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Section 19.1: Miners, Ranchers, and Cowhands

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Title: Section 19.1: Miners, Ranchers, and Cowhands


1
Section 19.1 Miners, Ranchers, and Cowhands
  • Today we will describe the geography of the West
    and explain how its people earned their living.

2
Vocabulary
  • frontier the boundary between civiliza-tion and
    wilderness
  • boomtown town that grows dramatic-ally in a
    short time
  • vaquero a Mexican cowboy
  • prospector person looking for valuable
    minerals, like gold or silver
  • vigilante unofficial crime fighter

3
Check for Understanding
  • What are we going to do today?
  • How does a vaquero get to work?
  • What does a prospector hope to find?
  • Why is living on the frontier dangerous?
  • Is Batman a vigilante? (Explain)

4
What We Already Know
  • Americans had begun moving west across the Great
    Plains in large numbers since the 1830s.

5
What We Already Know
  • The California gold rush attracted millions of
    people to the West Coast in 1849.

6
What We Already Know
  • Americans had settled in Texas and had helped
    make it part of the United States in 1845.

7
One Americans Story
  • Nat Love (aka Deadwood Dick) born a slave in
    Tennessee in 1854 left the South and went west
  • As a cowhand, he became well known for his expert
    horsemanship and rodeo skills.
  • In his 1907 autobiography, Love offered a lively
    but exaggerated account of his life.
  • Few cowhands led lives as exciting as
    thatdescribed by Nat Love, but they all helped
    to open a new chapter in the history of the
    American West.

8
Geography and Population of the West
  • Places such as St. Joseph and Independence,
    Missouri, were the last cities and towns before
    the frontier.

9
Geography and Population of the West
  • Most white people considered the Great Plains an
    empty desert.
  • Few had been attracted to its rolling plains, dry
    plateaus, and harsh deserts.

10
  • However, settlers had followed miners streaming
    into California after the 1849 gold rush.
  • By 1850, California had gained statehood. Oregon
    followed in 1859.

11
  • The Great Plains had few trees, but its
    grasslands were home to about 300,000 Native
    Americans in the mid-1800s.

12
  • Most Plains Indian bands followed the buffalo
    herds that rumbled across the open plains.
  • Despite the presence of these peoples, the United
    States claimed ownership of the area.

13
Railroads played a key role in settling the
western United States.
  • Trains carried minerals, timber, crops, and
    cattle to eastern markets, and brought miners,
    ranchers, and farmers to the west.

14
  • As the railroads opened new areas to white
    settlement, they also helped end the way of life
    of the Wests first settlers
    ....the Native Americans.

15
Adivina esto, Batman?
16
Why were few people been interested in settling
on the Great Plains before the Civil War?
  1. It was already the home of several powerful
    American Indian groups.
  2. The presence of so many buffalo made farming
    impossible.
  3. It was so dry and treeless that most people
    considered it a desert.
  4. The government had banned settle-ment west of the
    Mississippi River.

17
What is the frontier? Where the end of
civilization meets the beginning of wilderness
18
How did the transcontinental railroad spur
Western settlement?
  1. Carrying natural resources of the West to the
    East
  2. Providing jobs for settlers in railroad
    construction
  3. Bringing new settlers from the East to the West
  4. transporting soldiers west to fight the Indians

Choose all that are true!
19
Mining in the West
  • In 1859, gold and silver strikes drew as many as
    100,000 miners to the Rocky Mountains in Colorado.

20
Mining in the West
  • The same year, Comstock Lode in western Nevada
    produced some 300 million in silver and gold.

21
  • Any settlement near an ore strike became a
    boomtown, a town that has a sudden burst of
    economic or population growth.

22
Mining in the West
  • Gold fever also attracted miners from other parts
    of the world, including Europe, South America,
    Mexico, and China.
  • Few prospectors became rich, and most left
    disappointed and broke.

23
Over time, large mining companies replaced
individual prospectors.
  • Small-scale miners could not afford water cannons
    to blast away hillsides to expose gold deposits,
    or the equipment needed to sink shafts thousands
    of feet into the ground.

24
Results of Western Mining
  • Hillsides were stripped of vegetation and rivers
    were left polluted.
  • Once-thriving communities became ghost towns.
  • Nevada, Colorado, and South Dakota all grew so
    rapidly that they soon gained statehood.

25
??????? ??? ???, ???????
26
Why did large mining companies eventually replace
individual prospectors?
  1. Individual miners could not afford the equipment
    needed to make mining profitable.
  2. The mining companies bought up the smaller
    individual claims.
  3. The government would only send troops to protect
    the larger mining sites for Indian attacks,
    leaving prospectors defenseless.
  4. Prospectors couldnt afford to pay the high taxes
    placed on mining income by the government.

27
Why did the mining boom end?
  1. The costs of operating them had become too high.
  2. Too many miners left to work in the oil fields.
  3. The Indian threat frightened too many mine
    workers away.
  4. Ranching was easier and much more profitable.

28
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • The cattle trade had existed in the Southwest
    since the 1500s, but cattle herds remained small
    until the Civil War.

29
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • With no efficient way to get the beef to markets
    in the more heavily populated cities of the East,
    ranchers mostly sold their cattle locally.

30
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • An Illinois
  • livestock dealer
  • named
  • Joseph McCoy
  • realized that railroads could bring cattle from
    Texas ranches to meat-hungry Eastern cities.

