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The West: Exploiting an Empire

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17 The West: Exploiting an Empire 1849 1902 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The West: Exploiting an Empire


1
17
  • The West Exploiting an Empire
  • 1849?1902

2
The West Exploiting an Empire, 1849?1902
  • Beyond the Frontier
  • What were the challenges of settling the country
    west of the Mississippi?
  • Crushing the Native Americans
  • How did white Americans crush the culture of the
    Native Americans as they moved west?

17.1
17.2
3
The West Exploiting an Empire, 1849?1902
  • Settlement of the West
  • Why did Americans and others move to the West?
  • The Bonanza West
  • Why was the West a bonanza of dreams and
    get-rich-quick schemes?

17.3
17.4
4
Video SeriesKey Topics in U.S. History
  1. Conquest of the West
  2. The Dawes Act
  3. Chinese Exclusion Act
  4. The Gold Rush

Home
5
Lean Bears Changing West
  • 1863 Indian chiefs met with Lincoln
  • Lean Bear, the Cheyenne Chief
  • A few years later federal troops invaded Lean
    Bears land and killed him
  • Promised peace
  • The West became great colonial empire
  • Place of conquest and exploitation

Home
6
Beyond the Frontier
  • 1840 - Settlement reached Missouri
  • Great Plains treeless, nearly flat
  • Rockies formidable barrier
  • Basin desolate areas of Idaho and Utah
  • Pacific Coast past Cascades and Sierra Nevada,
    temperate
  • Most pre?Civil War settlers headed directly for
    Pacific Coast

Home
7
Beyond the Frontier
8
Discussion Question
  • What were the particular challenges of settling
    the country west of the Mississippi?

Beyond the Frontier
9
Crushing the Native Americans
  • Life of the Plains Indians
  • Searching for an Indian Policy
  • Final Battles on the Plains
  • The End of Tribal Life

Home
10
Crushing the Native Americans
  • 1865 250,000 Indians in western U.S.
  • Displaced Eastern Indians
  • Native Plains Indians
  • Pacific Coast tribes
  • By the 1870s
  • Most Indians on reservations
  • California Indians decimated by disease

Crushing the Native Americans
11
Life of the Plains Indians
  • Two-thirds of all Native Americans lived on the
    Great Plains
  • Many distinctive tribes
  • Nomadic and warlike
  • Migratory
  • Labor divided by gender

Crushing the Native Americans
12
Searching for an Indian Policy
  • Early nineteenth century
  • Indian Country - land west of the Mississippi
    River
  • Whites could not enter without license
  • 1850s Wagon trains, gold rush, and talk of
    transcontinental railroad
  • Government ended one big reservation
  • New policy of concentration
  • Whites poured into West

Crushing the Native Americans
13
Searching for an Indian Policy (continued)
  • Violence erupted as settlers moved west
  • Sand Creek massacre
  • Sioux War of 18651867
  • Fetterman massacre
  • Debate over Indian policy
  • Humanitarians wanted to civilize Indians
  • Others wanted firm control, swift reprisal
  • Small reservation policy adopted
  • Isolate Indians

Crushing the Native Americans
14
Crushing the Native Americans
15
Final Battles on the Plains
  • Small reservation policy failed
  • Young warriors refused restraint
  • White settlers encroached on Indian lands
  • Final series of wars suppressed Indians
  • Little Big Horn
  • Wounded Knee Massacre - 1890
  • To suppress Ghost Dances
  • Most battles resulted in Indian defeat

Crushing the Native Americans
16
Crushing the Native Americans
17
The End of Tribal Life
  • Assimilation policy
  • Congress stopped making treaties - 1871
  • Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania
  • Dawes Severalty Act - 1887
  • Near extermination of buffalo
  • Native American loss of culture
  • 1900 only 250,000 remained in U.S.
  • Poor lifestyle

Crushing the Native Americans
18
Crushing the Native Americans
19
Discussion Question
  • How did white Americans crush the culture of the
    Native Americans as they moved west?

