capitalist development of sw

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Capitalist Development of Capitalist Development of SW SW Frederick Jackson Turner Expansion of the West Frontier Thesis, 1893 Manifest Destiny Winning the West Robert Sperry Irrigation in IV

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Frederick Jackson Turner Expansion of the West Frontier Thesis, 1893 Manifest Destiny Winning the West Robert Sperry Irrigation in IV. Capitalist Development of SW. The Imperial Valley. Home to multibillion dollar agricultural industry Mexican labor Desert Home to Yuma Indians. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Capitalist Development of SW

Capitalist Development of SWCapitalist Development of SW

• Frederick Jackson Turner

• Expansion of the West

• Frontier Thesis, 1893• Manifest Destiny• Winning the West• Robert Sperry

– Irrigation in IV

Page 2: Capitalist Development of SW

The Imperial ValleyThe Imperial Valley

• Home to multibillion dollar agricultural industry

• Mexican labor

• Desert

• Home to Yuma Indians

Page 3: Capitalist Development of SW

Imperial ValleyImperial Valley

Page 4: Capitalist Development of SW
Page 5: Capitalist Development of SW
Page 6: Capitalist Development of SW
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Page 8: Capitalist Development of SW

““Winning” of the WestWinning” of the West

• Indian Removal Act of 1830– Southern U.S.: Cherokee, Choctaw,

Chickasaw, Creek and Seminole– Cherokee Trail of Tears 1838—4,000 died

• 1848: U.S.-Mexico War

• *January 1848: gold discovered in CA

Page 9: Capitalist Development of SW

The YumaThe Yuma

• Fort Yuma established

• Yuma as guides, traded with soldiers, forded river

• Yuma land trampled and vandalized during Gold Rush

Page 10: Capitalist Development of SW

The Ferry BusinessThe Ferry Business

• 1850: Battle with (John) Glanton Gang

• Morehead War– General Joseph C.

Morehead

• 1852: Major Heinzelman of U.S. Army

Page 11: Capitalist Development of SW

Destruction of the YumaDestruction of the Yuma

• Gold rush• Military occupation• War with enemy

tribes• Large scale

agriculture• Arrival of railroad

Page 12: Capitalist Development of SW

Irrigation arrivesIrrigation arrives

• 1898 California Development Company diverts water from CO River to farms

• End of Yuma floods

• 1900-Van Horn and Gillett families arrive– Pioneer myths of the West

Page 13: Capitalist Development of SW

Fresno scraperFresno scraper

Page 14: Capitalist Development of SW

Crossing the Colorado RiverCrossing the Colorado River(video clip)(video clip)

• Unpredictable rapids• Sandbars• Rocks• Yuma aquatic skills

Page 15: Capitalist Development of SW

Shared povertyShared poverty

• 1906: Yuma as wage laborers-help build dams during flood– Worked on first canals of IV

• Food, shelter, sand storms, fresh water, floods earthquakes etc.

• 1905: Autobiography of Fred W. Peterson, MD

Page 16: Capitalist Development of SW

AlliancesAlliances

• Jose and Francisca Perez (and children) arrive in IV in 1902

• The great fire

• Yuma aid

• 1911 Yuma famine

Page 17: Capitalist Development of SW

Rapidly Expanding IndustrialismRapidly Expanding IndustrialismEllis Island, Triangle Fire, YumaEllis Island, Triangle Fire, Yuma

• Southern and Eastern European immigrants in the East– Urban factories– Dangerous working

conditions– Extreme poverty– racism

• Yuma in the SW– Rural life– Large scale agriculture

• End of floods• Reservations• Destruction of crops

– Military occupation– Shared poverty– racism

Page 18: Capitalist Development of SW

Mexican LaborMexican Labor

• Profirio Diaz (1876-1911)– Mass exploitation of Mexico’s resources – Ejidos – Mass immigration of Mexicans at turn of 19th

century.– Mexican Revolution: By 1900, about 103,000

Mexican immigrants came to U.S. By 1910, about 500,000 had immigrated to the U.S.

Page 19: Capitalist Development of SW

Labor organizing Labor organizing

• Ricardo Flores Magón – Partido Liberal Mexicano

• 1906 strikes– Worker grievances against Consolidated

Copper – La Union Liberal Humanidad

• Sonoran governor Rafael Izábal sends in federal troops

Page 20: Capitalist Development of SW

Ricardo Flores Magon

Page 21: Capitalist Development of SW

Political Organizing: Political Organizing: Plan de San Diego Plan de San Diego

• Plan called for a general uprising of Mexicans and other minorities on Feb. 20, 1915

• Participants would execute all white males over the age of 16

• reconquer territory lost during the U.S.-Mexico war

• 3-5,000 joined the revolt • President Venustiano Carranza • Raids on Mexican communities

Page 22: Capitalist Development of SW

U.S. Dependence on Mexican U.S. Dependence on Mexican Labor Labor

• Restrictions on Chinese and Japanese immigration*

• European immigration slows during WW I• Immigration Act of 1917

Page 23: Capitalist Development of SW

Immigration Act of 1917Immigration Act of 1917

• Asiatic Barred Zone

• Literacy Act established an $8 head tax and banned illiterate immigrants

• Mexicans exempt– Mexicans as an ideal labor force – 1909 Dillingham Commission – No strict border enforcement

Page 24: Capitalist Development of SW
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U.S. Department of Labor:U.S. Department of Labor:Wage Withholding Scheme Wage Withholding Scheme

• encourage laborers to return to Mexico

• 20 percent of each worker’s wages for the first 2 months

• Employment restrictions

• Growers demanded access to Mexican workers

• By 1920 about 500,000 children of Mexican descent were born in the U.S

Page 26: Capitalist Development of SW

Bath RiotsBath RiotsEl Paso, Texas: January 28,1917El Paso, Texas: January 28,1917

• Carmelita Torres

• Refused disinfection

• 200 Mexican women had joined her and blocked all traffic into El Paso

• Demonstrators on the march

• Blocking traffic

• "el esquadrón de la muerte,"

Page 27: Capitalist Development of SW

Santa Fe BridgeSanta Fe Bridge

Page 28: Capitalist Development of SW

Fumigation w/ DDT, 1956Fumigation w/ DDT, 1956

Page 29: Capitalist Development of SW

Indignity on the Border:Indignity on the Border:videovideo

• The Bath Riots: Indignity Along the Mexican Border by David Dorado Romo

• What was the purpose of disinfections?• Why did European immigrants escape this

treatment?• What are some present day views of the

U.S.-Mexico border?• Do you agree with the author who claimed

the protests had no effect?

Page 30: Capitalist Development of SW

After the RiotsAfter the Riots

• Reclaiming sense of dignity

• Debunking myth of passive Mexican laborer

• Tradition of protest in Mexico carry over to U.S.

• Brought attention to issue

• feelings of solidarity

• Sense of confidence for future activism