31
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • By the 1860s, railroad lines were extended from
    Chicago and St. Louis into Kansas.

32
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • Cowhands had only to drive cattle herds north
    from Texas to his stockyards in Abilene, Kansas.

From there, the beef could be shipped to Chicago
and points east by rail car.
33
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • Cattle fed on the open range for a year or two
    and ranchers then hired cowhands to round up the
    cattle and take them to Abilene, where they were
    sold for as much as ten times their original
    price.

34
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • The success of the Abilene stockyards spurred the
    growth of other Kansas cow towns, including
    Wichita and Dodge City.

35
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • Cowhands followed specific trails across the
    plains, such as the Chisholm Trail, which
    stretched from San Antonio to Abilene.
  • From 1867 to 1884, about four million cattle were
    driven to market on this trail.
  • As cattle raising became more profitable,
    ranching spread north across the plains from
    Texas to Montana.

36
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • The first cowhands were vaqueros, who had
    developed in Mexico with the Spaniards in the
    1500s.
  • From the vaquero, the American cowhand learned to
    rope and ride.
  • Cowhands also adapted the saddle, spurs, lariat,
    and chaps of the vaqueros.

37
Rise of the Cattle Industry
  • About
  • one in three cowhands in the West was either
    Mexican or African American.

Also among the cow-hands were a large number of
former Civil War soldiers.
38
Palaisipan sa akin ito, Batman?
39
Before the mid-1800s, why were beef cattle only
sold locally in Texas?
  1. Consumers in the East didnt trust the quality of
    Texas beef.
  2. There was no way to ship the beef cattle from
    Texas to other markets.
  3. Before the mid-1800s, beef was not a popular meat
    on most tables.
  4. Government regulations didnt permit meat and
    poultry to be sold across state lines.

40
How did Joseph McCoy change the history of the
West?
  1. He invented the repeating rifle, which helped
    bring about the defeat of the Indians.
  2. He invented barbed wire, which ended the open
    range and made farming possible on the plains.
  3. He came up with the idea of driving cattle from
    Texas ranches up to Kansas railroad towns for
    shipment to Eastern cities.
  4. He developed the idea of vigilante justice, which
    brought law and order to towns without official
    sheriffs or marshals.

41
What helped the cattle industry to grow?
  1. The Plains Indians were all defeated and forced
    to move onto reservations.
  2. Railroad lines were built linking Kansas with
    Chicago and St. Louis.
  3. The mining boom ended in 1882.
  4. Barbed wire was invented in 1882.

42
Who were the first American cowhands?
  1. Civil war veterans
  2. Former slaves
  3. European immigrants
  4. Mexican vaqueros

43
The Wild West
  • At first, cow towns had
  • no local governments.

44
The Wild West
  • There were no law officers to handle the fights
    that broke out as cowhands drank and gambled
    after a long drive.

45
The Wild West
  • A more serious threat to law and order came from
    con men, who saw the new towns as places to get
    rich quick by cheating others.

J.R. Soapy Smith
46
The Wild West
  • Outlaws like Billy the Kid and Jesse and Frank
    James made crime a way of life.
  • Some women, such as Belle Starr, became outlaws,
    too.

47
The Wild West
  • For protection, citizens formed vigilante groups,
    taking the law into their own hands.

48
The Wild West
  • Vigilante justice often consisted of hanging
    suspects from the nearest tree or shooting them
    on the spot, so it was common for innocent people
    to be unjustly executed.

49
The Wild West
  • As towns became more settled, vigilantes were
    replaced by elected sheriffs and federal
    marshals, who would arrest lawbreakers and hold
    them in jail until the time of trial.

50
Riddle mér þetta, Batman?
51
Why did Westerners form vigilante groups?
  1. They didnt want to become dependent on the
    government for protection.
  2. There were no authorized government officials in
    their vicinity for them to call on.
  3. Taking the law into their own hands made them
    feel self-reliant.
  4. The towns were to poor to be able to pay for real
    law enforcement officials.

52
What did vigilante justice look like?
  1. Posse made up of private citizens
  2. Active participation by sheriffs or marshals
  3. Accused people locked up until trial
  4. Swift execution by hanging or shooting
  5. Great care exercised to protect the rights of the
    accused
  6. Innocent people unjustly punished

Choose all that are true!
53
End of the Long Drives
  • In 1886, the price of beef dropped sharply
  • as the supply increased.

54
End of the Long Drives
  • More farmers moved in to farm or raise sheep,
    fencing in their lands with barbed wire, and the
  • open range disappeared.

55
End of the Long Drives
  • In the harsh winter of 18861887, thousands of
    cattle froze to death
  • and many ranchers were put out of business.

56
Meanwhile, as the mining and cattle industries
were developing, the Native Americans of the
Great Plains were being pushed off their land.
57
Teka-teki saya ini, Batman?
58
What economic activities drew large numbers of
people to the West beginning in the 1860s?
  1. oil drilling
  2. mining
  3. ranching
  4. farming
  5. manufacturing

Choose all that are true!
59
What factors led to the end of the cattle boom?
  1. The price of beef dropped as the supply grew.
  2. Buffalo were competing with the cattle for food
    on the prairie.
  3. The use of barbed wire by farmers closed the open
    range.
  4. The severe winter of 1886-87 destroyed a large
    percentage of the cattle herds.
  5. Raids by vaqueros and vigilantes made ranching
    too dangerous.

Choose all that are true!
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