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U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West
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U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Dec 29, 2015

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Page 1: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

U. S. History Since 1877Chapter 13 Settling the West

Page 2: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Settling the West13.1 Miners and Ranchers13.2 Farming13.3 Plains Indians

Page 3: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

13.1 Settling the WestMining IndustryRailroadsRanchingFarming

Page 4: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Chapter 13 Objectives

AHSGE:◦5.1 Identify and evaluate the events that led to the settlement of the West.

ACOS: ◦1.) Explain the transition of the United States from an agrarian society to an industrial nation prior to World War I.

Page 5: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Mining IndustryProspectors traveled west to find gold

and silver.At first, they used a process called

placer mining.◦ This required tools like picks, shovels, and

pans.◦ They searched for mineral deposits near the

surface.

Page 6: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information.Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information.

Page 7: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.
Page 8: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Mining Industry

Many settlers were unsuccessful because they did not search deep enough.

Next, they began quartz mining, which mined deep below the surface.

Frontier towns would quickly boom.

Page 9: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Mining IndustryHenry Comstock

discovered the Comstock Lode, a rich deposit of silver.

Virginia City, Nevada instantly became a boomtown when people heard about the Comstock Lode.

Settlers would leave when the gold and silver ran out, creating a boom and bust cycle for frontier towns.

Page 10: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Ghost Town

Page 11: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

RailroadsRailroads were soon

extended to the West to connect the boom towns.

Farmers and ranchers settled the West after railroads were built.

In 1889, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana became states as a result of the population increase.

Page 12: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Mamas, Don’t Let Your Babies

Mamas, don't let your babies grow up to be cowboys.

Don't let 'em pick guitars or drive them old trucks.

Let 'em be doctors and lawyers and such.

Mamas don't let your babies grow up to be cowboys.

'Cos they'll never stay home and they're always alone.

Even with someone they love.

Page 13: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

RanchingEastern cattle could not

survive on the sparse prairie land in the West.

The Texas longhorn was a breed of cattle that descended from Mexican cattle.

Longhorns had adapted to the area.

They roamed free on the open range.

Page 14: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

RanchingThe Civil War and the

expansion of the railroad system contributed to the growth of the ranching industry.

Ranchers rounded up cattle and herded them to the railroads in a journey called the long drive.

Most cowboys were former Confederates escaping Reconstruction in the South.

Page 15: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Circa 1890

Page 16: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Ranching

Some cowboys were Hispanic or African American.

Nat Love was a black cowboy.◦He was born a

slave in Tennessee.

◦He was freed at the end of the Civil War and traveled west.

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Ranching

Cowboys lived dangerous lives but often exaggerated their tales.

These stories became “dime novels” and created the “Wild West.”

Page 18: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.
Page 19: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

FarmingFarmers and ranchers

often fought over territory.

Farms blocked the routes of cattle drives.

Barbed wire helped settle the disputes.

The range was mostly fenced off.

Barbed wire helped “tame” the “Wild West.”

Herds were then kept on fenced-in ranches.

Page 20: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

13.2 FarmingThe Great PlainsThe Wheat BeltThe FrontierTurner Thesis

Frederick Jackson Turner

Page 21: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Chapter 13 Objectives

AHSGE:◦5.1 Identify and evaluate the events that led to the settlement of the West.

ACOS: ◦1.) Explain the transition of the United States from an agrarian society to an industrial nation prior to World War I.

Page 22: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

The Great PlainsThis area consists mostly of sparse

grasslands.Railroads opened the Great Plains up

for settlement.Railroad companies sold land along

the railroads at low prices.

Page 23: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

The Great PlainsIn 1862, the government tried to

encourage settlement by passing the Homestead Act.◦ After paying a $10 registration fee, an

individual could apply for a homestead.◦ A homestead was a tract of public land

available for settlement.◦ After living on the land for three to five

years, a homesteader would own the land.◦ Homesteaders could claim up to 160 acres

of land.◦ This law provided a legal framework for

settling the land with clear property deeds.

Page 24: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

The Wheat BeltWheat became as

important to the Great Plains as cottons was to the South.

It could survive drought better than other crops.

New methods and tools helped cultivate the area.

Page 25: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

The Wheat BeltDry farming is a way of planting seeds deep into the ground where there is moisture.

Loose soil was easily blown away in the area.

Page 26: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

The Wheat BeltPeople who farmed the plains became

known as sodbusters.Commercial farms used new machinery

to cover thousands of acres.These farms became known as bonanza

farms because of the huge profits they made.

The increased production of wheat in the Great Plains earned the area a new nickname: the Wheat Belt.

Page 27: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

The FrontierIn 1889, the government opened the

Oklahoma area for settlement.Within hours, over 10,000 people rushed

to Oklahoma to settle the area.This created the Oklahoma Land Rush

and closed the frontier.

