Snap! As I stepped on the last bit of a wilted cornstalk, I fretted the next harvest hoping it would be better. I barely could support my family, and I can not think about going through this again next year. The Dust Bowl practically killed all my crops, and the crops that were left had no profit. I can just hear my daughter asking again, “Daddy when can we eat something besides bread and corn.” It breaks my heart knowing that I can barely support my family, but hey, maybe next year will be different.The dust bowl, unregulated crop prices, and foreclosure all resulted in white farmers in the south to struggle more than everybody else in the 1930’s.
The Dust Bowl caused white farmers in the south to struggle the more than any other people in the 1930’s. On the web page, US History, the article about the Dust
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In the article The Balance, “The farmers could not profit of the little crops that they had due to deflation.” Since they could not profit off their crops they had a very hard time living there lives. There kids sometimes had to drop out of school because their parents could not afford to hire help. This made children lose out on learning time, causing them to have lost a lot of valuable knowledge. On the web page US History, the article about Farmers Lives In The 1930’s, says, “More than one out of five farmers was on financial aid, because they could not make any money by selling their crops.” By being on financial aid, as a white farmer's kid, some would get teased at school if they went to school. Rich kids would tease them because they were so poor, and they needed help. Sometimes being a farmer’s kid was very rough during the 1930’s. Also, farmers killed 6 million pigs to try to reduce the supply, so they could then sell them and get more money as a result of that. White farmers had it the worst during the 1930’s due to unregulated crop