November 17, 2012
Ken Burns' PBS film relives horrors of the Dust Bowl
McClatchy Newspapers
The hardest hit area in the Dust Bowl was Boise City, Okla., part of the panhandle known as "No Man's Land." Here, a huge dust cloud approaches on April 15, 1935, in Boise City. "The Dust Bowl," a documentary by Ken Burns, airs tonight and Monday night on PBS.
McClatchy Newspapers
Photographer Dorothea Lange, of the New Deal-era Farm Security Administration, came across Florence Thompson and her children in a pea pickers' camp in Nipomo, Calif., in 1936. During the Great Depression, California's population grew by more than 20 percent, an increase of 1.3 million people.
Advertiser

FORT WORTH, Texas -- We've all heard stories about the Dust Bowl, the devastating decade-long drought of the 1930s.

But documentary filmmaker Ken Burns maintains that the Dust Bowl is, for the most part, a forgotten chapter of American history.

"For most people, the Dust Bowl can be summed up with some very superficial conventional wisdom, as bad storms and 'The Grapes of Wrath,'" he says. "The story is a lot more complex than that."

"The Dust Bowl," Burns' two-night, four-hour documentary, airing at 8 p.m. Nov. 18 and 19 on PBS, is provocative and enlightening. It will set the record straight once and for all.

The filmmaker and his team conducted poignant interviews with dozens of people, now in their 80s and 90s, who lived to tell about enduring the worst manmade ecological disaster in American history.

Their suffering was magnified because it coincided with the economic blow of the Great Depression.

That said, viewers won't fully appreciate the magnitude of the Dust Bowl until footage taken by an amateur filmmaker of the day is shown. In grainy black-and-white, we see a monster dust storm, hundreds of feet high, as it approaches and envelops a small town, snuffing out the sun at noon.

Seeing is believing.

To categorize this American tragedy as a decade of "bad storms" is comparable to saying that Hurricane Sandy caused a little wind and water damage.

"This was a 10-year apocalypse filled with hundreds of storms, some of which moved more dirt in one day than it took the entire excavation of the Panama Canal to move," Burns says. "For the people who lived through it, it was suffering overlaid on suffering."

The Dust Bowl tragedy was the result of extreme drought conditions, but also was a manmade catastrophe.

Before the arrival of settlers in the late 19th century, the southern plains of the United States were predominantly grasslands. But at the start of the 1900s, offers of cheap land attracted farmers. And in World War I, in the midst of a relatively wet period, a lucrative new wheat market opened up.

Recommended Stories

Copyright 2012 . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Popular Videos
The Gazette now offers Facebook Comments on its stories. You must be logged into your Facebook account to add comments. If you do not want your comment to post to your personal page, uncheck the box below the comment. Comments deemed offensive by the moderators will be removed, and commenters who persist may be banned from commenting on the site.
Advertisement - Your ad here
Get Daily Headlines by E-Mail
Sign up for the latest news delivered to your inbox each morning.
Advertisement - Your ad here
News Videos
Advertisement - Your ad here
Advertisement - Your ad here