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    The Dust Bowl refers to the period of time during which the Great Plains was devastated by severe dust storms and drought. This caused widespread agricultural failure, particularly in the areas hardest hit: large portions of Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, Kansas, and New Mexico. At the same time, The Great…

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    The Great Depression of the 1930's deeply affected the Braddock family and millions of others following the stock market crash. The Braddock family posses a story of overcoming difficult obstacles. Jimmy Braddock, the heavyweight championships, experienced some bad luck for a while and had his boxing license taken away. As a result, he struggled to place food on the table for his family. The kids were starting to become sick and Mae, Jimmy's wife, started to become hopeless. The Great Depression…

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    to lift the top soil until everything was covered in a copious layer of silt. Not only, had the winds displaced the top soil, but they had had also displaced many families as well. While, countless farmers had been suffering along for decades, the dust bowl buried them financially. Under those circumstances, many homes were foreclosed on, leaving families with few choices. Consequently, for farmers the only comprehensible answer was to move, generally to California. “Handbills, or flyers,…

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    The Great Depression was an extreme time of struggle for not only the economy of America, but also the American people of every race. The Great Depression took place from 1929- 1939. One of the main reasons of what led to the Great Depression was the crash of the stock market. The crash itself propelled and drove Wall Street workers straight into a major fear and nightmare that was thought and imagined to never come. Throughout the years that came “Consumer spending and investment dropped,…

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    The Dust Bowl Benton Berger The dust bowl was a drastic time for “the breadbasket of the USA” (Western U.S.A.) The dust bowl was the result of farmers trying to get the most money possible and not using correct farming practices. Many people had to abandon homes and farmland. The dust bowl started when farmers were trying to make more money, caused many things for people, and had a bad outcome on the land for a long time. The beginning of the dust bowl may have been in the 1930s but one cause…

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    Dust Bowl In The 1930s

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    It is completely mind-blowing to realize that the Dust Bowl actually happened in the United States not too long ago! The hardships that these families endured while living there, like losing their family farms and many of their belongings, is heart-breaking. What is even sadder is that the banks and government acted like they didn’t know who was to blame for the evicting! The social and economic issues of the 1930s were very problematic and the programs of the New Deal attempted to help get…

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    Dust Storms In The 1930's

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    behind, the book “To Kill A Mockingbird” was published in 1960. There were a lot of things that occurred in that time period that relate to this book, such as The Dust Bowl. Crops died so people didn’t have a lot of money, which is the connection with this book and The Dust Bowl. The Dust Bowl, known as the Dirty 30’s, was a period of dust storms that greatly damaged the ecology and agriculture of the United States and Canadian Prairies during 1930 through 1940. Severe drought and a failure to…

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    Is having a dream an illusion as a motivation for a better future? Almost everything around us symbolize more than what they appear to be. In the novella, “Of Mice and Men”, by John Steinbeck, the author repeats Lennie and George's dream throughout the novella to show its illusory. He does this by describing their dream too perfect to be possible. Their dream is an illusion, that they use as a motivation for a better tomorrow. In the beginning of the novella, Steinbeck introduces Lennie…

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    Cesar Chavez was an inspirational figure in history who used civil disobedience to raise more respect for farm workers all throughout America. After his family lost their farm due to the great economic collapse as known as the Great Depression, they became migrant farm workers. The Chavez family along with other migrant farmer families were paid at the minimum wage, even though they experienced harsh physical labor. Cesar Chavez immediately recognized this was not right, and knew it needed to…

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    Carlson, Eric W. "Symbolism in the Grapes of Wrath." College English 19.4 (1958): 172-75. Web. The article, “Symbolism in the Grapes of Wrath”, by Eric Carlson, is a detailed journal, published in College English, which explores the impact of John Steinbeck’s plentiful inclusion of prominent naturalistic symbols in the novel, and their effects on developing the theme. His main focus is the primary symbolic structure and how it is constructed, as well as examining Rose of Sharon’s pregnancy, the…

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