The Sleeping Archive
Step into the Oklahoma plains in 1934, where your narrator is Thomas Avery, a farmer whose family has worked the same land since the Land Run of 1889. For decades, the soil had answered every season of labor with wheat and hope. But during the early years of the Great Depression, drought and wind began to change the land itself. Across Oklahoma and the surrounding Great Plains, years of aggressive plowing combined with severe drought left the soil exposed. By the mid-1930s, enormous dust storms were sweeping across the region, burying crops, choking livestock, and forcing families to confront a devastating reality: the land they trusted could no longer sustain them. In this episode of The Sleeping Archive, Thomas Avery recounts life on the plains as the Dust Bowl begins to take hold. Through his daily routines, family life, and quiet observations of the land, we witness how ordinary farming communities experienced one of the most severe environmental disasters in American history. This calm historical narrative follows the slow unfolding of that crisis — from failing crops and rising dust to the storms that would come to define the Dust Bowl years. –––––––––––––– What to Expect • Immersive narrative history • First-person storytelling • Historically accurate fictional narrative • Calm, sleep-friendly pacing • Suitable for Charlotte Mason and classical learners –––––––––––––– This is not a documentary. It’s history, as if you were there.
31 episodios
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