• FIND IT FAST
  • Cars
  • Jobs
  • Rentals
  • Real Estate
  • Buy/Sell Stuff
  • Mobile Site
 
KRCW

50° F

Wednesday, June 19, 2013
3:36 AM PDT
  • Home
    • Photo Galleries
    • Viral News
  • News
    • Nation & World News
    • Entertainment News
    • Business News
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Weather
    • Traffic
  • Weather
    •  
  • Lifestyle
    • Halloween
    • Recipes
    • Fashion
    • Petwalk Place
    • DIY
    • Safe for Work
  • Health
    •  
  • Community
    • Go Green
    • Personal Finance
  • Shows
    • Schedule
    • Hart of Dixie
    • 90210
    • ANTM
    • Gossip Girl
    • Nikita
    • The Vampire Diaries
    • All Shows >>
  • Entertainment
    • Entertainment News
    • Offbeat News
    • Music
    • Movies
    • Gaming
  • Auto
    • The Ride Show
    • Traffic
  • About
    •  
  • Advertise
    •  
  • FIND IT FAST
  • Cars
  • Jobs
  • Rentals
  • Real Estate
  • Buy/Sell Stuff
  • Mobile Site
  • DON'T MISS:
  • FREE Advance Movie Screenings
  • Portland Blogs
  • Local Video
  • Antenna TV
  • ThisTV
Advanced Search

Advanced Search

X

Images from Ken Burns' 'The Dust Bowl'

Ken Burns' two-part, four-hour film, "The Dust Bowl," premieres on PBS on Sunday and Monday.
MORE: Ken Burns' latest: The man-made disaster of the Dust Bowl
Image 1 of 9
  • «2
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • »
FSA photographer Dorothea Lange came across Florence Thompson and her children in a pea pickers' camp in Nipomo, Calif., in March 1936.  During the decade of the Great Depression, California's population grew by more than 20%, an increase of 1.3 million people. More than half of the newcomers came from cities, not farms; one in six were professionals or white collar workers. Of the 315,000 who arrived from Oklahoma, Texas and neighboring states, only 16,000 were from the Dust Bowl itself. But regardless of where they actually came from, regardless of their skills and their education and their individual reasons for seeking a new life in a new place, to most Californians -- and to the nation at large -- they were all the same. And they all had the same name: Okies.

Ken Burns' 'The Dust Bowl'

( Dorothea Lange / PBS )
FSA photographer Dorothea Lange came across Florence Thompson and her children in a pea pickers' camp in Nipomo, Calif., in March 1936. During the decade of the Great Depression, California's population grew by more than 20%, an increase of 1.3 million people. More than half of the newcomers came from cities, not farms; one in six were professionals or white collar workers. Of the 315,000 who arrived from Oklahoma, Texas and neighboring states, only 16,000 were from the Dust Bowl itself. But regardless of where they actually came from, regardless of their skills and their education and their individual reasons for seeking a new life in a new place, to most Californians -- and to the nation at large -- they were all the same. And they all had the same name: Okies.
  • E-mail
  • add to Twitter Twitter
  • add to Facebook Facebook
  • add to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  •  

Comments (0)

Add comments | Discussion FAQ

Currently there are no comments. Be the first to comment!

    • Terms of Service
    • Privacy Policy
    • About Our Ads
A Tribune Broadcasting website