Episodes
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Reaping the Whirlwind
S1 E2 - 1h 55m
Black Sunday was only halfway through the decade-long crisis. The storms continued. The Great Depression still affected people. Government programs were instituted to help. Learn what FDR’s administration did to try to keep the southern Plains from becoming a North American Sahara desert. Find out why some residents finally decided they had to give up and move somewhere else and how some held on.
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The Great Plow-Up
S1 E1 - 1h 55m
The grasslands of the southern Plains were rapidly turned into wheat fields. Then following the early years of the drought, storms killed crops and livestock and literally rearranged the landscape. The worst storm of them all was on April 14, 1935—Black Sunday—a searing experience for everyone caught in it, including a young songwriter from Pampa, Texas, named Woody Guthrie.
Extras + Features
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Government Reform Programs
S1 - 5m 16s
By 1937, the Dust Bowl farmers are asking for government help in regulating the land by forcing other farmers to take better care of their soil. They even consider declaring martial law. For many farmers who had previously demonstrated independence and suspicion of government, this is a substantial ideological turnaround.
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Plows and Bubbles
S1 - 38s
Learn about the two types of plows farmers used.
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Jack Rabbits
S1 - 33s
Plagues of jack rabbits swarmed the great plains destroying everything in their path.
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Gas Money
S1 - 1m 4s
"Do you have enough gas money?" Some people moved west to get away from the storms.
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Sanora Babb's Account Beat Out by the Grapes of Wrath
S1 - 1m 16s
Sanora Babb sent chapters of her book back to New York, but John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath is so popular, that her editor recommends holding off on publication. It is eventually published in 2004, a year before her death.
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Trixie Travis Brown Talks About Black Sunday
S1 - 33s
Trixie Travis Brown Talks About Black Sunday.
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Floyd Coen Talks About Having A Big Family
S1 - 16s
Floyd Coen talks about having a big family.
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First Look | Suffocating Blackness
S1 - 20s
Survey the causes of the worst man-made ecological disaster in U.S. history: the catastrophic dust storms of the 1930s.
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Making The Dust Bowl | Uncovering the Dust Bowl
S1 - 5m 55s
Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan discuss making The Dust Bowl and the myriad hardships facing those in the Panhandle during the 1930s.
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Modern Machinery
S1 - 4m 9s
Modern machinery made farming more profitable and changed the structure of the land for growing wheat. The result was more land speculation, more acreage turned over to wheat farming, and a blind faith that the good times wouldn’t end, but warning signs were evident.
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You Gave Us Beer, Now Give Us Water
S1 - 1m 7s
FDR was greeted with signs along the road saying "You gave us beer. Now give us water."
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Buying Land
S1 - 40s
Land prices are going up and people say the climate is undergoing a permanent shift.
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