The Prairie Winnows Out Its Own: The West River Country of South Dakota in the Years of Depression and Dust

The Prairie Winnows Out Its Own: The West River Country of South Dakota in the Years of Depression and Dust

by Paula M Nelson
The Prairie Winnows Out Its Own: The West River Country of South Dakota in the Years of Depression and Dust

The Prairie Winnows Out Its Own: The West River Country of South Dakota in the Years of Depression and Dust

by Paula M Nelson

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Overview

Between 1900 and 1915, in the last great land rush, over one hundred thousand homesteaders flooded into the west river country of South Dakota, a land noted for its aridity and unpredictable weather, its treelessness, and its endless sky. The settlers of “the last, best west” weathered their first crisis in the severe drought of 1910-1911, which winnowed out many of the speculators and faint of heart; they abandoned their founding hopes of quick success and substituted a new ethos of “next year country”—while this year was hard, next year would be better, an ironic phrase at once optimistic and fatalistic.

“Next year,” however, was in many of those years not better. The collapse of the agricultural economy in the immediate aftermath of the boom years of World War I set in motion a pattern of regional decline amid national prosperity and cultural change: the rise of radio and mass culture increased rural folks' awareness of national trends and tastes, a development which paradoxically increased their own sense of remoteness and isolation. The failure of the farm economy to recover to any substantial degree in the twenties caused a less dramatic but cumulatively greater impact on the west river country's population and prospects—a second great crisis.

The Great Depression and the dustbowl years of the thirties were the greatest test of the west river people. The drought of 1910-1911, heretofore seen as the benchmark of bad times, faded even in the remembrances of the original pioneers in the face of the thirties' relentless drought, grasshoppers, blowing dust, and the accompanying starvation, struggle, and despair. The Depression in the west river country was a blast furnace from which a hardened yet still hopeful people emerged, scathed but undefeated. The Prairie Winnows Out Its Own is the voice of this experience.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781587291678
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Publication date: 12/01/1996
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 276
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Paula Nelson is a professor of history at the University of Wisconsin- Platteville.

Table of Contents

Contents
Preface
Introduction: After the West Was Won
Chapter 1. Room at the Bottom
Chapter 2. The Cow, the Sow, and the Hen
Chapter 3. If a Woman Is a True Companion
Chapter 4. Not a Young Chicago
Chapter 5. The Social Costs of Space
Chapter 6. Seedtime and Harvest Shall Not Cease
Chapter 7. In the Last Days, Perilous Times Shall Come
Chapter 8. The Plainsman Cannot Assume …
Chapter 9. Outside the Shelterbelt
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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