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Causes Of The Dust Bowl In To Kill A Mockingbird

Decent Essays

In To Kill A Mockingbird the characters discuss problems in their world that have relevance to them. One topic mentioned by multiple people is how farmers like Mr. Cunningham are poor and pay with crops or food instead of money. A cause of how poor Mr. Cunningham could be the Dust Bowl because the story mentions how hot and dry it is in Maycomb.
The Dust Bowl was a period of severe “dust” storms that damaged agriculture in parts of the U.S. The Dust Bowl was caused from drought, erosion, and over using the land. For example the book mentions “Somehow, it was hotter then: a black dog suffered on a summer’s day…”(Lee,5) .It affected farmers in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado, and Kansas but the storm affected nearly every farmer from all over the country. For example the farmer Mr.Cunningham didn’t have much money so, “The Cunninghams never took anything they can’t pay back…”(Lee, 22) .The Dust Bowl caused tens of thousands of families to abandon their homes. This caused even more problems to the U.S. economy. …show more content…

California didn’t welcome the farmers because there were more of them than jobs. This caused Franklin D. Roosevelt to enact the first of several mortgage and farming relief acts. The Dust Bowl caused thousands of farmers to lose their jobs, adding to the Great Depression unemployment rates throughout the U.S. The Dust Bowl could have been prevented by many different ways but major ways that could have helped were farming less and rotating crops. The Dust Bowl could happen again but now our farmers are more aware and are careful to what they plant, and the Dust Bowl was a combination of us and weather

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