JerryPat2
Member Laureate
since 2011-02-06
Posts 16975
South Louisiana
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0
posted
2014-03-08
07:28 AM
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in the direst of straits of the very most awful of the season Black Tuesday. October 29, 1929 money reduced to nothing people were ruined overnight many climbed the tallest building leapt to their deaths overcome with hopeless grief people on the move walking town to town looking for work anything would do signs at the edges of towns saying Keep walking, we can’t feed our own. add to this horrible time The Dust Bowl added misery on top of misery the okies and the arkies, et al piled everything they owned in their Model T’s exodus to California but California was no longer the land of milk and honey she was sick with fever and heartache at what had been lost her farms, her lands by the time the okies made it to the Cuyamaca Mountains the snow came and continued for three days when the thaw came next spring they found them his skeleton arms were wrapped abound her legs pressing them to his own skeleton chest he had given her the warmth from himself until at last they were both at peace
©March 3, 2014 / Jerry Pat Bolton
~*~ There was a sign on the lawn at a drug re-hab center that said 'Keep off the Grass'. ~*~
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© Copyright
2014
Jerry Pat Bolton
- All Rights Reserved
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Lori Grosser Rhoden
Member Patricius
since 2009-10-10
Posts 10202
Fair to middlin' of nowhere
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1
posted
2014-03-08
07:34 AM
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Glad my people survived it and kept the farm! I know I'm blessed.
Lori
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JerryPat2
Member Laureate
since 2011-02-06
Posts 16975
South Louisiana
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2
posted
2014-03-08
07:37 AM
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Yes, there were success stories among the bad ones.~*~ There was a sign on the lawn at a drug re-hab center that said 'Keep off the Grass'. ~*~
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EmmaRose
Senior Member
since 2011-03-02
Posts 1376
Midwest
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3
posted
2014-03-08
10:00 AM
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you speak of harsh times, which are not that far from today's well written historical and period piece
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JerryPat2
Member Laureate
since 2011-02-06
Posts 16975
South Louisiana
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4
posted
2014-03-08
10:09 AM
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You are right, Emma, we are due I would say. Thank you.~*~ There was a sign on the lawn at a drug re-hab center that said 'Keep off the Grass'. ~*~
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Jack Napes
Member
since 2014-02-22
Posts 290
Phaedra's Womb
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5
posted
2014-03-08
10:28 AM
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Watching the Ken Burns documentary 'Dust Bowl' presents an exceptional view of what you mention JerryPat2.Touch, but don't look
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JerryPat2
Member Laureate
since 2011-02-06
Posts 16975
South Louisiana
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6
posted
2014-03-08
10:29 AM
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Thanks Jack.~*~ There was a sign on the lawn at a drug re-hab center that said 'Keep off the Grass'. ~*~
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Marchmadness
Member Rara Avis
since 2007-09-16
Posts 9271
So. El Monte, California
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7
posted
2014-03-08
06:19 PM
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My parents made it through the depression. My dad was creative. He was a bootlegger, caught rattle snakes, could grow a garden just about anywhere and finally worked for the WPA when they left Oklahoma and road a freight train to Tennessee. Most of his family had moved to the Northwest and escaped the worst of it.
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JerryPat2
Member Laureate
since 2011-02-06
Posts 16975
South Louisiana
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8
posted
2014-03-08
06:31 PM
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Yeah, my parents survived it also, Ida. He drove a truck for seventy-five cents a day I was told, and glad to get it. Thank you for stopping by.
~*~ There was a sign on the lawn at a drug re-hab center that said 'Keep off the Grass'. ~*~
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