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Transforming the Nation

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Also businesses and factories in the east shipped ... The Great Plains are found in the middle of the ... of land to adults who were U.S. citizens or wanted ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transforming the Nation


1
Transforming the Nation
2
Big Idea
  • How can people change the world they live in?

3
Connecting the East to the West
  • In the early 1800s news was spread by letters
    sent on horse or boat. News might be old before
    the newspaper was printed.
  • In 1844, Samuel Morse invented a code of dots and
    dashes to send messages across a wire telegraph
    line on a telegraph machine that used electric
    signals, called Morse Code.

4
Transcontinental Railroad
  • Because settlers were heading west and were
    having to go by ship around South America, or by
    railroad and then wagon, a group of entrepreneurs
    in California planned to build a railroad.
  • A transcontinental railroad is a railroad that
    crosses a continent.

5
Transcontinental Railroad
  • In 1862, Congress passed the Pacific Railway Act
    that allowed the government to loan money to the
    Union Pacific and the Central Pacific railroad
    companies.
  • The Union Pacific railroad started in Nebraska
    building east to west and the Central Pacific
    railroad started in California building west to
    east.

6
Transcontinental Railroad
  • On May 10, 1869 both tracks joined at Promontory
    Point, Utah, where railroad officials tapped in
    gold and silver spikes in the last piece of
    track.

7
Transcontinental Railroad
  • After the Civil War ended, the Union Pacific
    hired former soldiers and freed African Americans
    to work on the railroad. They also hired Irish
    immigrants that moved west to work on the
    railroad.
  • The Central Pacific hired Chinese workers. These
    immigrant workers faced prejudice, unfair,
    negative opinion that lead to unjust treatment
    from other workers. They often worked for less
    wages and were asked to do more dangerous jobs.

8
Transcontinental Railroad
  • The transcontinental railroad helped settlers in
    the west ship their goods to the east. Also
    businesses and factories in the east shipped
    tools, clothing and other goods out west.

9
Time Zones
10
Life on the Great Plains
  • The Great Plains are found in the middle of the
    United States. This large area is mostly grassy
    and flat.
  • Because the area is not good for farming or
    building homes, settlers passed right through the
    Great Plains and traveled further west.

11
The Homestead Act
  • Congress passed a law called the Homestead Act in
    1862. A homestead is a settlers land and home.
    This act offered 160 acres of land to adults who
    were U.S. citizens or wanted to become citizens.
    They had to pay a small fee and promise to farm
    the land for 5 years. This offer was to entice
    people to move to the Great Plains area.

12
The Exodusters
  • Because African Americans were still facing
    prejudice, they decided to move to the Great
    Plains. Benjamin Pap Singleton visited Kansas
    and liked it. He printed advertisements to ask
    the African Americans to move out west. These
    that moved called themselves Exodusters. They
    called themselves this after Exodus, a book of
    the Bible, that tells about how the people of
    Israel escaped slavery in Egypt.

13
Settlers Face Hardships
  • All those that moved to the Great Plains faced
    several hardships. Winters were long and very
    cold. Summers were very hot and dry. Droughts,
    long periods without rain, often occurred.
  • Droughts made farming very hard. Because the land
    was so dry, prairie fires were common too.

14
Settlers Adapt to the Great Plains
  • Settlers could not build homes from wood because
    the Great Plains had very few trees. So they
    built their homes out of sod. Sod is
    grass-covered dirt held together with thick
    roots. Because the sod was so hard to cut, the
    farmers became known as sodbusters. They used
    heavy iron or steel plows to cut the sod.

15
Growing Crops
  • Another hardship faced by the settlers was
    growing crops in such a dry climate. Settlers
    finally tried wheat seeds brought from Eastern
    Europe and were able to have a crop that was
    successful.
  • Because farming was so difficult and workers were
    scarce, new and improved farming machines were
    invented.
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