Reaping the Whirlwind
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.
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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Dale Coen Talks About Dust Storms
S1 - 21s
Dale Coen talks about dust storms.
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Roosevelt Weather
S1 - 50s
FDR tours the Panhandle. The Dust Bowl airs on PBS November 18 and 19, 2012.
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Woody Guthrie: Okies
S1 - 2m 19s
No matter their state of origin, all newcomers were dubbed Okies when they crossed the California border. Woody Guthrie talks about the extreme poverty he had seen across the country and sings "I Ain't Got No Home (In This World Any More)".
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Relief
S1 - 6m 43s
Social worker Dorothy Williamson describes her experiences talking with victims of the Dust Bowl. What help there was came from Washington, D.C., with programs such as the CCC, NYA, or WPA.
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Wheat Will Win the War
S1 - 1m 12s
Learn about what caused "The Great Plow Up" and the slogan "Wheat Will Win the War."
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Suicides
S1 - 1m 52s
Multiple suicides took place during the Dust Bowl in the southern Great Plains.
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Heading West
S1 - 1m 30s
Some people packed up their families and headed west.
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FDR Visits the Dust Bowl
S1 - 1m 37s
The rains followed FDR on his second trip to the Dust Bowl.
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Robert Boots McCoy Talks About The Jack Rabbits
S1 - 49s
Robert Boots McCoy talks about the jack rabbits.
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Extended Look
S1 - 1m 43s
The Dust Bowl chronicles the worst man-made ecological disaster in American history, in which the frenzied wheat boom of the Great Plow-Up, followed by a decade-long drought during the 1930s nearly swept away the breadbasket of the nation..
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Dale Coen Reads a Poem by his Mother
S1 - 1m 37s
Dale Coen reads a poem by his mother about why she moved to the Great Plains.
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The Depression Comes to the Southern Plains
S1 - 5m 45s
Wheat prices continue to fall and a drought begins, farmers elect a democrat, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, for president.
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