Scenes of Boone 1936
Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2014 5:08 pm
Thought ya'll would get a kick out of this.
http://www.yosefscabin.com/forum/
After? 1936 was still during I thought.asu66 wrote:I was taken by the apparent vibrancy of the community so soon after The Great Depression.
asu66 wrote:I was taken by the apparent vibrancy of the community so soon after The Great Depression.
McLeansvilleAppFan wrote:After? 1936 was still during I thought.asu66 wrote:I was taken by the apparent vibrancy of the community so soon after The Great Depression.
Maybe something to be said about buy local. I doubt there was much industry in Boone in 1936 so not much job loss there. This was not the Dust Bowl area so if you could grow enough to eat you could do ok I would think. And if the production in the Dust Bowl area was down there could be markets for a farmer here, if they could get the crops to market. I guess they were growing a bunch of burley tobacco then in the area.asu66 wrote:McLeansvilleAppFan wrote:After? 1936 was still during I thought.asu66 wrote:I was taken by the apparent vibrancy of the community so soon after The Great Depression.
I took a grad school economics course on The Depression way back when. I entered the class confused; and came out about the same way. US market conditions were probably at their worst in '30--with upward movement from '31 forward. The auto industry began to recover in the mid-30s and things s-l-o-w-l-y improved. Then the war effort put a lot of women to work--while husbands and boyfriend were digging foxholes all over Europe or banging their heads in below-deck battleship crawl spaces in the Pacific.
I think it really depended on where you lived and if/where you worked as to when it ended. The film footage depicted a busy, vibrant small town with business a-boomin'. I expected to see at least some signs of poverty. Even the farm scenes gave the impression of happy--not downtrodden folks. I think it underscores what we've known as former Appalachian students--Boone/Watauga wasn't and isn't any ordinary mountain community.
In some countries around the globe, TD didn't end until well after WWII. In some sections of rural Appalachia, it really still hasn't ended.
McLeansvilleAppFan wrote:Maybe something to be said about buy local. I doubt there was much industry in Boone in 1936 so not much job loss there. This was not the Dust Bowl area so if you could grow enough to eat you could do ok I would think. And if the production in the Dust Bowl area was down there could be markets for a farmer here, if they could get the crops to market. I guess they were growing a bunch of burley tobacco then in the area.asu66 wrote:McLeansvilleAppFan wrote:After? 1936 was still during I thought.asu66 wrote:I was taken by the apparent vibrancy of the community so soon after The Great Depression.
I took a grad school economics course on The Depression way back when. I entered the class confused; and came out about the same way. US market conditions were probably at their worst in '30--with upward movement from '31 forward. The auto industry began to recover in the mid-30s and things s-l-o-w-l-y improved. Then the war effort put a lot of women to work--while husbands and boyfriends were digging foxholes all over Europe or banging their heads in below-deck battleship crawl spaces in the Pacific.
I think it really depended on where you lived and if/where you worked as to when it ended. The film footage depicted a busy, vibrant small town with business a-boomin'. I expected to see at least some signs of poverty. Even the farm scenes gave the impression of happy--not downtrodden folks. I think it underscores what we've known as former Appalachian students--Boone/Watauga wasn't and isn't any ordinary mountain community.
In some countries around the globe, TD didn't end until well after WWII. In some sections of rural Appalachia, it really still hasn't ended.
Yes...burley leaf, cabbage, rare herbs, trapping/furs, timber. Wholesale and retail sales and services. ASTC as a category of its own; even then, the largest employer in the area. Manufacturing to include printing, cottage industries, kraut production and...rumors persist to this day that not-so-legal alcohol distilling was in evidence.asu66 wrote:McLeansvilleAppFan wrote:Maybe something to be said about buy local. I doubt there was much industry in Boone in 1936 so not much job loss there. This was not the Dust Bowl area so if you could grow enough to eat you could do ok I would think. And if the production in the Dust Bowl area was down there could be markets for a farmer here, if they could get the crops to market. I guess they were growing a bunch of burley tobacco then in the area.asu66 wrote:McLeansvilleAppFan wrote:After? 1936 was still during I thought.asu66 wrote:I was taken by the apparent vibrancy of the community so soon after The Great Depression.
I took a grad school economics course on The Depression way back when. I entered the class confused; and came out about the same way. US market conditions were probably at their worst in '30--with upward movement from '31 forward. The auto industry began to recover in the mid-30s and things s-l-o-w-l-y improved. Then the war effort put a lot of women to work--while husbands and boyfriends were digging foxholes all over Europe or banging their heads in below-deck battleship crawl spaces in the Pacific.
I think it really depended on where you lived and if/where you worked as to when it ended. The film footage depicted a busy, vibrant small town with business a-boomin'. I expected to see at least some signs of poverty. Even the farm scenes gave the impression of happy--not downtrodden folks. I think it underscores what we've known as former Appalachian students--Boone/Watauga wasn't and isn't any ordinary mountain community.
In some countries around the globe, TD didn't end until well after WWII. In some sections of rural Appalachia, it really still hasn't ended.
Yes...burley leaf, cabbage, rare herbs, trapping/furs, timber. Wholesale and retail sales and services. ASTC as a category of its own; even then, the largest employer in the area. Manufacturing to include printing, cottage industries, kraut production and...rumors persist to this day that not-so-legal alcohol distilling was in evidence.asu66 wrote:[
I think you're right about the effect of the depression on Boone. Life was never easy in Appalachia, even in the best of times. To most the "stock market" was where they sold their pigs. Also by 1936 most the programs created during the new deal would have been in place for awhile and already paying off, especially in the mountains. Unemployment had drop by 8%, so to most people "happy days were here again". Over in Tenn, the TVA was hiring, (later Watauga Lake would replace the original town of Butler). Work on the Blue Ridge Parkway was starting or getting ready to start.McLeansvilleAppFan wrote:I was taken by the apparent vibrancy of the community so soon after The Great Depression.
Maybe something to be said about buy local. I doubt there was much industry in Boone in 1936 so not much job loss there. This was not the Dust Bowl area so if you could grow enough to eat you could do ok I would think. And if the production in the Dust Bowl area was down there could be markets for a farmer here, if they could get the crops to market. I guess they were growing a bunch of burley tobacco then in the area.
Yes most people would live a mile from where they were born. To some degree WWI, changed that but mostly WWII changed the dynamics of the US. People moved to take manufacturing jobs to help the war effort, military personnel saw the world and didn't want to go back to the farm. All of a sudden we became a consumer society, with little box houses.WataugaMan wrote:Also, times were more simpler then: People grew their own food (big gardens, livestock, etc.). And, people helped each other out a lot more back in those days as well.