I love to write about the Old West, about cowboys and ranchers
and the exciting lives they led. Researching my stories gives me pleasure.
Reading the historical romances of my friends brings me relaxation and
satisfaction. They are a mental vacation from today’s stress.
But what was it really like to live in the Old West?
My work in progress features three adults and three children
in an 1888 Texas dust storm. Any of you who have ever lived in the Southwest
know how dreadful a dust storm can be. Not sand, but fine dust that seeps in
through the tightest windows and doors.
Except for six years in California as a child, I grew up in
West Texas. We had some doozy sand storms that would sting your skin if you
happened to be outside. And this was in prehistoric times when girls could not
wear jeans to school and we had to walk home with sand stinging our bare legs. Ugh,
those were NOT the good old days. We also occasionally had a bad dust storm.
Dust storm at Midland TX |
The first one I remember was when I had just turned eight. We had just
moved back to Texas from Bakersfield and the dust started blowing in the
afternoon. Because I was asthmatic, my mom wet sheets and hung them at the
windows of my room. She didn’t bother to do the same in her and Daddy’s
bedroom. The next morning when they woke, my mom started laughing at my dad. Fine gray dust covered his face, like grayish-brown talcum. When he
raised his head, she could see the outline of where he’d lain. He asked her why
she was laughing and she told him he looked as if he had on some kind of stage
make up. He told her to go look in the mirror. She was shocked to see she
looked the same and her brown hair was beige. I still remember the surprise of
seeing their outline on the pillows before I was banished back to my room.
About ten years ago, my husband and I were visiting his mom in
Lubbock, where she lived in a beautiful, new assisted living complex. The sky
grew dark and we thought we were in for a thunderstorm. No, it was roiling clouds of black dust
from who knows where? The dirt around Lubbock is reddish-brown and further west
the soil is tan. This was black and fine, like tons of obsidian talcum powder smothering
us. Her apartment had double-paned windows in metal frames. That storm must have sucked all the oxygen from the air, because I started choking up. I don’t have many asthma attacks now that I’m an
adult and know what to avoid, but I had a severe attack then.
We had to cut our visit short and hurry out of town or go to the emergency room. We left.
Lubbock, Texas |
Dugout in Indian Territory Oklahoma Historical Society |
In my current story, THE MOST UNSUITABLE COURTSHIP (to be released in October), the adults are as uncomfortable as you would expect of anyone caught in a dust storm on the prairie. But two of the children have asthma, one
severely. This made me wonder about pioneers like those above from my step-grandmother's family. My husband and I have taken turns
sitting up nights with our asthmatic children (or sitting with one child when
they were both ill at the same time), we learned to give respiratory therapy to
them, and we monitored their diets, shots, and medicines. With all that, we still
felt helpless when they were sick.
How horrible it must have been to have a child gasping for
breath with no help in sight. No emergency room, steroids, or modern medicines.
No wonder so many children died in infancy.
I love to write and read about the Old West. I'm glad I missed out on the real Dust Bowl. I give thanks
that I live in the New West.
10 comments:
I sure enjoy my insulated house, central heat, and all that goes with it. We don't have dust storms here, but they do in Idaho--very fine dirt that settles in and on everything.
About asthma: my great-uncle was diagnosed with it. The doctor prescribed smoking. At age 6, they made him smoke four pipe bowls per day. Can you imagine? It turns out that he wasn't asthmatic at all--he was allergic to dogs.
My dad started smoking at fourteen to help his sinusitis. He smoked mentholated tobacco. He became a life long smoker. Unfortunately, he died of emphysema from smoking.
Great post, Caroline!! I've never seen a dust storm, living in Alberta, Canada and I don't think I want to. :)
Great post Caroline. My great-grandparents lived in Oklahoma and I've heard tales of the great dust bowl your picture shows. Not many of them were smokers, but snuff dippers and tobacco chewing. :)
Thanks for sharing and brining back some memories, if not teaching me some new things about my favorite era.
Was in a dust storm about the third grade on trip to dads folks in Texas. Sand stuck on walls, bugs every where.
Dad was born in 1899, youngest of 12,in Palo pinto county. 5 did live to see adulthood. Rough times, but like war all dad remembered was the good times.
I enjoyed your post, Caroline. I've never been in a dust storm and don't feel like I've missed a thing! LOLI will not try to seek out that experience. ;-)
Enjoyed reading about dust storms. Can't begin to imagine what they must do to people's lungs. I think I will stay well away, being a chronic asthmatic they would wreak havoc with me. Such an interesting post.
I remember those dust storms. My grandmother lived in Midland and my uncle lived in Lubbock. In fact, my grandfather was principal of Midland High for a number of years. Anyway, they had huge cinderblock fences to help combat some of the dust and we loved climbing on them. Fond memories. I can't begin to imagine how the settlers dealt with the sand. Ack.
Ah, yes, Ciara. My uncle had a cinderblock fence with tall Lebanon cedars around it to combat the dust. Don't think they helped all that much, but anything is worth a try. Everyone painted their walls a color called "Sand," which was a tan with some pink in it and matched the color of the dirt so it didn't show so badly on the walls. I still hate that color. LOL One of my jobs was to vacuum the walls.
Thanks for the info and photos, Caroline. When I was a youngster studying geography in about 4th or 5th grade, the Great Plains (at least the southern part) were still referred to as the Great American Desert. I think I see why now. Those dust storms sound very much like the terrible sand storms that sometimes race across the Sahara Desert. Nasty!
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