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Georgia and the American Experience

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Title: Georgia and the American Experience


1
Georgia and the American Experience
  • Chapter 6
  • An Age of Expansion, 1783-1838
  • Study Presentation

2
Georgia and the American Experience
  • Section 1 Creating A New Government
  • Section 2 Land Fever in Georgia
  • Section 3 Economic Growth in Georgia
  • Section 4 Georgia At the Dawn of a New Century
  • Section 5 The War of 1812
  • Section 6 Native Americans in Georgia

3
Section 1 Creating A New Government
  • Essential Question
  • What was Georgias role in the Constitutional
    Convention?

4
Section 1 Creating A New Government
  • What words do I need to know?
  • U.S. Constitution
  • Bill of Rights
  • General Assembly

5
Constitutional Convention of 1787
  • William Few and Abraham Baldwin represented
    Georgia at the 1787 Constitutional Convention in
    Philadelphia George Washington presided
  • U.S. Constitution established three governmental
    branches
  • Executive, (enforces laws)
  • Legislative, (creates laws)
  • and Judicial (settles disputes about laws)

6
Constitutional Convention of 1787
  • Established 2 houses of Congress
  • Senate (2 from each state members elected by
    citizens 6-year terms) and
  • House of Representatives ( from each state is
    determined by population members elected 2-year
    terms)
  • Only three-fifths of slave population would count
    toward representation

7
U.S. Constitution Ratified in 1788
  • Georgia was fourth state to ratify (approve) the
    new Constitution
  • Constitution could be amended (changed) first 10
    amendments became the Bill of Rights
  • George Washington became the first President

8
Postwar Georgia
  • Economy in ruin government provided food basics
    as farmers tried to reestablish their farms
  • Capital moved from Savannah to Augusta (to keep
    up with the population spread into the
    backcountry)

Click to return to Table of Contents
9
Postwar Georgia
  • Georgia delegates met in 1788 and 1789 adopted
    state constitution similar to national
    government, with three branches
  • General Assembly had two houses, Senate and House
    of Representatives appointed governor and
    judges controlled spending decisions

Click to return to Table of Contents
10
Section 2 Land Fever in Georgia
  • Essential Question
  • How did many Georgians obtain land in the twenty
    years following the end of the American
    Revolution?

11
Section 2 Land Fever in Georgia
  • What words do I need to know?
  • headright system
  • Yazoo land fraud
  • Louisiana Purchase

12
Headright System
  • Indian land in Georgia east of the Oconee River
    was given to settlers
  • Every white male counted as a head of household
    and had the right to receive up to 1,000 acres

13
Land Lottery
  • Replaced the headright system in 1803
  • Lottery for government-owned (public domain) land
    west of the Oconee
  • For a small fee, any white male twenty-one years
    of age or older could buy a chance and win land.
    Heads of households with children, war veterans,
    and widows were given extra chances in the land
    lotteries millions of acres in several states
    were given away

14
Yazoo Land Fraud
  • 1795, four companies bribed the governor and
    legislators
  • Bought millions of acres in western GA (todays
    AL and Mississippi) for 1½ an acre
  • The public found out and protested the
    legislators involved were voted out of office
  • General Assembly repealed the law approving the
    sale then the federal govt paid more than 4
    million to help GA settle Yazoo land claims

15
The Western Territory
  • In 1802, Georgia ceded (gave up) its land claims
    west of the Chattahoochee River to the federal
    government for 1.25 million
  • President Thomas Jefferson doubled the nations
    size in 1803 with the Louisiana territory
    purchase the U.S. paid France 15 million for
    land that stretched to the Rocky Mountains

Click to return to Table of Contents
16
Section 3 Economic Growth in Georgia
  • ESSENTIAL QUESTION
  • How did Georgia rebuild and expand its economy in
    the late 17th and early 18th century?

17
Section 3 Economic Growth in Georgia
  • What words do I need to know?
  • depression
  • turnpike
  • cotton gin
  • mechanical reaper

18
Cotton and the Cotton Gin
  • Eli Whitney in 1793 invented a machine for
    separating cotton seeds from its fiber
  • Increased the amount cotton growers could process
    each day
  • The gin used wire teeth on a turning cylinder to
    separate the seed from fiber

19
The Mechanical Reaper
  • Cyrus McCormick invented a machine to cut grain
    in a field
  • Wooden paddles attached to a horses harness
    allowed six times more grain to be cut per day
    than previous methods
  • Georgia farmers could work larger and more
    profitable farms with these agricultural machines

20
Depression and the Panic of 1837
  • GA banks failed 1837-early 1840s b/c of
    depression (a sharp economic downturn)
  • Many business failed many farmers and planters
    lost their land
  • Many banks didnt have enough to pay out money
    to people

21
Early Roads in Georgia
  • Railroads, built after 1830, replaced horses,
    stagecoaches, and boats
  • Most GA roads ran east to west follow former
    Indian footpaths
  • Plank roads over wetlands that featured pikes
    or gates were called turnpikes
  • Travelers paid a toll, or fee at each pike the
    Old Federal Road connected Athens north to
    Tennessee

22
Terminus
  • Located at the southern end of a rail line that
    originated in Chattanooga, Tennessee
  • Later remained Marthasville, after the daughter
    of former Governor Wilson Lumpkin
  • Marthasville became Atlanta, and the capital of
    GA
  • Rail lines greatly reduced travel time for people
    and freight

Click to return to Table of Contents
23
Section 4 Georgia at the Dawn of a New Century
  • ESSENTIAL QUESTION
  • How did lifestyles differ in Georgia between
    frontier families and town dwellers?

