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Title: The%20Last%20West%20and%20the%20New%20South,%201865-1900


1
The Last West and the New South, 1865-1900
Painting by Robert Lindneux in the Woolaroc
Museum, Bartlesville, Oklahoma
2
  • American social development has been continually
    beginning over again on the frontier. This
    perennial rebirth, this fluidity of American
    life, this expansion westward with its new
    opportunities, its continuous touch with the
    simplicity of primitive society, furnish the
    forces dominating American character. The true
    point of view in the history of this nation is
    not the Atlantic coast, it is the Great West.
  • -Frederick Jackson Turner, 1893

3
Settlement of the Last Frontier
  • People began to migrate to the Great American
    Desert after the Civil War
  • The Great Plains, the Rocky Mountains, and the
    Western Plateau
  • Little rainfall, open grasslands, buffalo
  • By 1900, buffalo were wiped out and homesteads
    were fenced in
  • 3 groups of pioneers miners, cattlemen/cowboys,
    and farmers

4
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5
The Mining Frontier
  • California Gold Rush in 1849 was only the start
  • Gold and silver strikes in Colorado, Nevada,
    Idaho, Montana, Arizona, and South Dakota
  • Comstock Lode (340 million in gold and silver by
    1890) responsible for Nevada entering the Union
    in 1864

6
Mining Towns
  • Towns grew quickly and became famous for saloons,
    dance-hall girls, and vigilante justice
  • Many became ghost towns after the mining boom
  • 1/3 of western miners were Chinese immigrants
  • Miners Tax 20/month for all foreign-born
    miners

Virginia City, Nevada
7
Effects of Mining
  • Impact on the economics and politics of the U.S.
  • Environmental problems
  • Native Americans lost their land

8
The Cattle Frontier
  • Traditions and techniques borrowed from Mexicans
  • Railroad construction into Kansas opened up
    eastern markets for Texas cattle
  • Cowboys, many of whom were blacks and Mexicans,
    earned about 1 a day
  • Long cattle drives ended in 1880s after
    overgrazing destroyed the grass and a blizzard
    and drought killed off about 90 of the cattle
  • Barbed wire revolutionized ranching (Joseph
    Glidden)

9
The Farming Frontier
  • Homestead Act of 1862
  • Offered 160 acres of land free to families who
    settled it for 5 years
  • Many families ended up paying for the best land
    that was owned by railroad companies and
    speculators

10
The Farming Frontier Problems and Solutions
  • Sodbusters
  • Extremes of hot and cold
  • Grasshopper plagues
  • Isolation
  • Water was scarce
  • Falling prices
  • High cost of new machinery
  • Dry-farming and deep-plowing techniques
  • Dams and irrigation saved many

11
Turners Frontier Thesis
  • Oklahoma Territory (old Indian Territory) opened
    for settlement in 1889
  • Last great land rush
  • 1890 U.S. Census Bureau declared that the
    frontier had been settled
  • Significance of the Frontier in American
    History (1893)
  • Expansion had promoted independence and
    individualism
  • Free land a safety valve for discontent
  • Were we doomed to follow the social conflict
    represented in Europe?

12
Removal of the Native Americans
  • Diverse population
  • New Mexico and Arizona Pueblo farmed in
    permanent settlements
  • Navajo and Apache of the SW were nomadic
    hunter-gatherers who had to adapt
  • Pacific Northwest Chinook developed communities
    based on hunting and fishing
  • 2/3 of tribes were nomadic, living on the Great
    Plains and hunting buffalo (Sioux, Blackfoot,
    Cheyenne, Crow, Comanche)

13
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14
Reservation Policy
  • 1830s Jackson moved Natives westward into
    Indian Territory
  • U.S. Government negotiated with tribes in 1851
    and moved them to reservations

15
Indian Wars
  • 1864 Colorado militia massacred Cheyenne women,
    children, and men at Sand Creek, Colorado
  • Sioux War of 1865-1867 Army detachment wiped out
    by the Sioux
  • Treaties provided for reservations after these
    battles, but miners refused to stay off land
  • 1870s second Sioux War led by Sitting Bull and
    Crazy Horse
  • Eventually defeated by the Army, but Custers
    command was destroyed at Little Big Horn in 1876

16
Assimilationists
  • A Century of Dishonor (1881) by Helen Hunt
    Jackson
  • Created sympathy for Native Americans
  • Many proposed education and conversion to
    Christianity

17
Dawes Severalty Act (1887)
  • The US government stopped negotiating treaties
    with the Native Americans as separate nations.
  • This allowed the US government not to recognize
    the sovereign nations of the Native Americans and
    take on the more aggressive policy of
    assimilation.
  • Families would receive 160 acres or less
  • U.S. citizenship was granted to those who stayed
    on land for 25 years and became civilized
  • Best land sold to white settlers by government,
    speculators, and even Native Americans
  • Policy failed
  • Disease and poverty reduced population to 200,000
  • The failure of the Bureau of Indian Affairs to
    manage this trust fund will bring about the
    lawsuits from the Native American tribes in the
    1990s.

18
Ghost Dance Movement
  • Religious movement
  • Misunderstood
  • Government tried to suppress
  • Sioux medicine man Sitting Bull was killed
  • December 1890 Over 200 Native American men,
    women, and children were gunned down at Wounded
    Knee in the Dakotas

19
Indian Reorganization of 1934
  • This signals a major reversal of previous federal
    Indian policies.
  • Instead of forcing Native Americans to give up
    all of their customs and traditions to be farmers
    or live in cities, the IRA gave them back their
    rights to live as separate cultures.
  • Tribes were allowed to form their own governments
    among their reservations to increase tribal
    holdings and encouraged tribal customs.
  • This will end the push for assimilation.
  • It will also remove the federal responsibility to
    the
  • Native American Tribes under previous policies.

