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The stubbornest Americans: A tale of the farmers who refused to flee the Dust Bowl.


The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great America Great America is a name shared by two American amusement parks opened by the Marriott Corporation in 1976.

Both parks are now under different ownership and are known as:
  • Great America (California) - Santa Clara, California, now owned by Cedar Fair.
 Dust Bowl

By Timothy Egan Houghton Mifflin Houghton Mifflin Company is a leading educational publisher in the United States. The company's headquarters is located in Boston's Back Bay. It publishes textbooks, instructional technology materials, assessments, reference works, and fiction and non-fiction for both young readers , $28.00

For several days just after Christmas 2005, a series of wildfires raged in Oklahoma and northern Texas. Caused by a devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 combination of strong, dry winds and the worst drought to hit the region in half a century, the fires claimed five lives, consumed dozens of homes, and literally wiped several communities off the map before being brought under control early in the new year. Though area residents are no strangers to hardship--they've been hit by devastating tornadoes and price fluctuations on the oil market--the holiday timing of the blazes must have seemed especially cruel.

The Worst Hard Time, journalist Timothy Egan's new book, recalls another period of adversity on the southern Plains: the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. In contrast to the recent wildfires, however, the difficulties of that earlier event spanned an entire decade and killed off not merely small towns, but also entire counties in parts of Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico New Mexico, state in the SW United States. At its northwestern corner are the so-called Four Corners, where Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah meet at right angles; New Mexico is also bordered by Oklahoma (NE), Texas (E, S), and Mexico (S). , Texas, and Oklahoma. More than a quarter of a million people eventually deserted the region, some moving merely to less hard-hit areas within the affected states, while others trudged westward to the supposed promised land of California, where they hoped to find work in fields and orchards. Their migrations, of course, survive in the writings of novelist John Steinbeck Noun 1. John Steinbeck - United States writer noted for his novels about agricultural workers (1902-1968)
John Ernst Steinbeck, Steinbeck
 and the iconic images taken by photographer Dorothea Lange.

Unlike Lange and Steinbeck, however, Egan focuses on those who stayed behind, either because of their determination to endure or their utter lack of opportunities elsewhere. Many of them took great pride in their decisions to remain in the Dust Bowl, such as the editor of the local newspaper in Dalhart, Texas Dalhart is the county seat of Dallam CountyGR6 in the U.S. state of Texas. The population was 7,237 at the 2000 census. Founded in 1901, Dalhart is named for its location on the border of Dallam and Hartley counties. , who founded the Last Man Club during the direst years of catastrophe. The organization distributed membership cards that began, "Barring Acts of God or unforeseen personal tragedy or family illness, I pledge myself to be the Last Man to leave this country...." (As it happened, the editor himself wound up abandoning Dalhart in the late 1930s, although he decamped only to Amarillo--some 80 miles to the south--and not, say, to the West Coast). It is precisely Egan's attention to those who remained when others fled that makes The Worst Hard Time such a welcome addition to the extensive literature about the Dust Bowl.

Although Egan supplies the book with essential context, he builds his story around a handful of central characters, some of whom (or their descendants) he managed to interview. Their narratives bring the disaster vividly to life. There is George Ehrlich, a German from Russia who escaped the tyranny of the czars and suffered through the American anti-German prejudice of World War I only to see his Oklahoma homestead devoured by drought, heat, and blowing dirt. There is Hazel Lucas Shaw, a farmer's wife farmer’s wife

makes hell too hot even for the devil, who sends her back home. [Am. Balladry: “The Devil and the Farmer’s Wife”]

See : Shrewishness
 living in the no man's land of the Oklahoma Panhandle “Neutral Strip” redirects here. For the area in Louisiana sometimes known as the Neutral Strip, see Sabine Free State.
The Oklahoma Panhandle is the extreme western region of the state of Oklahoma, comprising Cimarron County, Texas County, and Beaver County.
, whose burial of her grandmother and infant daughter--both dead from dust pneumonia--coincided with Black Sunday (April 14, 1935), quite literally the darkest day of the Dust Bowl. And there is Bam White, a beleaguered be·lea·guer  
tr.v. be·lea·guered, be·lea·guer·ing, be·lea·guers
1. To harass; beset: We are beleaguered by problems.

2. To surround with troops; besiege.
 farmer who became the face of the tragedy when he accepted $25 (as much as he could make in two months) from filmmaker Pare Lorentz to drag a horse-drawn plow across his devastated dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 fields. That featured sequence from "The Plow That Broke the Plains," a government-sponsored documentary, served notice of the heartland's desperation, though White's neighbors later ostracized him for publicizing their misery.

