday.
By the
spring of 1935, people began to do die of what was called dust pneumonia and in
1938 Woody Guthrie wrote a song called “Dust Pneumonia Blues”.
During the dust
storms, the static electricity was so bad it would short out cars leaving
people stranded in the middle of these dust storms.
By December 1935,
experts had estimated that 850 million tons of topsoil had blown off of the
southern plains.
About 25% of the
population left the affected states and by 1940, 2.5 million people had moved
out of the Plains states.
Reporter Ernie Pyle
wrote, “If you would like to have your
heart broken, just come out here”.
The Dust Bowl Ends
The rains came
again in the fall of 1939 and with the start of World War II in 1941, the price
of crops were rising. New farming and conservation techniques were learned and
put into practice. In the middle 1950s another severe drought hit the same
area.
There were dust storms, but the lessons learned from the dirty 30s saved
the area from having another Dust Bowl.
Historian Robert
Worster wrote, "The ultimate meaning
of the dust storms of the 1930s was that America as
a whole, not just the plains, was badly out of balance with its natural
environment. Unbounded optimism about the future, careless disregard of
nature's limits and uncertainties, uncritical faith in Providence,
devotion to self-aggrandizement - all these were national as well as regional
characteristics."
Copyright © 2009 Sam Montana
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