Miners Ranchers Farmers chapter 7, section 3. Miners.

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Miners Ranchers Farmers chapter 7, section 3

Transcript of Miners Ranchers Farmers chapter 7, section 3. Miners.

Page 1: Miners Ranchers Farmers chapter 7, section 3. Miners.

MinersRanchers

Farmers

chapter 7, section 3

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Miners

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Gold Miners• California gold rush, 1849 (49ers)• near Pike’s Peak, 1859 (59ers)• Comstock Lode

–$400 million in gold and silver by 1890–Responsible for Nevada’s statehood

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Finding Gold• Individual prospectors look for

traces of gold in mountain streams(placer mining)

• When found, deep-shaft mining begins.–Expensive equipment required–Wealthy investors required

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Boom Towns• Rich strikes created boom towns

saloons, dance-hall girls, vigilantes• Many became ghost towns just a

few years later.• Other towns that served the

mines became important commercial centers.–San Francisco, Sacramento, Denver

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Mining Towns• Similar to industrial cities• Workers were also from Europe,

Latin America, and China.• ½ the population was often

foreign born• Greatly increased Western

population

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Foreign Backlash• Resentment among whites• Miner’s Tax ($20 / month) in CA• Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)

prohibited further Chinese immigration

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Ranchers

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Ranching• Civil War – TX is cut off from CSA

5 million heads of cattle roam freely• TX cattle business – easy to enter

FREE CATTLE!• Ranchers Kill off the buffalo

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Railroads• RR starts in Kansas

(Cow towns) RR goes to KC, St. Louis, Chicago

• Steers bought for $5 / headand sold for up to $80 / head

• Refrigerated railcars made it even cheaper.

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Cattle Drives• RR didn’t go into TX

Cowboys drove cattle to Kansas• 1 cowboy per 300-500 cattle

up to 1,500 miles to Kansas$30 per month, paid in 1 lump sum (for quick spending)

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End of Cattle Drives• 1880s

overgrazing destroyed the grass• 1885-1886

blizzard and drought(90% of cattle die)

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Farmers

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Farming• Homestead Act of 1862

160 acres is yours after 5 years• 500,000 Homestead families

2.5 million families had to buy land from the RR

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Housing• Made of sod

strips of grass with thick roots and earth attached

• No trees to make housesNo trees to make fences

• Joseph Glidden invents barbed wire to fence GP land.

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Hard Times• Many discover that 160 acres is

not enough to survive.2 of 3 farms fail by 1900

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The Family• Everyone had to work in order

to survive–Men did heavy manual labor–Children collected wood & carried water–Women did chores around the house,

managed the money, raised the children, provided food (crops, butter, chickens, milk)

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Bonanza Farms

• Run like big business

• High volume• Drove down

prices• Squeezed out the

small farmers

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Dry Farming• The only way to farm

successfully in the GP–Crops that don’t require much water–Keeping fields free of weeds–Digging deep furrows to reach the water

• New plows developed to make several furrows at once.

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Frontier Myths

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Not as wild as you thought…

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The Closing of the Frontier

• The move westward began in the 1860’s

• In 1890, the Department of the Interior declared the that the frontier was settled.

• Government begins to reserve land.

• The West opened and closed in a generation…