“I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our
cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battles or
in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.”
John F. Kennedy
If this pandemic is our generation’s
Dust Bowl and we follow the example set by the Greatest Generation, we are
going to be okay.
I have developed a keen
interest in the Dust Bowl of the 1930’s. US Highway 83, bisecting the High
Palins, is my favorite vagabonding byway. The area, especially between my two
adopted hometowns of McCook, NE in the north to Canadian, TX in the south, was devastated
by the endless Great Depression era wind storms and draught.
The area has always been, and
is still in many ways, a “next year” land. Next year, the rain will come back,
next year the grain prices will rise, next year credit will be more available;
next year, if we can just make it to next year.
I made a point, when my
schedule allowed, of approaching every person I encountered in towns along
Highway 83 who appeared to be over the age of 80 and request they share with me
their personal experiences from the Dust Bowl years. Their tales are now safely
recorded on numerous stored cassette tapes I posses.
Most were thrilled to
cooperate. Time is of the essence. As with our World War II vets, these aging
sources of firsthand accounts from this fascinating era are rapidly disappearing
from our world. Several I spoke with
expressed that they felt a duty, as one elderly lady in the no man’s land of
the Oklahoma Panhandle told me, before she departed this earth to pass down her
firsthand accounts of this horrid time. She told me she was a small girl but
she would never forget the walls of dust that blew in at all times of the day
and night. She said it was as if the ground had turned upside down.
To their credit, most
survivors I spoke with recalled this time of horror truthfully, with no attempt
to apply a revisionist makeup to cover the scars. To the survivors, it was what
it was, the worst of times. In North Platte, NE I heard the story of an elderly
widow who just recently had burned the diary her late husband had kept during
the Dust Bowl years. Why destroy such a valuable relic, I asked? She said it
was not a time worth remembering, I was told.
Their memories hammer to the
core of the hardships in a life dominated by this manmade catastrophe. Day
after day, week after week, hard-working families stood by stoically and
helplessly as they watched their lives blown away by waves of dust so thick it
turned midday into midnight. As these monster storms tore unimpeded through the
High Plains, I can only imagine the despair. Death and destruction were
everywhere, but somehow, most held on. Symbolic to “burning the boats,” many
had no choice but to stay as most had nowhere else to go.
Hopeless is the most
devastating word in the English language, and a term used often to describe the
“Dust Bowl.” But maybe a better word would be hope. I was struck by how many of
the survivors - mere children during these calumnious years -spoke of their
parents’ resolve, how against all odds they never lost hope or their dream of
carving out a better life in as demanding an environment as found anywhere on
this earth. Somehow, they did.
Even after over 100 years of
hardships, men and women seeking a better life are still drawn to the High
Plains. In the new millennium the oil
fields and the packing plants have taken the place of the homesteads and the
railroads, but the magnetic appeal of a better life has not changed. Juxtaposed
side by side, both optimism and disappointment define the rich family history
of today’s descendants of the area’s original 19th century pioneering
homesteaders.
Family roots on Highway 83 run
deep. An obscure quote from a 1915 High Plains newspaper editorial I stumbled
upon succinctly sums up these contrasting dynamics, highlighting the resolve so
abundant amongst the both past and present hardened survivors: “We should be
thankful....... that we are still living to try again.”
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