The Webb Thesis: Adaptation to the Great Plains

 

The central thesis of The Great Plains, Walter P. Webb's master work published in 1931, is human adaptation to the physical environment. Webb said that in order for people to live on the plains, all the institutions and tools developed in the eastern parts of the United States had to be adapted to the environment of the Great Plains—which was level, treeless, and semiarid.

 

Carried to extreme, the Webb thesis becomes a form of environmental determinism that both offends traditional scholarly conceptions of multiple causation in history and also deprives historical subjects of the assumption of free will. Considered thoughtfully, however, the Webb thesis enlightens many of the important commonalities of regional life.

 

Examples of the Webb Thesis in Action

Eastern institution or tool

Great Plains adaptation

Kentucky long rifle

Colt’s revolver

log cabin

sod house

conventional tillage

dry farming (later conservation tillage)

dug wells and buckets

drilled wells and windmills

binder

header

gates

cattle guards

small, diversified farms

large, single-crop farms

 

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