"Dust Bowl" Essays and Research Papers

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    GKE Task 1

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    GKE TASK 1 Western Governors University For the first of my two environmental/geography factors contributed to both the expansion and development of the United States‚ I have chosen the gold rush. The reason I have chosen this as one of my two choices is because I use to live in Grass Valley‚ California very close to Sutter’s Mill. As a child I would visit Sutter’s Mill often. Even now the town has retained the western feel of the gold rush

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    Cited: Bonnifield‚ Paul. “1930 ’s Dust Bowl.” The Dust Bowl Men‚ Dirt and Depression. 5 Oct. 2007. Web. 4 Nov. 2010. Kelly‚ Martin. “Top 5 Causes of the Great Depression.” About.com:American History‚ 2010. Web. 4 Nov. 2010. Kelly‚ Martin. “What is the Smoot-Hawley Tariff.” About.com:American History

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    Leo Hart Unsung Hero

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    from Hart’s school. The Dust Bowl was a time where the mid-South states were plagued by dust storms. Families fled the area and most of them wound up in California where the current residents thought they shouldn’t be educated. Leo Hart thought otherwise. Hart impacted many Dust Bowl refugee families by taking actions when others didn’t‚ building a school for Okie children‚ and including important life skill classes. Leo Hart’s life was pretty normal before the Dust Bowl—everyone’s lives changed

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    The 1920’s was practically the spending period for America‚ we had just gotten out of a war and the citizens thought they could buy all these luxuries (refrigerators or radios for example) and say they’ll pay the bank back‚ but never really did. According to PBS.org; on October 24‚ 1929 the stock market had crashed‚ leaving all the rich people broke and the poor people dead broke. When March of 1930 came around already more than 3.2 million people were unemployed. While business owners were hit hard

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    Grapes Of Wrath

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    The Grapes of Wrath‚ describes the difficulty of migrant labors during the Great Depression. Written by‚ John Steinbeck‚ this novel went on to receive many awards. Generally viewed as Steinbeck’s best and most striving novel‚ The Grapes of Wrath was published in 1939. Stating the story of an expelled Oklahoma family and their fight to form a reestablished life in California at the peak of the Great Depression‚ the book captures the sorrow and anguish of the land throughout this time-period. The

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    Grapes Of Wrath

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    every high school student should read. The subject matter isn’t the issue‚ it’s the understanding of the desperation during the time period‚ that’s most high school students don’t have. Many students in high school haven’t yet learned about the dust bowl‚ and it helps to have a basic knowledge of the time period when you read a piece of historical fiction. With information of the time‚ it’s easier to understand the feeling of desperation and devastating fact that many lost their livelihoods and homes

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    Of Mice and Men

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    brought many rural poor and migrant agricultural workers from the Great Plains states‚ such as Oklahoma‚ Texas‚ and Kansas‚ to California. · a seven-year drought that began in 1931‚ turned once fertile grasslands into a desertlike region known as the Dust Bowl. · What is important about the title? · What is the famous reference? · Was the title misleading? · What are some themes in the story and how do they relate to the plot and characters? In the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck‚ setting

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    Depression began to change everything people had grown old knowing‚ and it forced everyone to deal with dramatic alterations to their lives that left them with no options except acceptance. America then witnessed the mass migration of farmers from the Dust Bowl out to the west towards California and the required intervention by the federal government in stepping up and taking responsibility for the socioeconomic issues plaguing the disintegrating nation. This was profoundly illustrated throughout John Steinbeck’s

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    Effects of capitalism

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    the family who moved out west were the Joads. During 1930’s‚ Midwest was hit hard by the great-depression. And to aggravate these effects dust bowls were sprawling all over Midwest. The Joads were immensely devastated by these conditions in ‘The Grapes of Wrath’ by John Steinbeck. First the author shows how the all over Midwest families were the target of dust bowls because the land was over used and crops weren’t rotated. Because people couldn’t grow their own crops‚ they had to borrow money from lenders

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    to progress with great similarity. The Dust Bowl was a period in the 1930s when the prairies of both the United States and Canada suffered environmental damage from intense dust storms caused by severe drought (“About the Dust Bowl”). The nutrient topsoil‚ that was essential for a successful harvest‚ was eroded away by the wind causing farmers to be unsuccessful in yielding a crop‚ in turn decreasing their incomes to nearly nothing (“The Dust Bowl”) Unable to make profit‚ farmers were faces

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