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Route 66 and the Dust Bowl Migration. Dennis Rees Teacher-Consultant Arizona Geographic Alliance. In the 1930’s, several factors came together to create a region known as the Dust Bowl.
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Route 66 and the Dust Bowl Migration Dennis Rees Teacher-Consultant Arizona Geographic Alliance
In the 1930’s, several factors came together to create a region known as the Dust Bowl.
The Great Depression began in 1929. Wheat prices fell and farmers started plowing more land to pay back loans.
Decades of poor farming techniques had removed the native ground cover. Lack of ground cover and failure to practice crop rotation resulted in land that was exposed to the forces of erosion.
It is estimated that 200 dust storms ravaged the region from 1932 to 1937.
Encouraged by stories, handbills, and posters promising work out West, the displaced farmers and their families began their migration.
Established in 1926, Route 66 was the highway most of them used to make this journey.
The migrants loaded their families and the essentials needed for the journey into cars and trucks,
Towns and service stations along the highway provided gasoline, water, food, and car parts.
until they reached the Colorado River and crossed into California.
After crossing the desert and a mountain range, they entered the Promised Land, the agricultural valleys of central California.
Most of the work was seasonal, picking crops. The migrants traveled from harvest to harvest.
The lucky ones got to live in camps run by the Department of Agriculture.
Some lived in camps created by wealthy landowners where the company store quickly ate up any money they made.
The stress of the journey and the uncertainty of life in California showed on the faces of the migrants.
Two works of historical fiction describe this time and journey.
Sources for this power point: Library of Congress The Grapes of Wrath 2010 Arizona Geographic Alliance Route 66 Advanced Summer Institute