Section 10.2

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Section 10.2 The Dream Foreclosed

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Section 10.2. The Dream Foreclosed. Today’s Agenda. 10.2 Slide Show Presentations Homework Finish reading Chapter 10.2 & begin 10.3 Quiz on Chapter 10 Thursday (40-50 points). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Section 10.2

Page 1: Section 10.2

Section 10.2

The Dream Foreclosed

Page 2: Section 10.2

Today’s Agenda

• 10.2 Slide Show

• Presentations

• Homework

• Finish reading Chapter 10.2 & begin 10.3

• Quiz on Chapter 10 Thursday (40-50 points)

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"And then the dispossessed were drawn west- from Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico; from Nevada

and Arkansas, families, tribes, dusted out, tractored out. Car-loads, caravans, homeless and hungry; twenty

thousand and fifty thousand and a hundred thousand and two hundred thousand. They streamed over the

mountains, hungry and restless - restless as ants, scurrying to find work to do - to lift, to push, to pull, to pick,

to cut - anything, any burden to bear, for food. The kids are hungry. We got no place to live. Like ants scurrying for

work, for food, and most of all for land."

- John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath, 1939

• What is Steinbeck talking about?

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ObjectivesAt the end of this lesson you should

be able to:• Define and describe the Dust Bowl• Define foreclosure and Penny auction• Define Okie and list 3 characteristics of their life• Compare the effects of the Depression on tenant

farmers with urban workers• Describe a Hooverville in a short paragraph• Describe how the role of fathers and mothers

were affected by the Depression• Describe the impact of the Depression socially,

physiologically and nutritionally

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What was the Dust Bowl?• ecological and human disaster

that took place in the southwestern Great Plains region (Oklahoma/Texas) 1933-1934

• Term coined because as the land dried up, great clouds of dust and sand, carried by the wind, covered everything

• caused by – misuse of land – years of sustained drought

• Millions of acres of farmland became useless

• hundreds of thousands migrated to California

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Dust Bowl RefugeesThe Okies

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What happened to farms? • Overproduction + falling

prices = inability for farmers to pay their mortgages

• Banks foreclosed (repossessed) farms and auctioned them off

• Penny Auction- collective effort of farmers to ‘buy’ foreclosed farms/equipment at low prices and return it to original owner

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Who were the Okies?• Okie = migrating homeless

Midwestern farmers (some from Oklahoma) of 1930s

• Migrated mainly to California along Route 66.

• 15% of the Oklahoma population left• Called the migrants "Okies",

regardless of whether they were actually from Oklahoma

• term was disrespectful and used in a derogatory manner, with connotations of homeless, poverty, hickishness

• Lived outside of towns in Hoovervilles

• Paid starvation wages for laborious farm labor

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California: The Promised Land

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What happened to tenant farmers during the Depression?

• Rented land that they farmed

• To get prices to rise government encouraged farm owners to let some land lie fallow

• Gave owners $ to buy better equipment

– No longer needed farm laborers

• Owners threw tenants off land

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How were Mexican American treated during the Depression?

• Discriminated against

• More than 12 thousand (some US citizens) rounded up in 1931-34 and repatriated (sent back to Mexico)

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Dust Bowl

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What are Hoovervilles?

• About 2 million homeless in ’32

• Constructed temporary shelters

• Conditions varied

• Some squalid, garbage/rat laden

• Others humble but clean

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Hoovervilles

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How was the role of the father affected?• Traditionally the provider• Unemployment = lost

status, self-esteem• No longer the

breadwinner• Some sank into

depression• Abandonment• Others sought work daily• Kept busy (see quote on

page 341)• Painted house for 2 years

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How was the role of mother affected?• Traditional role as

homemaker bolstered• Depression less drastic

effect• Controlled family budget

and rationing• Domestic industries revived• Illegal for more than 1

member of family to work for gov.

• 25% increase in female employment

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Invisible Scar

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What was the “Invisible Scar”?

• Psychological fear of impending disaster

–Tore some families apart

–Ashamed, less social

–Lack of hope • Marriage, children put off

–Malnourishment common

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Families Fall Apart

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Bruce Springsteen's Ghost of Tom

Joad