20
Indian Reservation Today
21
The New South
  • Modern capitalist values
  • Industrial growth
  • Improved transportation
  • Henry Grady, editor of the Atlanta Constitution,
    spread the ideal of Laissez-faire capitalism
  • Offered tax-exemption to investors
  • Cheap labor

22
Economic Progress
  • Birmingham, AL leading steel center
  • Memphis, TN growing lumber industry
  • Richmond, VA center of tobacco industry
  • Cheap labor allowed GA, NC, and SC to become
    chief producers of textiles
  • Southern RR companies converted to standard gauge

23
Continued Poverty
  • Remained largely agricultural
  • Northern investors controlled ¾ of the southern
    railroads and by 1900 had control of the steel
    industry
  • Industrial workers (94 were white) in the S.
    earned ½ the national average
  • Most remained in traditional roles of
    sharecropping and farming

24
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25
Why did the South remain poverty-stricken?
  • Souths late start at industrialization
  • Poorly educated workforce
  • Failed to invest in technical and engineering
    schools
  • Political leadership provided little support for
    the education of either poor whites or African
    Americans

26
Agriculture
  • Remained tied to cotton 1870-1890 cotton acres
    more than doubled
  • Overproduction caused cotton prices to decline by
    more than 50 by the 1890s
  • Per capita income declined and farmers lost their
    farms
  • By 1900, over ½ of white farmers and ¾ of black
    farmers were tenants (sharecropping)

27
Attempt at Diversification
  • George Washington Carver
  • African American scientist at the Tuskegee
    Institute in Alabama promoted the growing of
    peanuts, sweet potatoes, and soybean

28
Farmers Political Activism
  • 1890 Farmers Southern Alliance had more than 1
    million members
  • Colored Farmers National Alliance 250,000
    members
  • Both promoted political reforms to help solve the
    farmers economic problems
  • If they could have united, they would have been
    even more powerful

29
Segregation
  • Democrats came to power in the southern states
    after Reconstruction
  • Business community
  • White supremacists
  • Favored segregation in public facilities
  • Often used racial fears of whites to remain in
    power

30
Discrimination and the Supreme Court
  • During Reconstruction federal laws had protected
    against racial discrimination
  • U.S. Supreme Court began to strike down these
    laws in the 1870s
  • Civil Rights Cases (1883)
  • Ruled that Congress could not legislate against
    racial discrimination practiced by private
    citizens

31
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
  • Upheld a LA law requiring separate but equal
    accommodations for white and black passengers on
    the railroads.
  • Did not violate the 14th Amendments guarantee of
    equal protection of the laws.
  • Jim Crow laws were passed by many states after
    Plessy.
  • Separate washrooms, fountains, park benches, etc.

32
Loss of civil rights
  • Voter registration dropped
  • Ex. 130,334 registered in LA in 1896 and only
    1.342 in 1904
  • Literacy tests, poll taxes, whites-only
    primaries, grandfather clauses
  • Barred from serving on juries
  • Stiffer penalties for crimes committed by African
    Americans
  • Lynch mobs killed over 1400 men in the 1890s
  • Remained in farming jobs and low-paying domestic
    work

33
Responding to segregation
  • International Migration Society
  • Booker T. Washington
  • Established Tuskegee Institute
  • Largest and best-known industrial school in the
    nation
  • Organized the National Negro Business League
  • Racial harmony and economic cooperation
  • Would rise up through education (W.E.B. Du Bois
    would later argue against this)

34
Tuskegee Institute
35
Farm Problems North, South, and West
  • Farmers were becoming a minority
  • Number of farms doubled
  • Number of farmers went from 60 of population in
    1860 to less than 37 in 1900

36
Changes in Agriculture
  • More commercialized and specialized
  • Farmers were getting food and goods from stores
    and catalogs
  • More dependent on machines such as steam engines,
    seeders, and reaper-thresher combines

37
Falling Prices
  • Increased production and global competition from
    Argentina, Russia, and Canada drove prices down
    for wheat, cotton, and other crops
  • Money supply was not changing, so went into
    deflation in the 1870s and 1880s
  • Farmers faced high interest rates and need to pay
    off old debts

38
Rising costs
  • Monopolistic corporations kept prices high
  • Middlemen took profit before selling to farmers
  • Railroads, warehouses, and elevators charges high
    rates for transportation and storage
  • Heavy taxes on property and land, but did not tax
    income from stocks and bonds
  • Unfair tariffs

39
Fighting back
  • National Grange Movement
  • National Grange of Patrons of Husbandry
  • Originally a social and educational organization
    for farmers
  • Established cooperatives
  • Lobbied state legislatures to regulate railroad
    and elevator rates
  • Illegal for RRs to fix prices through pools and
    to give rebates
  • Munn v. Illinois (1877) SC upheld right of
    states to regulate businesses

40
Interstate Commerce Act (1886)
  • State laws could really only regulate the
    short-hauls, not across state lines
  • Wabash v. Illinois (1886) individual states
    could not regulate interstate commerce
  • Established the Interstate Commerce Commission
    power to investigate and prosecute pool and
    rebates
  • RR rates had to be reasonable and just

41
Farmers alliances
  • By 1890, about 1 million farmers had joined
  • Both whites and blacks joined
  • Had serious potential of turning into an
    independent political party

42
Ocala platform
  • National Alliance
  • Attacked major parties as being subservient to
    Wall Street and big business
  • Supported direct election of U.S. senators
  • Lower tariff rates
  • Graduated income tax
  • New banking system regulated by the federal
    government
  • Treasury notes and silver be used to increase the
    amount of money in circulation
  • Wanted to create inflation and raise crop prices
  • Many of these ideas would become part of the
    Populist movement in 1892 and 1896
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