"Ditched, Stalled and Stranded": Dorothea Lange and the Great Depression
by Carol Quirke
The stock market crash of October 1929 serves as shorthand for the Depression’s start, but the economy had slowed since mid-decade. After the crash, the economy unraveled. The nation’s GNP dropped by one-third. Companies cut production, cut wages, and then cut jobs. In five months after the crash, unemployment doubled and by the time Franklin Delano Roosevelt came into office, a full quarter of the workforce was unemployed. Businesses folded, farmers went bankrupt, throwing one-third of farmers off the land, and banks failed, some 9,000 of them, taking the life savings of nine million Americans. The earth itself seemed to protest when the Great Plains Dustbowl sent soils from Texas and Oklahoma all the way to New York City and Washington, DC.
The Depression distorted some lives more than others. Married women, perceived as competitors to male breadwinners, could be prohibited by ordinance or legislation from holding jobs. Some two million Mexican Americans were deported; nearly half were US citizens. Pushed off the land in the deep South, African Americans were forced to become day laborers or domestics. African American unemployment was twice that of Americans as a whole. Regions or cities tied to specific industries, such as tire-producing Akron, auto parts center Toledo, or Pennsylvania mining towns had unemployment rates exceeding 60 percent.
This was a far cry from the triumphalist capitalism of the 1920s, when Americans were promised automobiles, refrigerators, and gleaming bathroom tile. President Calvin Coolidge had pronounced that the "chief business of the American people is business," and Herbert Hoover, when accepting the Republican nomination in 1928, opined that America had "triumphed" over poverty. This prosperity shaped Lange’s early career. As an emerging portraitist, the New Jersey–born Lange took society photographs in her new home of San Francisco. Softly diffused light enveloped many subjects; even close-ups flattered her elite Bay Area clients. Lange mostly shot in her studio—known for its velvet couch, her Russian samovar with tea for guests, a warm fire, and Lange herself, sometimes garbed in elegant Fortuny gowns.
Lange hung these photos on her studio walls, and visitors were uncertain of what to make of them, as the "documentary" genre had no name. Aside from Jacob Riis’s lantern slides of New York City’s poverty-stricken tenement districts and Lewis Hine’s "social photography" profiling child laborers, such photographs were uncommon. Lange’s California peers took landscape photographs and nudes. Environmental photographer Ansel Adams, Lange’s friend-competitor, said unkindly that the documentary photographers, as they would soon be called, were "sociologists with cameras."
But Lange’s work, once exhibited, brought her to the attention of an agricultural economist, Paul Taylor. Taylor studied California’s agricultural laborers who worked in fields owned by major growers. From Taylor, Lange learned to listen to her subjects and to articulate the circumstances that led to their marginalization. The two soon wed and Taylor introduced Lange to working for the government.
The Resettlement Administration (RA), later reorganized as the Farm Security Administration (FSA), was an initiative of Columbia University economist Rexford Tugwell, a New Deal braintruster. Tugwell saw the unintended consequences of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, which exacerbated land consolidation and mechanization, resulting in small farmers, tenants, and sharecroppers being thrown off the land by larger owners and speculators. The RA/FSA responded to their losses, rehabilitated eroded land, and sheltered migrant farmers. Underfunding limited RA/FSA accomplishments, but the agency’s commissioning of photographers to document the Depression remains a monument to government cultural work. Roy Stryker managed the agency’s Historical Section, designed to publicize its programs. Stryker expanded his brief, imagining a "visual encyclopedia of American life." He hired professionals like Lange and Walker Evans, artists like Ben Shahn, and novices like Arthur Rothstein, Russell Lee, Gordon Parks, and Esther Bubley. Ultimately, RA/FSA photographers took some 175,000 black-and-white images, and another 1,600 color ones.
RA/FSA photographs were seen in exhibitions at county fairs, conferences, and world’s fairs; they were part of congressional investigations; and they were displayed in murals, newspapers, and the new photo magazines. These magazines, particularly LOOK and LIFE, ensured that a mass audience of millions of Americans consumed their news, including RA/FSA photographs, visually. Novelists, poets, and photographers used RA/FSA photographs in an experimental realist form—the photo book—to dramatize the Depression. Lange’s photos feature prominently in her and Taylor’s American Exodus about the nation’s agricultural crisis, Archibald MacLeish’s Land of the Free on the Depression’s challenge to democracy, and Richard Wright’s Twelve Million Black Voices, which charted the plight of black Americans.
Lange traveled to the South multiple times, taking searing images of southern racism and poverty. She met with members of the Southern Tenant Farmers Union, heralding their interracial solidarity in an era when crossing the color line could mean death. Her 1937 Greene County, Georgia, photographs comment on southern history. In several, chimneys from old plantation houses stand, lone remnants of former grandeur. The chimneys are mute evocations of a past that persists, even as it erodes. Unlike monuments to the Confederacy that she also captured, these chimneys puncture the plantation mythology, so popular in the 1930s, reminding viewers that the war was fought over slavery. Most intriguing is her shot of a former slave and his wife on the steps of "a plantation house now in decay."
Lange explored the ironies of consumer culture in an era of dispossession. She took many photographs of the road, in American lore tied to mobility and reinvention. She showed entire families on the road—if fortunate, they had an auto or jalopy piled high with possessions. But some families walked—with baby carriages, carts, and wagons—sometimes hundreds of miles.
For migrants, there is no relaxation, no shelter, no destination. In another photo taken along California Route 99, a Union Pacific billboard’s base supports a ragged tarp shielding three families from the elements. Their stove and rocking chair lie beneath a blistering sun just below the advertisement of a soft pillow cushioning a young man’s head. The advertisement reads, "Travel while you sleep"; the image and text dwarf the migrants’ meager domestic arrangements.

Lange’s most famous photograph—"Migrant Mother"—has become the symbol of the Depression. As Lange’s Bancroft Prize–winning biographer, Linda Gordon, writes, those unfamiliar with Lange often describe the Depression by referring to "Migrant Mother." Lange thought the photo of Florence Owens Thompson, a thirty-two-year-old mother of seven, "had a life of its own," making it "her picture, not mine."
Historians have shown how racism, an individualist ethos, and distrust toward the state undercut demands for social programs. Indeed, compromises made to attain our nation’s limited welfare state hobbled these programs at birth. Lange called her photographs "ammunition," understanding that even in the midst of our nation’s worst economic peril, citizens needed visual confirmation of what surrounded them.
Carol Quirke is Associate Professor of American Studies at SUNY Old Westbury. She is the author of a forthcoming biography of Dorothea Lange (Westview Press) and also Eyes on Labor: News Photography and America’s Working Class (Oxford University Press, 2012).