Back then people farmed to get their profit, especially in the southern plains of the U.S. People's lives revolved around farming. If they didn't get their crops planted on time, there wouldn't be food on the table for the family. But “When people mismanage agricultural lands or when natural forces otherwise conspire to destroy soil, the results can be devastating. One of the most dramatic examples occurred in what came to be known as the dust bowl. This was the name given to a wide area covering Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and even agricultural parts of Colorado during the years 1934 and 1935. Over the course of a few months, once-productive farmlands turned into worthless fields of stubble and dust, good for almost nothing and highly vulnerable to violent wind erosion” (Allaby.) …show more content…
Banks,factories, shops closed and farm halted production. MIllions of people left jobless and penniless. This also caused significant effects on people's beliefs and on government policies. some nations changed their leaders and types of government. Many people didn't trust the economy which caused people to withdraw their money from the banks. Thousands of people died from disease that the Dust Bowl caused, such as dust pneumonia,rickets, valley fever, and