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Rain Follows the Plow
"The West has always been and always will be
a place where there's a struggle to survive, and where nature strikes
heavy blows at you. . . That's geography. And I think part of that
conquering of the West seeped into the American character. In many
ways, the West has been a geography of hope for the country as a
whole." For forty years, homesteaders had passed over the western prairies on their way to better land, but now even this rough, arid soil was desirable, thanks in part to railroad company advertisements that described it as lush farmland and to a growing belief that settlers had actually changed the onetime "Great American Desert" by plowing the earth.
During the 1870s and early 1880s, unusually heavy rainfall made these claims sound plausible, and within ten years nearly 2 million people had sunk their roots into the prairie soil. But when the wet years finally came to an end, the high plains became again a place where only the most determined could hang on.
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