Crushing the Native Americans
20
Settlement of the West
  • Men and Women on the Overland Trail
  • Land for the Taking
  • The Spanish-Speaking Southwest

Home
21
Settlement of the West
  • Unprecedented settlement 18701900
  • Most moved West seeking a better life
  • Rising population drove increasing demand for
    Western goods
  • West was not a major safety valve for social
    and economic tensions

Settlement of the West
22
Men and Women on theOverland Trail
  • Great migration westward
  • First push aimed for California and Oregon
  • Gold Rush of 1849
  • Overland Trail
  • Migration usually a family affair
  • Journey was strenuous

Settlement of the West
23
Land for the Taking
  • 18601900 Federal land grants
  • Homestead Act of 1862
  • Most land acquired by wealthy investors
  • Water was dominant issue
  • 1902 - National Reclamation Act (Newlands Act)
  • Railroads largest landowners in West
  • Eager to have immigrants settle on land

Settlement of the West
24
Settlement of the West
25
The Spanish-Speaking Southwest
  • Spanish-speakers of Southwest
  • Contributed to culture and institutions
  • Spanish?Mexican Californians
  • Culture shaped society
  • Continuous immigration kept culture strong

Settlement of the West
26
Discussion Question
  • Why did Americans and others to move to the West?

Settlement of the West
27
The Bonanza West
  • The Mining Bonanza
  • The Cattle Bonanza
  • The Farming Bonanza
  • Discontent on the Farm
  • The Final Fling

Home
28
The Bonanza West
  • Quest to get rich quick
  • Produced uneven growth
  • Caused boom-and-bust economic cycles
  • Wasted resources
  • Constant change
  • Instant cities
  • Institutions based on bonanza mentality
  • West - an idea as well as a region

The Bonanza West
29
The Mining Bonanza
  • Mining first attraction to the West
  • California Gold Rush of 1849
  • Placer mining gave way to big business
  • Comstock Lode
  • Black Hills
  • Towns grew from camps that sprouted with first
    strike
  • Governed by simple democracy
  • More men than women
  • Many foreign-born

The Bonanza West
30
The Mining Bonanza (continued)
  • Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882
  • Hostility toward foreign miners grew
  • Suspended Chinese immigration for ten years
  • 1890s - bonanza over
  • Contributed millions to economy and helped
    finance Civil War
  • Scarred and polluted environment
  • Left ghost towns

The Bonanza West
31
What New Economic Patterns Emerged in the West?
  • How did railroad expansion shape population
    growth in the West?
  • How did western agriculture develop during the
    late 1800s?
  • How did the federal governments presence
    manifest itself as settlers moved west?

The Bonanza West
32
The Bonanza West
33
The Bonanza West
34
The Cattle Bonanza
  • The far West ideal for cattle grazing
  • Cattle ranching dominated open range
  • Getting beef to eastern markets
  • Cowboys worked long hours for little pay
  • Laws and rules
  • End of the great cattle drives
  • Farmers moved in
  • Mechanization modernized ranching
  • Weather connection
  • Ranchers adapted

The Bonanza West
35
The Bonanza West
36
The Bonanza West
37
The Farming Bonanza
  • 1870?1900 Millions of farmers moved West to
    cultivate land
  • Population on Plains tripled
  • 1900 - 30 percent of population in West, compared
    to less than 1 percent in 1850
  • Exodusters
  • Problems on the Plains
  • New farming methods

The Bonanza West
38
Discontent on the Farm
  • National Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry (the
    Grange)
  • Provided social, cultural, and educational
    activities
  • Banned political involvement
  • Farmers grievances
  • Transformation of American agriculture
  • Nations garden
  • Commercial and scientific

The Bonanza West
39
The Final Fling
  • 1889 - Oklahoma opened to white settlement
  • Indians forced to give up rights to land
  • Sooners and Boomers

The Bonanza West
40
Discussion Question
  • Why was the West a bonanza of dreams and
    get-rich-quick schemes?

The Bonanza West
41
Conclusion The Meaning of the West
  • Historians differ in their interpretation of the
    American frontier experience
  • Frederick Jackson Turner Turners thesis
  • New Western historians
  • Image of frontier and the West influenced
    American development

42
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