Title: This is the face of a migrant worker'
1This is the face of a migrant worker.
1
8-year old mother from Oklahoma now a California
migrant. (Circa March 1937
2Makeshift housing of a migrant working family.
M
igrant family looking for work in the pea fields
of California. (Circa 1935)
3The Depression effected everyone
Farm Security
Administration migrants. (Circa 1935)
- California was definitely not the promised land
of the migrants' dreams. Although the weather was
comparatively balmy and farmers' fields were
bountiful with produce, Californians also felt
the effects of the Depression.
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6Mexican immigrants in Texas in 1938. Very often
men traveled from Mexico first to find work and
then sent for families.
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8A hope for a better life
- Why did so many of the refugees pin their hopes
for a better life on California? One reason was
that the state's mild climate allowed for a long
growing season and a diversity of crops with
staggered planting and harvesting cycles. For
people whose lives had revolved around farming,
this seemed like an ideal place to look for work.
Popular songs and stories, circulating in oral
tradition for decades.
9These laborers prepare to disembark one farm to
work in another.
10Illegal immigration
Local and state governments were already
overburdened, and the steady stream of newly
arriving migrants was more than the system could
bear. After struggling to make it to California,
many found themselves turned away at its borders.
Those who did cross over into California found
that the number of job openings was far too small
for the number of incoming available labor
workers.
11When they were not working
- When they were not working or looking for work,
or tending to the civil and domestic operations
of the camp, the migrants found time to engage in
recreational activities. Singing and making music
took place both in private living quarters and in
public spaces. The music performed by the
migrants came from a number of different sources.
12Migrants who found employment soon learned that
this overabundance of workers caused a
significant reduction in the going wage rate.
Even with an entire family working, migrants
could not support themselves on these low wages.
Many set up camps along irrigation ditches in the
farmers' fields. These "ditchbank" camps fostered
poor sanitary conditions and created a public
health problem
13Barracks set up for migrant laborers
14Living conditionsfor migrant workers were..
- As you can see from this image, living conditions
included use of stagnant water and therefore
filthy cooking and dwelling spaces. They were
left to live in squalor.
15Wait your turn!
- Sometimes hundreds of workers were left to share
one outhouse. This meant they also shared
sickness and disease.
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17 Arrival in California did not put an end
to the migrants' travels. Their lives were
characterized by transience. In an attempt to
maintain a steady income, workers had to follow
the harvest around the state. When potatoes were
ready to be reaped, the migrants needed to be
where the potatoes were. The same principle
applied to harvesting cotton, lemons, oranges,
peas, and other crops.
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19Okies
- As the "double whammy" of drought and
depression deepened on the Great Plains, more and
more farmers gave up or were forced off of their
land. In addition, the relentless march of new
tractors meant that the farmers who were able to
scrape together enough money to buy a tractor
could buy out their neighbors. Fewer farmers
could farm more land. But where would those who
left go? - Some went to cities. But many decided to head
west. In fact, during the 30s hundreds of
thousands left the plains for the West Coast. So
many migrated from Oklahoma that they were dubbed
"Okies" in the popular press. For years,
California, Oregon and Washington had been
growing. Many who were pushed off of the plains
were pulled west because they had relatives who
had moved to the coastal areas. And the boosters
of California had advertised that the state
offered a perfect climate and an abundance of
work in the agricultural industry
20A Strike for Rights!
- Better wages and better living conditions!
- Conflict between Okies and immigrant workers
existed over competition for work. - These signs show a strike slogan, or saying.
21Mexican-American Migrant Worker on Strike
- Mexican-American Migrant Worker on Strike Here
is a Mexican-American migrant worker on strike as
part of an action by the United Farm Workers of
America. Supervisors were tough on laborers,
sometimes requiring them to work 18 hour days for
pay too inadequate to survive and no medical
care.
22Cesar Chavez
- "Cesar Chavez (1927-1993) Here is Cesar Chavez,
an American labor organizer who founded the
National Farm Workers Association in 1962. Chavez
used strikes, fasts, picketing, and marches to
obtain contracts from a number of major growers.
23Resources
- http//memory.loc.gov/ammem/afctshtml/tsme.html
- http//www.picturehistory.com/product/id/http//ww
w.picturehistory.com/product/id/13018 - http//education.lakotatechnology.com/MIGRANT-WORK
ER-GREAT-DEPRESSION.html - http//livinghistoryfarm.org/farminginthe30s/water
_06.html