Essential Question: What economic, political, & migratory...

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Essential Question: What economic, political, & migratory factors led to the end of the western frontier by 1890? Warm-Up Question: For each era, define what the “West” was & what role the West played in American life: (a) 1750, (b) 1800, (c)1850

Transcript of Essential Question: What economic, political, & migratory...

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■Essential Question:

–What economic, political, &

migratory factors led to the end

of the western frontier by 1890?

■Warm-Up Question:

–For each era, define what the

“West” was & what role the

West played in American life:

(a) 1750, (b) 1800, (c)1850

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America After the Civil War: 1870-1900

Industrialization & Urbanization

Reconstruction & Rise of Jim Crow Segregation

Ranching, Mining, & Farming

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America in the Gilded Age: 1870-1900

The South: By 1877, the South was recovering

from the Civil War but was no longer forced to “reconstruct”

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The “New South”?

Sharecropping

“Jim Crow” reigned supreme as whites legally segregated the South into 2 distinct societies

We won’t discuss much about the South in this unit because, when

Reconstruction ended in 1877, few significant economic or political

changes took place until the 1940s

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America in the Gilded Age: 1870-1900

The North: Experienced a “2nd Industrial Revolution,”

mass immigration, & urbanization

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Railroads, steel, & oil companies formed America’s first monopolies

American industry & urbanization grew

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America in the Gilded Age: 1870-1900

The West: Manifest Destiny

continued after 1865 as miners homesteaders,

& ranchers headed West

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The United States by 1890

Established new

states & closed the frontier by 1890

Colorado

Washington Montana North Dakota

South Dakota

Idaho

Wyoming

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Western raw materials fueled eastern factories

..but this came at the expense of

Native Americans

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Settlement of the West

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The Mining Bonanza

■Mining was the 1st magnet to

attract settlers to the West

■CA (1849) started the gold rush,

but strikes in Pikes Peak, CO &

Carson River Valley, NV (1859)

set off wild migrations to the West:

–Comstock Lode = $306 million

–John Mackay’s Big Bonanza

made him richest man in world

John Mackay earned $25 a minute from his gold/silver lode in Sierra Mountains

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Mining

Regions of

the West

Discoveries of gold & silver led to overnight mining towns

Created need for local gov’t, law enforcement, sanitation, businesses, prostitutes

Individual “placer miners” took little skill or money to start, but could not reach deep lodes

Corporations had the expensive machinery (“hydraulic mining techniques”) to extract

most of the gold in the West

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Mining Bonanza ■¼ to ½ of the mining population

was foreign born:

–Latin American miners brought experience & new techniques

–Chinese brought a tireless ethic

■Led to hostility & riots:

–Foreign Miners’ Act in 1852 charged a monthly mining fee

–Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882 suspended Chinese immigration

Pacific Chivalry: “Encouragement to Chinese Immigration”

"Courts of Justice Closed to Chinese Extra Taxes to 'Yellowjack'"

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The

Cattle

Bonanza

In the 1860s, cattle ranching boomed

Ranchers used the

“open range” to graze

longhorns

By 1867, ranchers started using trains to ship cattle to Chicago

A cattle bought for $4 in Texas sold for $40 in Kansas

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The Cattle Bonanza

■½ of all cowboys were black &

¼ were Mexican

■By 1880, the

“open range”

was ending:

–Wheat growers,

homesteaders, & barbed wire

blocked the range

–Many switched to raising sheep

But “range wars” erupted over grazing rights between cowboys & “sheep-boys”

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The Farming Bonanza ■The U.S. gov’t offered incentives

for farmers to settle the West:

–Homestead Act (1862)—gave 160 acres of land if families pledged to live there for 5 years

–Other gov’t acts helped develop western lands by planting trees & building irrigation systems

–Due to land grants, RRs were the largest western landowners

500 million acres doled to businesses but only 80 million to homesteaders

2/3 of all homesteaders failed to farm their land

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The Farming Bonanza

■In 1870, homesteaders pushed West & adapted to the harsh farming conditions:

–Farmers used dry farming techniques & planted tougher varieties of wheat

–New machinery sped harvesting & planting; led to bonanza farms

–By 1890, the U.S. became a major crop exporter

A pioneer sod house

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Homestead Sales, 1870-1940

In 1900, the West made up 30% of the U.S. population (was 1% in 1850)

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Exodusters

■Exodusters

were black

farmers who

moved West

to escape

Southern crop

liens & Jim

Crow Laws

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Rails Across the Continent ■In 1862, Congress authorized the

transcontinental railroad:

