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Cattle Ranchers

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Life on the Drives (see map on page 240) A cowhands job was ... were scared and hid in the Badlands of South Dakota. U.S. soldiers captured Big Foot and killed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cattle Ranchers


1
Cattle Ranchers
2
Texas Cattle
  • In the 1800s, ranchers in Texas raised and sold
    longhorn cattle.
  • Texas had a lot of cattle, but the market was not
    good. Cattle sold for only 4.00 each. In the
    eastern and northern parts of the country, cattle
    sold for about 40 each. This difference was
    because of supply and demand.
  • Demand is the amount of something that people
    want to buy at certain prices. When the prices
    are low, people usually buy more of it. Supply is
    the amount of something that people want to sell
    at certain prices. When the price is high, people
    want to produce and sell more of it.
    GPS
    SS5E1b

3
The Cattle Drives
  • Cowhands led cattle to railroads, where the
    cattle were shipped to eastern and northern
    cities.
  • Ranchers wanted to sell their cattle to eastern
    and northern cities where supply was low and
    demand was high.
  • To get them to the cities they had to lead them
    to railheads. A railhead is a town where the
    tracks begin or end.
  • Because the railheads sometimes were hundreds of
    miles away, cowhands had to lead them on cattle
    drives.

4
Life on the Drives (see map on page 240)
  • A cowhands job was hard, sometimes boring, and
    usually dirty.
  • Often the cowhands were African Americans or
    Mexicans. One well known African American cowhand
    was Nat Love, who wrote a book about life on the
    trail.
  • One famous trail is the Chisholm Trail. The trail
    stretched from southern Texas across the Red
    River, and on to the railhead in Abilene,
    Kansas.
  • GPS SS5H3a

5
The End of the Drives
  • Cattle drives ended for several reasons. One
    reason was the invention of barbed wire. Barbed
    wire is twisted wire with a sharp point every few
    inches. Barbed wire was put up by new settlers
    and cattle drives could not cross the land as
    easily.
  • Also the growth of more railroads. After
    railroads were built in Texas, cowhands could
    ship their cattle.

6
Conflicts on the Plains
  • American Indians and settlers fought on the Great
    Plains in the late 1800s.
  • Settlers were moving west in search of gold or
    land. They settled on land already lived on by
    American Indians.
  • The Government built roads and railroads on the
    land. They tried to convince the American Indians
    to move to reservations. A reservation is land
    that the government set aside for American
    Indians.

GPS SS5H3
7
Conflicts on the Plains
  • The Government hoped that the Plains Indians
    would move to the reservations and begin farming.
    But the Plains Indians were used to hunting
    buffalo and moving around. They didnt want to
    move.
  • Plains Indians fought soldiers who tried to force
    them onto reservations. Most of the fighting
    occurred in the 1860s and 1870s.

8
Sand Creek Massacre
  • In 1864, volunteer fighters of the Colorado
    militia attacked a Cheyenne Indian village near
    Sand Creek, Colorado. The village people were
    asleep. Chief Black Kettle raised a white flag
    and an American flag to surrender, but it was
    ignored. The soldiers continued to kill almost
    half of the men, women, and children. After this
    massacre, the Plains Indians did not believe that
    peace was possible with the U.S. Government.

9
Battle of the Little Bighorn
  • The Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming are
    sacred to the Lakota Indian tribe. In the 1870s
    Lieutenant colonel George Custer led soldiers to
    the Black Hills and found gold. Thousands of
    Lakota and Cheyenne Indians gathered to protect
    the land. In 1876 Custer tried to force the
    American Indians on reservations. They attacked
    them at their village on the Little Bighorn
    River. Led by Crazy Horse, Gall, and Sitting
    Bull, the American Indians won, killing all of
    the U.S. soldiers.

GPS SS5H3 e
10
Massacre at Wounded Knee
  • Many Plains Indians followed a religion called
    Ghost Dance. When Sitting Bull became a ghost
    dancer, the government sent police to arrest him
    and he died. Many of the Ghost Dancers, led by
    Chief Big Foot, were scared and hid in the
    Badlands of South Dakota. U.S. soldiers captured
    Big Foot and killed many men, women, and children
    in the fight.

11
Destruction of the Buffalo
  • Because of the settlers and railroads, many of
    the buffalo habitats were destroyed. A habitat is
    the area where an animal or plant normally lives
    or grows.
  • Settlers killed the buffalo for meat, for sport,
    or for the skins. This caused the buffalo to
    become extinct, no longer exists. By 1889, only
    about 1,000 buffalo were left.

12
Government Policy
  • Government officials tried to force American
    Indians to change their way of life.
  • Lawmakers tried to get the American Indians to
    assimilate into American life. Assimilate means
    changing a groups culture and traditions so that
    it blends with a larger group.
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