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Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war
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Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Why do people relocate (move)?

• loss of job• lack of opportunity • over-crowding • famine• war

Page 2: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

When a family is planning to move, what do they look for?

• Better jobs • better climate• lower taxes• more room • professional opportunity

Page 3: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Unit 3 Movement of

People

Page 4: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Movement of People to the U. S.

http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/activities/09/gapacket05.pdf

Page 5: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Two types of movement

•Voluntary•Involuntary

Page 6: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Voluntary Movement

Voluntary is when someone is willing or wanting to do something.

» Raising your hand to read is a voluntary movement.» Signing up to play football or be a cheerleader is a

voluntary movement.

1. A voluntary migration is when a group of people chose to leave an area and relocate.

Page 7: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Voluntary Migrations

2. An example of a voluntary migration is the pilgrims coming landing at Plymouth.

 

3. Another example of voluntary migration is the Gold Rush.

Page 8: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Involuntary Movement

• Involuntary is when someone is made to do something against his/her will.

» For some of you, coming to school everyday may be an involuntary movement.

4. An involuntary migration is when a group of people are forced to leave and area and relocate.

Page 9: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Involuntary Migrations5. An example of a group of people who

involuntarily migrated is _African Americans. They were forced migrate to America as slaves.

 

6. Another example of involuntary migration is _Native Americans. They were force to migrate to reservations.

 

7. A _reservation_ is a piece of land set aside by the government for American Indians.

Page 10: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

HISTORICAL MOVEMENTS

• Throughout the history of the United States and the world, there have been many movements of people. Some groups of people wanted to move and others were forced to move for various reasons.

Page 11: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Historical Movements

*Colonists—English moved to create a new life in the new world

*Pilgrims—wanted to practice their religious beliefs

*Pioneers—wanted to their own land

*Slaves—wanted their freedom

Page 12: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Gold Rush• The California Gold Rush (1848–1855) began on January 24,

1848, when gold was discovered by James Wilson Marshall at Sutter's Mill, in Coloma, California.[1] News of the discovery soon spread, resulting in some 300,000 men, women, and children coming to California from the rest of the United States and abroad.[2] Of the 300,000, approximately 150,000 arrived by sea while the remaining 150,000 arrived by land.

• These early gold-seekers, called "forty-niners," (as a reference to 1849) traveled to California by sailing boat and in covered wagons across the continent, often facing substantial hardships on the trip.

• The effects of the Gold Rush were substantial. San Francisco grew from a small settlement to a boomtown, and roads, churches, schools and other towns were built throughout California. A system of laws and a government were created, leading to the admission of California as a free state in 1850 as part of the Compromise of 1850.

• New methods of transportation developed as steamships came into regular service and railroads were built. The business of agriculture, California's next major growth field, was started on a wide scale throughout the state. However, the Gold Rush also had negative effects: Native Americans were attacked and pushed off traditional lands, and gold mining caused environmental harm.

Page 13: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/

http://pbskids.org/wayback/goldrush/

Page 14: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Event Cause Effect

Gold Rush(Voluntary)

Claim of gold found in the west

Westward expansion(California became a state.)

Gold Rush

Page 15: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Oregon Trail• The Oregon Trail was a voluntary

migration that occurred beginning in the 1841.

• The businesses in the United States were not doing well and therefore could not pay their loans.

• The Pioneers were forced to make a new beginning.

Voluntary Migration

Page 16: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.
Page 18: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Event Cause Effect

Oregon Trail(Voluntary)

People were having a hard time making a living. Forced to make a new beginning

Westward expansion

Oregon Trail

Page 19: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Jamestown Settlement• 1607• 1st European Settlement• To search for treasure and spread

Christianity

Voluntary Movement

http://www.historyisfun.org/Jamestown-Settlement.htm

Page 20: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Event Cause Effect

Jamestown Settlement(Voluntary)

To search for treasure and spread Christianity

A new colony was formed

Jamestown Settlement

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Underground Railroad

• http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/bhistory/underground_railroad/

• http://www.nationalgeographic.com/features/99/railroad/

***1830

Voluntary Migration

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Page 23: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Event Cause Effect

Underground Railroad(Voluntary)

Slavery African-Americans moved north and gained their freedom.

Underground Railroad

Page 24: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Trail of Tears

• The Trail of Tears occurred in 1831.• This was an involuntary movement.

http://www.socialstudiesforkids.com/wwww/us/trailoftearsdef.htm

Page 25: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Primary Source

8. A primary source is information that gives the real words and views of people who were there when an event took place.

Page 26: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

9. Examples of Primary Sources

• United States Constitution• Photograph of a crime scene• A diary entry of your day at school

Page 27: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Secondary Source

10. A secondary source is information written at a later time by someone who was not there to see what happened when an event took place.

Page 28: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

Example of Secondary Sources

11. A textbook written today about an event that took place in 1861

*a story written about a baseball game, based on the author’s interview of people who saw the game

Page 29: Why do people relocate (move)? loss of job lack of opportunity over-crowding famine war.

12. Point of view

• Is a person’s set of a beliefs that have been shaped by factors such as whether the person is old or young, male or female, rich or poor.

http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/mlkihaveadream.htm