24
Section 4 Georgia at the Dawn of a New Century
  • What words do I need to know?
  • pioneers
  • frontier Georgia
  • cultural refinements
  • townsfolk

25
Religious Activities
  • Anglicans, Quakers, and Methodist circuit riders
    (traveling ministers for frontier dwellers) grew
    in
  • GAs 1st Roman Catholic Church est. in Wilkes
    County in 1796
  • Savannah had Jewish synagogue
  • As more towns were established, churches become
    central to community life
  • In other parts of America, the Mormon church and
    the African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) churches
    were started

26
Education in Georgia
  • The University of Georgia chartered in 1785 as
    nations first land-grant university opened for
    classes in 1801
  • UGA was often called Franklin College in its
    early days
  • By 1820, there were forty academies (schools)
    across the state
  • Georgia Female College (later Wesleyan College)
    opened in 1836

Click to return to Table of Contents
27
Section 5 The War of 1812
  • ESSENTIAL QUESTION
  • What were the causes of the War of 1812?

28
Section 5 The War of 1812
  • What words and people do I need to know?
  • embargo
  • president James Madison
  • war hawks
  • Treaty of Ghent

29
Unhappy with French and British Trade Policies
  • Years of war between Great Britain and France
    prompted both countries to try to block U.S.
    trade with its enemy
  • British ships took American sailors and made them
    serve with the British Navy
  • President Thomas Jefferson ordered an embargo in
    1807 to stop trade with foreign countries this
    proved disastrous to American shipping

30
War Hawks
  • Land-hungry Southerners and Westerners
  • Believed British were stirring up the Indians in
    the western territories
  • Argued for war against GB
  • Believed the British should be driven from Canada
    to eliminate the problems in the western
    territories
  • President James Madison pushed Congress to
    declare war on Great Britain in 1812 the war
    declaration narrowly passed

31
War of 1812
  • War lasted for two years neither side gained
    advantage during first two years
  • In 1814, British attack and burn Washington, the
    young national capital
  • British later attacked Baltimore harbor The
    Star Spangled Banner written during The Battle
    of Fort McHenry
  • The Battle of New Orleans, fought after the
    Treaty of Ghent ended the war, was a decisive
    American victory
  • The war united the American states as one nation
    Andrew Jackson became a national hero

Click to return to Table of Contents
32
Section 6 Native Americans in Georgia
  • ESSENTIAL QUESTION
  • Why were the Indians removed from Georgia?

33
Section 6 Native Americans in Georgia
  • What words do I need to know?
  • syllabary
  • Oconee War
  • Treaty of New York
  • Red Sticks
  • White Sticks
  • Treaty of Indian Springs
  • Trail of Tears

34
Cherokee Culture
  • Most advanced of Georgias tribes learned
    quickly from white settlers
  • Some, like Chief James Vann, lived in large
    houses
  • Chief Vann encouraged Christianity
  • Sequoyah developed a syllabary, a group of
    symbols that stand for whole syllables it gave
    Cherokees a written form of their language
  • Government modeled on that of United States
    capital at New Echota by 1825

35
Creek Indians
  • Series of clashes between Creek and settlers who
    pushed into their land known as Oconee War
  • Treaty of New York Creeks give up all land east
    of the Oconee River, but could keep land on the
    west side this angered Georgia settlers, who
    felt betrayed by their government
  • Land treaties were often broken
  • Red Stick Creeks endorsed war to fight for their
    land claims White Stick Creeks wanted peace

36
The Creek War
  • Red Sticks attacked Fort Mims, killing more than
    400 people
  • The Battle of Horseshoe Bend, in Alabama, ended
    the Creek War in 1814 Andrew Jackson led the
    U.S. troops
  • The Creeks were forced to give up nearly all
    their land to the U.S. government
  • The Treaty of Indian Springs gave up last Creek
    lands in Georgia to the U.S. Chief William
    McIntosh was later murdered by rival Creeks for
    signing the treaty

37
Creek Removal
  • Treaty of Washington (1832) resulted in 5 million
    acres of Creek land ceded to the United States
  • U.S. agreed to allow Creeks who wished to remain
    and live on 2 million of those acres the U.S.
    promised to protect those who stayed
  • Those who didnt wish to stay would have to move
    to the western territories
  • The treaty was broken by 1840, nearly all Creeks
    were forced to move west

38
The Trail of Tears
  • Discovery of gold in Dahlonega Georgia heightened
    demand for Cherokee land
  • The Supreme Court ruled that Cherokee territory
    was not subject to state law, but the ruling was
    not enforced (Worcester v. Georgia)
  • Between 1832 and 1835, Cherokees were stripped of
    their land
  • In 1838, thousands of Cherokees were forcibly
    removed to Oklahoma about 4,000 died from
    disease, exposure, or hunger
  • 700 to 800 escaped and hid in the North Carolina
    mountains

Click to return to Table of Contents
39
Frontier Georgia
  • Undeveloped land in central and western GA
  • Few settlers much land given away in land
    lotteries
  • Far-flung trading posts were only stores
  • Often danger lurked from hostile attacks
  • Social activities often centered around necessary
    work
  • The country store became the center of activity
    few luxuries were available

40
Life in Georgias Towns
  • Cultural refinements (higher level living) set
    apart frontier and town lifestyles
  • Newspapers, theater, and debate societies
  • Fancy balls, barbecues, camp meetings, and horse
    racing
  • Orphanages, hospitals, and facilities for people
    with special needs were operated
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