Dust, Drought, and Dreams Gone Dry recalls a tragic period in our nation’s history — the drought and dust storms that wreaked havoc on the Great Plains in the 1930s — and explores its environmental and cultural consequences.
The exhibition delved into the history and geography behind the Dust Bowl, and also provided a human element; through the words of the survivors themselves, we learn what it was like to live during such a difficult time.
In addition to the national traveling exhibit, Booth Library faculty and staff members curated a variety of related exhibits on topics such as New Deal photography and poster art; The Grapes of Wrath novel and film; and a special look at Eastern’s agricultural historian, Gilbert Fite, who was president of EIU from 1971 to 1976.
The exhibit and program series was made possible thanks to the hard work of Booth reference librarians Janice Derr, Kirstin Duffin and Pamela Ferrell. Funding was provided by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Library Association, Oklahoma State University and Mount Holyoke College.
Browse the 2016 - Dust, Drought, and Dreams Gone Dry Collections:
Dust, Drought, and Dreams Gone Dry: Supporting Exhibits
Dust, Drought, and Dreams Gone Dry: Program Booklet
Dust, Drought, and Dreams Gone Dry: Photo Galleries
- Dust Bowl Ballads: Woody Guthrie and the Politics of the Working Class
- Dust Bowl Lessons - Soil Conservation Then and Now
- Dust Pneumonia Blues
- Film Screening: Ken Burns's 'The Dust Bowl' - Part I
- Film Screening: Ken Burns's 'The Dust Bowl' - Part II
- Film Screening: 'The Grapes of Wrath'
- Illinois Plows and Breaking the Plains: Technology, Ecology, and Agricultural Production During the 1930s
- Recapturing the Experiences of Women in the Dust Bowl: The Life and Writings of Caroline Henderson
- Stinging Dust & Forgotten Lives: The Dust Bowl
- The Politics of Drought in The Grapes of Wrath