Considering Egan's expertise as an environmental writer, it comes as no surprise that--in addition to his human cast--he highlights the natural world as a critical actor in the story. Describing the Plains on the eve On the Eve (Накануне in Russian) is the third novel by famous Russian writer Ivan Turgenev, best known for his short stories and the novel Fathers and Sons.  of their ruin, he writes: "The land would not die an easy death. Fields were bare, scraped to hardpan hardpan, condition of the soil or subsoil in which the soil grains become cemented together by such bonding agents as iron oxide and calcium carbonate, forming a hard, impervious mass.  in some places, heaving in others." Such attentiveness is essential, for the Dust Bowl's key lesson taught that the earth does indeed have its limits, and those who push beyond them do so at their peril. In Egan's capable hands, swirling storms of topsoil become memorable characters--menacing, unpredictable, and relentless. Likewise, swarms of grasshoppers Grasshoppers may refer to one of the following:
  • Grasshoppers (Caelifera), a suborder of insects
  • Grasshopper-Club Zürich, a Swiss football club.
 descending upon a rare patch of carefully-cultivated vegetation conjure nightmarish images of an advancing army. Even his descriptions of less dramatic features of the Great Plains environment--such as shelterbelts (rows of trees meant to shield crops from the wind) or underground aquifers--create vibrant images for the reader.

For all its merits, The Worst Hard Time has its shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
, some of them substantial. First, Egan's attempts to capture the local idiom in his own narrative voice are distracting in the extreme. Instead of explaining that Plains farmers came to recognize the problems with their methods of cultivation, Egan writes they "got religion" Similarly, wealthy ranchers are not cattlemen, but rather "fancy-pantsers." And as for the growing rural-urban divide of the Jazz Age Noun 1. Jazz Age - the 1920s in the United States characterized in the novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald as a period of wealth, youthful exuberance, and carefree hedonism , Egan notes that "[t]he country had one foot in the fields, one foot in a bathtub of gin in the city." For those who live in the heartland (and probably even for those who do not), such affectations seem awkward and condescending, however well-intentioned the author might be (and from reading his acknowledgements, there is no doubting Egan's warmth and sincerity). Mercifully, Egan abandons this tic about a third of the way into the book.

Furthermore, it is a losing proposition to describe the region in hyperbole, as Egan is inclined to do, starting with the title itself. There is no doubting the horrors of the Dust Bowl--Egan and others have made that abundantly clear--but catastrophes have served as a defining aspect of life on the Plains since the era of white settlement began in earnest after 1862. For instance, the clouds of Rocky Mountain locusts that swept the continent's midsection mid·sec·tion
n.
A middle section, especially the midriff of the body.
 annually from 1873-1877 reduced thousands of residents of Nebraska, among other states, to the brink of starvation. In more recent times, the ascendancy of industrial agriculture has driven people off the land in ever-growing numbers, forcing schools to close and residents to migrate to the cities, so some counties now have fewer residents than at any point in the last 100 years. Put simply, life has never been easy here, so to set one era above the others as "the worst hard time" is as troublesome as elevating the soldiers of one particular war to the status of "the greatest generation."

Most significantly, Egan's reluctance to extend at least some of the blame for the disaster to the small farmers themselves is problematic. To be sure, it is proper to excoriate ex·co·ri·ate
v.
To scratch or otherwise abrade the skin by physical means.



ex·cori·a
 (as Egan does) the government boosters who lured homesteaders to the southern Plains on false premises, and the federal officials who responded with aching slowness to the unfolding catastrophe. However, we know from other writers--chief among them the historian Donald Worster--that a key factor in the creation of the Dust Bowl was the attitude of the cultivators, who treated the land with an unmistakable aggression (see: "sodbusting") in their quest to wring profit from the soil. While farmers may have seen few economic alternatives, they could not plead ignorance: As Egan himself notes, area cowboys and native peoples had insisted for decades that the land was fit for grazing, not farming.

Notwithstanding these misgivings, The Worst Hard Time is highly worthwhile. Egan helps correct the notion that most residents fled the Dust Bowl--in fact, the overwhelming majority stayed put--and in the process he crafts a moving, eloquent testimony to human suffering and perseverance. With the debate about the future of post-Katrina New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded  now beginning, we would do well to keep in mind that we can manipulate the natural world for only so long before it rises in revolt.

Andrew R. Graybill teaches history at the University of Nebraska. His book comparing the Texas Rangers Texas Rangers, mounted fighting force organized (1835) during the Texas Revolution. During the republic they became established as the guardians of the Texas frontier, particularly against Native Americans.  and Canada's North-West Mounted Police is forthcoming from the University of Nebraska Press.
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Title Annotation:On Political Books; The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great America Dust Bowl
Author:Graybill, Andrew R.
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book review
Date:Apr 1, 2006
Words:1321
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