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~ THE DUST BOWL ~
AND
THE GREAT DEPRESSION  
AND
~ THE NOSTALGIC ROUTE 66 ~


,- - - I SURE DID ~ PASTOR BILL ~ GOD BLESS Y'ALL


Music Now Playing :
A SONG WRITTEN BY
Mrs. Mary Sullivan
~ 1940-1941 ~
Called : SUNNY CALIFORNIA
     So Please Remember To Keep On, Keeping On !    


  NOTE: EVEN AS YOU MOVE YOUR CURSOR YOU WILL
FIND THAT MOSES AND THE EAGLES IN FLIGHT ARE
FOLLOWING JESUS !


~ THE DUST BOWL ~
OF THE 1930's  

They called them Okies and Arkies. Soon many of these refugees from the " Dust Bowl " were called names a whole lot worse then that when Arizona and California became inundated by people desperate for work, any kind of work. Almost every American and many people around the world caught a glimpse of the Okies and the misery of these people through the book and movie " The Grapes Of Wrath. " Much more truth then fiction. They had lost almost everything they owned when their farms literally blew away with the wind.

The area called the " Dust Bowl " was the " Great Plains " region, included parts of Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado. The dust bowl itself, was a man made disaster helped by years of sustained drought. Before farmers came to the dust bowl area it was covered by native grasses with roots that held the soil in place in spite of a climate that alternating between droughts and occasional periods of torrential rains.

In the late 1800's homesteaders begin moving into the area by the hundreds. They planted thousands of acres of wheat and row crops and started cattle ranching. Together, the farming and ranching exposed the soil to the winds that constantly sweep over that area. The organic lighter parts of the soil were carried great distances by the winds. In some cases these cloud of wind borne soil particles darkening the sky for hundreds of miles, while the heavier materials such as sand drifted against buildings, fences, and even hiding some farm equipment that sat idle for awhile. Millions of acres of farmland became useless, and hundreds of thousands of people were forced to leave their homes to seek a source of income.

California was inundated by a huge number of these people because the farmers there kept advertising in the dust bowl areas for cheap labor. " Plenty of jobs for everyone in California, " the advertisements said and the devastated Okies and Arkies loaded up their cars and trucks and left for the promised land. Although the " Okies " have been characterized as the main group of people effected by the Dust Bowl thanks to the Grapes of Wrath, Texans living on both the High Plains and the Lower Plains were equally affected. One has only to compare the 1940 and 1930 census figures for those two regions to glimpse something of the magnitude of the migration resulting from the Dust Bowl.

An Example Of The Far Reaching Effects Of The Dust Bowl, Los Angeles County, was one of the most seriously hit areas of the State of California. In 1936 during the refuge onslaught 456,000 people ( 19.26 per cent ) of Los Angeles county's estimated population of 2,366,904 were on relief. It was reported to the Federal authorities that 2,946,614 persons had entered California by automobile during that one 12-month period. Of that total 74 percent of the people indicated the Southern California area as their destination, and a large number of these persons needed manual employment. Approximately 70,000 persons, mostly families from the dust bowl areas, overtaxed relief and health agencies in the San Joaquin valley.

The situation got so bad that the Los Angeles county Supervisors sponsored a plan to give county jobs to county residents only and to demand that the State and Federal governments care for indigent persons coming in from other States. In Los Angeles county, it is asserted, the relief costs jumped from 92 cents per capita in 1925 to $44.52 in 1936, or $87.51 per taxpayer. The per capita cost was being greatly increased even more by the horde of newcomers that were still arriving.


Men in recreation hall at Tulare F.S.A.
[ Farm Security Adminstration ]
Camp Visalia, California -1940

THE GREAT DEPRESSION  

To The Depths Of Desperation



Franklin D Roosevelt, Who Led Us Through One Of The Darkest Periods In This Nations History

The Great Depression Of The 1930's



" THE GREAT DEPRESSION "

It's hard to realize now, the condition that this country had reached after the Stock Market Crash of 1929. Few historians would disagree with the fact that one of the greatest catastrophes America ever faced was the Great Depression of the 1930's. There was rampant unemployment and economic despair throughout the whole country. Americans were faced with the typical depression horrors ranging from unemployment to starvation. Thousands of Americans stood in long lines everyday just to get a free bowl of soup or a loafs of bread that were distributed by churches and other charitable organizations.

Many country people during that time ended up eating what they called " Hoover Hogs " to stay alive. President Herbert Hoover was blamed for the Great Depression by much of the population. Then after many citizens were reduced to eating baked armadillos and opossums, they were called " Hoover Hogs. "

This was the same period of time that the Russians shifted to communism, Italy had accepted Fascism and the Germans had already started toward Nazification. In an a attempt to hold the United States together, Presidential Candidate Franklin D. Roosevelt had promised the people a " New Deal " to solve the problems of the Great Depression if he was elected President. In the early 1930's, a group of programs were initiated in an attempt to solve those problems.

The federal government had a fascination with initial names for programs even back in the 1930's. The programs that meant the most for the people were the C.C.C., W.P.A., N.R.A., S.S.A., A.A.A. and the T.V.A.

