migrant workers during the time of mice and men

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MIGRANT WORKERS DURING THE TIME OF MICE AND MEN

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Migrant workers During the Time of Mice and Men. Post WWI - Recession led to a drop in the market price of farm crops Great Plains farmers increased productivity through mechanization and cultivation of more land - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

MIGRANT WORKERS DURING THE TIME OF MICE AND MEN

Page 2: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

ECONOMIC TROUBLES Post WWI - Recession led to a drop in the

market price of farm crops Great Plains farmers increased productivity

through mechanization and cultivation of more land This required an increase in spending that

caused many farmers to become in debt. 1929 stock market crash- exacerbated the

situation, and many farmers lost their farms

Page 3: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

OUT OF WORK Tenant farmers were

turned out when economic pressure was put on large landholders.

The displaced agricultural workers, both private farmers and tenant farmers, had a hard time finding work, due to the 30% unemployment rate.

Page 4: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

THE DUST BOWL The grasslands of the Great Plains were

replaced with cultivated fields when the farmers had tried to increase productivity.

The soil lost its ability to retain moisture and nutrients and began to erode.

A seven-year drought began in 1931 was followed by dust storms in 1932 and many of the farms literally dried up creating what became known as the "Dust Bowl."

Page 5: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

RECAP: CAUSE AND EFFECT Recession leads to

increased mechanization.

Increased mechanization leads to debt and strain on the land (The Dust Bowl).

Debt causes loss of farms and leads to farmers looking for work.

Page 6: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

HEADED FOR CALIFORNIA Driven by the Great

Depression, drought, and dust storms, thousands of farmers packed up their families and made the difficult journey to California where they hoped to find work.

Page 7: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

WHY CALIFORNIA? Mild climate allowed for

a long growing season and a diversity of crops.

Popular songs and stories exaggerated California as the “promised land.”

Flyers advertising a need for farm workers in California were distributed in areas hard hit by unemployment.

Page 8: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

OKIES Although the Dust

Bowl included many Great Plains States (including parts of Missouri), the migrants were known as "Okies."

20 percent of the workers were from Oklahoma.

Page 9: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

BROKEN DREAMS Local and state

infrastructures were already overburdened, and newly arriving migrants were too much.

Found themselves turned away at its borders

Those who were able to cross the border found that the available labor pool was disproportionate to the number of job openings that could be filled, which lead to lower wages.

Page 10: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

DITCHBANK CAMPS Even with an entire

family working, migrants could not support themselves on the low wages.

They set up camps along irrigation ditches in the farmers' fields.

poor sanitary conditions and public health problem.

Page 11: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

TRANSIENCE Migrants followed

the harvest around the state.

Potatoes, cotton, lemons, oranges, peas, and other crops

Tramps Hoboes

Page 12: Migrant workers  During the Time of  Mice and Men

WORKS CITED Dorothea Lange photographic images

taken from: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/amstudies/resources/dorothea_lange.html

Migrant Worker Information taken from The Library Congress American Memory: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/afctshtml/tsme.html