PATRICIA COWGILL

37%
Flag icon
The New Deal’s response to this ecological crisis was spectacular and, in those years prior to World War II, offered the most far-reaching vision of the collective public good since the Freedmen’s Bureau: the government resettled families, put people to work, planted trees, restored the loam, reseeded soil, expanded national parks, returned land to Native Americans for pasture, and tamped down the dust.
The End of the Myth: From the Frontier to the Border Wall in the Mind of America
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview