This is pretty good. If you do Google searches though, you will find that before the stock market official crashed, there was a 40 % artificial jump in stocks. Then later, when the market first crashed, since money was very tight and people started to panic, businesses whom were dependant on the earlier flux of welcome sales were left with warehouses stuffed with product and no buyers. Then time flowed into the early 30's and collided with the results of the Dust Bowl. Those whom lived in those areas whom were long used to doing with what they had to tough it out and bring foods/products to the American tables were left with nothing. People died on roads when the thick dust poured through. Crops were non-existant. What little was left was consumed by locusts larger than clouds. Hares literally took over praries and once fertile grounds looking like a horror movie. These familes had few options other than either separating where men hopped railways praying for work elsewhere, or moving to states where they could hopefully make a new start. In part, this is what helped build CA. Families crammed together. But those whom stayed lost their livestock, everything. Literally everything was used and reused until they disintergrated. The stock market was very serious, but I think that we could have overcome this much faster if it weren't for the Dust Bowl. So many people died either directly or indirectly from this. It really wasn't changed until WW11, when jobs brought in money for supplies. It helped unite and focus people with one common bond, until the end when most figured that this would be a fresh start. Between the Stock Market and Dust Bowl, everyone was vulnerable.