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Buried in Dust

The History of the Dust Bowl for Kids

James Smith

EPUB
ca. 7,49

SL Editions img Link Publisher

Kinder- und Jugendbücher / Sachbücher / Sachbilderbücher

Beschreibung

The sky turned black. The wind roared like a beast. The land, once rich with golden wheat, crumbled into dust and vanished into the air. Families sealed their homes with wet rags, covered their faces with masks, and watched helplessly as the world they knew disappeared under towering storms of dirt.

The 1930s brought one of the worst environmental disasters in American history. A massive drought, combined with years of poor farming practices, turned the Great Plains into a barren wasteland. Dust storms swallowed entire towns, crops failed, and thousands of families were forced to leave their homes in search of a better life.

This book takes young readers on a gripping journey through the events that shaped the Dust Bowl era. It explores what caused the disaster, how families fought to survive, and the hard lessons learned that changed farming forever. From the rise of dust storms to the desperate migration west, each chapter brings history to life with vivid storytelling and fascinating details.

The past holds warnings for the future, and the story of this disaster is more relevant than ever. Understanding what happened and why can help prevent the mistakes of the past from happening again. The land is strong, but only if people take care of it.

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Schlagwörter

Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1930s history, stock market crash, land conservation, dust storms, Great Plains farming, New Deal programs, topsoil loss, children's history book, drought, wind erosion, Black Sunday, agricultural history, environmental disaster, Dust Bowl, extreme weather events, farming history, historical nonfiction, Great Depression, Dust Bowl migration, US history for kids, migrant workers, Okie migration, soil conservation, American history, dust pneumonia, Route 66