–Union Pacific worked westward from Nebraska (Irish laborers)

–Central Pacific worked eastward from CA (Chinese immigrants)

–May 10, 1869 the 2 tracks met at Promontory Point in Utah

■By 1900, 4 more lines were built to the Pacific

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1st transcontinental railroad connected the west coast to eastern cities in 1869

Chinese workers made up a large percentage of laborers

on the western leg

Irish workers made up a large percentage of laborers on the eastern section

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Federal Land Grants to Railroads by 1871 The national gov’t doled $65 million &

millions of acres in land grants (received reduced rates for shipping)

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The Transcontinental Railroad

In 1870, RR companies developed the 1st time zones to better schedule the RR system; the US

would not adopt time zones until 1918

“Pullman cars” & “refrigeration cars”

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Railroad Construction, 1830-1920

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■Essential Question:

–What economic, political, &

migratory factors led to the end

of the western frontier by 1890?

■Reading Quiz Ch 18A (p.606-625)

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Crushing the

Native Americans

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The Plains Indians

In 1865, 2/3 of all Indians lived on the Great Plains

Tribes of several 1,000 people were subdivided into bands of 100s which made it difficult for the U.S. to negotiate treaties

Their culture was dependent

upon the buffalo & the horse

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Searching for an Indian Policy

■Before the Civil War, the West

was “one big reservation”

–The Indian Intercourse Act

(1834) forbade whites from

entering

“Indian

country”

without

a license

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Searching for an Indian Policy

■But…rapid Western expansion in the 1850s brought a new Indian “concentration policy” with distinct boundaries for each tribe “as long as the waters run and grass grows”

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Searching for an Indian Policy

■Concentration did not last as whites ignored these boundaries: –Sand Creek Massacre (1864)—

Col John Chivington attacked 700 sleeping Indians in CO after a peace agreement was signed

–Sioux War (1865-1867)—gold miners wanted a Bozeman Trail (across Sioux hunting grounds) to connect mining towns; Sioux murdered 88 U.S. soldiers

“Kill and scalp all, big and little”

Congress investigated & condemned Chivington’s attack

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Searching for an Indian Policy ■In 1867, the U.S. formed the

Indian Peace Commission :

–Ended Bozeman Trail plans

–Made “small reservations” in the Dakota & Oklahoma territories

■Few Native Americans settled into these reservations peacefully:

–Red River War (1874)

–Little Big Horn (1876)

–Wounded Knee Massacre (1890)

Black soldiers in the U.S. army called “buffalo soldiers” were used to fend

off Indian attacks in the West

The discovery of gold in South Dakota led a Sioux army of 2,500 to ambush

& kill Lt Col Custer & his 197 soldiers

“Custer’s Last Stand” set off demands for revenge among Americans

The U.S. army was ordered to stop Sioux “ghost dances” & machine

gunned 200 men, women, & children

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The End of Tribal Life

■In 1871, the U.S. adopted its 4th

Indian policy: Assimilation

–U.S. citizenship was offered to

all Indians who farmed, lived

away from their tribe & “adopted

the habits of civilized life”

–Dawes Severalty Act in 1887

offered farms (160 acres to

families & 80 to men) & the

protection of U.S. laws

“Kill the Indian and save the man” —Richard Pratt, founder of Carlisle

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The End of Tribal Life

■The final blow to Indian culture came with annihilation of buffalo:

–Began with the construction of the transcontinental RR in 1860s

–From 1872 to 1874, 3 million buffalo were killed each year

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1 hunter = 100 buffalo per day

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The Final Fling

■In 1889, Congress responded to

demands to open the Oklahoma

Territory to white settlement

■On April 22, 1889, about 100,000

“Boomers” & “Sooners” flooded

into the last “Indian land”

–White migrants claimed 2 million

acres in Oklahoma homesteads

–Moved out Creeks & Seminoles

Oklahoma “Boomers” waiting for noon “Sooners” couldn’t wait until noon

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Lands Lost by Native Americans (1894) Indian Reservations Today

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Conclusions: The End of the Frontier

■By 1890, the western frontier ended

–Miners, ranchers, & cowboys

flooded West at the expense of

Indians who were restricted to

smaller & smaller reservations

–Westerners were commercially

connected to Eastern markets but

would grow increasingly frustrated

by the economic & political

concentration of power in the East

A continuation of antebellum

“Manifest Destiny”

With no more West to conquer, where would American expansion

go next?