Page 28: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Turner ThesisFrederick Jackson Turner,

an American historian, published a thesis claiming the frontier had helped develop the character of America.

Frontier life presented opportunities for social advancement, the spread of democracy, and adventure.

The Turner thesis emphasized individual effort in the American success story.

Page 29: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Discussion Question:Why did some people feel that the

closing the frontier was the end of an era?

Page 30: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

13.3 Plains IndiansCultureEncroachmentDakota SiouxLakota Sioux

_________________Sand Creek

MassacreBattle of Little Big

HornBattle of Wounded

KneeAssimilation

General Custer

Page 31: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Chapter 13 Objectives

AHSGE:◦5.1 Identify and evaluate the events that led to the settlement of the West.

ACOS: ◦1.) Explain the transition of the United States from an agrarian society to an industrial nation prior to World War I.

Page 32: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

CultureNumerous tribes of

Native Americans lived in the Plains.

They depended largely on the buffalo population for food.

Thus, they were nomads roaming the Plains in search for buffalos.

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Culture

The army encouraged white hunters to kill buffalo.

This would force the Native Americans onto the reservations.

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CultureGender determined

daily tasks for individuals.

Men hunted for food, traded goods, and fought against their enemies.

Women cared for children, cooked, and prepared hides.

Dakota Sioux

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EncroachmentAs railroads brought

settlers, Native Americans began competing with the settlers for land.

Indians were deprived of hunting grounds.

The U.S. Army often forced various Indian tribes to sign treaties forfeiting their claims to the land.

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EncroachmentThese treaties also

often required the tribes to relocate to Indian reservations.

Some Native American tribes resisted with violence.

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Dakota SiouxThe Dakota Sioux

were mistreated by Congress and the army.

Chief Little Crow tried to intervene for his people.◦ Congress failed to

pay annuities on time as agreed.

◦ Little Crow asked traders to provide food on credit.

Dakota Sioux

Page 38: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Dakota Sioux

◦Andrew Myrick said, “If they are hungry, let them eat grass or their own dung.”

◦The Dakota Sioux soon rebelled.

◦Myrick was found shot to death with grass stuffed in his mouth.

Page 39: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Lakota SiouxThe army sent troops to prevent

more trouble among settlers and the Indians.

It actually created more resistance.Chiefs Red Cloud, Crazy Horse,

and Sitting Bull led successful attacks against the U.S. army.

Crazy Horse lured Captain William Fetterman and his troops into an ambush.

They destroyed the American regiment in Fetterman’s Massacre in Wyoming.

Sitting Bull

Red Cloud

Crazy Horse

Page 40: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Sand Creek MassacreThe Cheyenne and

Arapaho met conflict with miners at Sand Creek.

Chief Black Kettle tried to negotiate peace with the settlers.

Several hundred Cheyenne Indians were attacked while waiting to negotiate a peace treaty at Camp Lyon.

Page 41: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Sand Creek MassacreMost of the details

remain a mystery.◦ 14 soldiers died.◦ 69-600 Indians could

have died in the battle.Congress responded by

forming the Indian Peace Commission to create two reservations.

It was a failed attempt at peace.

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Battle of Little Big Horn

Americans settlers continued to move into the reservations.

Many of the Lakota decided to abandon the reservation to hunt near the Bighorn Mountains.

Lieutenant Colonel George A. Custer led the Seventh Cavalry.

Page 43: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Battle of Little Big Horn

They attacked the Lakota Sioux and Cheyenne Indians on June 25, 1876 by the Little Bighorn River.

About 2,500 Indian warriors repelled Custer’s charge.

Custer and his men were all killed in “Custer’s Last Stand.”

Newspapers reported the event as a vicious Indian massacre.

This intensified Indian persecution.

Page 44: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

Battle of Wounded Knee

Lakota Sioux Indians who remained on the reservations continued to perform a forbidden Ghost Dance.

The government blamed Sitting Bull for the resistance.

Sitting Bull was killed in an exchange of gunfire.

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Battle of Wounded Knee

Other Ghost Dance participants fled the reservation.

The army pursued the Indians to Wounded Knee Creek where a battle erupted.

25 soldiers were killed and about 200 Lakota men, women, and children were killed.

Page 46: U. S. History Since 1877 Chapter 13 Settling the West.

AssimilationSome Americans protested the

mistreatment of the Native Americans.

They hoped the Indians would assimilate into American culture.

The Dawes Act divided the reservations into individual allotments.◦ Families received 160 acres.◦ Single adults received 80 acres.◦ Children received 40 acres.◦ Excess land was sold at low prices.◦ Proceeds were supposed to help the

Indians.

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Assimilation

The Indians received no training or tools to cultivate the land.

They soon plunged further into poverty.

This attempt at assimilation ultimately failed.

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Chapter 13 Test Tomorrow!