" THE C.C.C. " ( The Tree Army )

The CCC was originally established by an act of Congress in 1933 as the Emergency Conservation Work Act to provide jobs and alleviate the nations suffering due to the lack of jobs during the Great Depression. Another act in 1937 changed the name to the Civilian Conservation Corps.
When the CCC was formed they accepted young men from 18 to 25 who were physically fit, unemployed and unmarried. In 1935 the age requirement was change to from 17 to 28. The men were paid $30.00 per month, YES per month. $25.00 of that was sent home to the man's family and he received $5.00 for expenses.

The first 25,000 men were enrolled in 1933 and they had increased to 507,782 men by 1939. The average number of camps open at any one time was 1,600. The War Department administered the program and despite the " Civilian " part of it's name it was a military organization. That was probably where earned their nickname, " The Tree Army. " The men were grouped into companies which reported to District Headquarters which were associated with Army Corps commands. Its equipment was military in origin - one feature of the CCC was that the young men driving to and fro to projects in the backs of open bed Army trucks. Its officers too, were military men on active duty, Colonels and Captains and Lieutenants who had fought in the last war and would fight in the next.

During their time, the CCC men planted 2,356,000,000 trees. Yes, that's billions. A very large part of their projects were related to forestry and building camp grounds, hiking trails and roads in national forests and parks. Some of their more notable projects included the Skyline Drive in Virginia, the Pacific Crest Trail and the great Appalachian Trail.

Everybodys Dad, Brother, Uncle and Sons was in the CCC in the 30's. Like most men in the armed service, They was always broke and needed money for cigarette's and also stamps if they was going to write letters home to their familys.

" THE W.P.A. "

The W.P.A., which was established May 6, 1935,originally stood for the Works Progress Administration. The name was changed in 1939 to the Works Projects Administration. Its original purpose was to provide economic relief for the hundreds of thousands of unemployed workers during the Great Depression. Like the CCC money earned in the W.P.A. was sent to the family. The men were paid from $15.00 to $90.00 per month, depending on the job he or she had. When the job required it, housing and food were included.

In 1943, after eight years, the program was phased out. There was a couple old jokes that folk's had : One was to send 8 men and 2 shovels for each job, " 2 men shoveling, 2 on the pot, 2 a going and 2 a coming back ", the other one was : W. P. A. stood for " We Putter Around ! " That definitely was not true. During those eight years the W.P.A. built 651,087 miles of highways, repaired 124,087 bridges, constructed 125,110 public buildings, established 8,192 parks and 853 air strips. They build things like stone walls, courthouses, schools, hospitals, public drinking fountains, playgrounds and libraries with many still in use. They did much more than put shovels in workers' hands and construct buildings however. The W.P.A. provided free or inexpensive puppet shows, dance recitals, musical presentations, and dramas. They gave jobs to actors, directors, playwrights, scene designers, make-up artists, and orchestras-people who would have remained on breadlines. The W.P.A. also provided jobs to musicians, historians, dancers, actors, cartoonists, writers, and artists.

" THE N.R.A. " ( Blue Eagle )

The National Recovery Administration ( N.R.A. ), sometimes refered to as the " Blue Eagle " because of the signs that businesses were required to post to show they were in compliance with the law. The N.R.A. was supposed to establish codes for each industrial sector and, had it worked as such, would have caused a fundamental change for the role of government in business. However, the N.R.A. did not bring this change. Many people were opposed to the N.R.A. because they feared set price levels would be too high. One reason it didn't work was that large business still continued to dominate the economy because they created most of the codes. At the same time, N.R.A. labor agreements were unpopular with both small business, who feared rising costs, and labor, who felt the agreements did not go far enough. This almost universal opposition to the program, combined with the administrative problems, made it impossible for the agency to effect any fundamental changes. These problems were all solved however, when the Supreme Court declared the N.R.A. unconstitutional and shut it down.



" THE S.S.A. "

The " New Deal " did come up with one solution. It did not however, bring any immediate change. It started the trend toward a fundamental shift that has changed all of our lives. That was the Social Security Act of 1935, which began old age pensions, unemployment compensation, and aid to mothers and children.

This program was a fundamental change that has eventually developed the United States into a Welfare State. In 1935 however, it was very limited, excluding large numbers, and only the premise appeared radical. It was later expansion of the Act that changed America and the program did not actually bring any fundamental changes in the United States until after the1930's.

" THE A.A.A. "

In fairness though, there were two recovery programs that did cause real fundamental changes in the U.S.A. The first was the Agricultural Adjustment Act (A.A.A.). This was a system of government crop controls and price supports which set a new and lasting precedent

" THE T.V.A. "

The other real change also involved increased government intervention and competition with private industry. This was the T.V.A. or Tennessee Valley Authority, and other public works projects, which through which the government became directly involved in the economy. Through the T.V.A. the government was directly involved in in competition with private utilities in areas like producing electricity. This was definitely a fundamental shift in government policy. These two exceptions are the only instances of the New Deal bringing lasting change.