The American author who wrote about plains farmers leaving their homes is Willa Cather. In her novel "My Ántonia," she vividly depicts the lives of settlers in the Great Plains and the challenges they face, including abandonment and migration. Cather's work captures the struggles and resilience of these farmers as they navigate the harsh realities of frontier life.
plains farmers~apex
plains farmers
During the Great Depression years, in the Dust Bowl states, located in the Great Plains, dust and dirt 'devoured' many crops leaving farmers without adequate earnings and crop yields.
its more dependent on rail roads
Decrease in prices, Plains farmers faced a long drought. The drought destroyed the crops and forced many farmers back east.
The nickname for plains farmers is okies.
African American farmers who moved to the plains of Kansas -apex
plains farmers
plains farmers
plains farmers~apex
Plains farmers
During the Great Depression years, in the Dust Bowl states, located in the Great Plains, dust and dirt 'devoured' many crops leaving farmers without adequate earnings and crop yields.
its more dependent on rail roads
they were homesteaders. not farmers.
its more dependent on rail roads
There was competition between ranchers and farmers to settle in the Great Plains because they wanted to have more land.
Plains are special because animals roam there and farmers grow there crops there.