chapter 16: the conquest of the far west 1865-1896

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Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

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Page 1: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West

1865-1896

Page 2: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

Growth of the WestIndian Removal Act – 1830

a.Removal of Natives by force if needed/Pres. AJ

b.Trail of Tears after Cherokee Nation v. Ga. 1831

7.“No Mans Land”

8.Leads to “Land Rush” and “Sooners”

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“Land Rush” & “Sooners”

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Growth of the West1. Gold rush (1848)

2. Homestead Act (1862)

3. Alaska Terr. (1867)

4. TRR (1869)

5. Trouble w/Natives

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Importance of the Buffalo

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Settlers and the Buffalo

1. Killed a. by hunters for heads,

hides, bones, and fur

b. for sport

c. by RR co.

2. Helped gov’t push Natives onto reservations

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Massacre at Sand Creek, Co 1864 1. Natives told to make camp at

Sand Creek to make peace deal.

2. Col. Chivingtona. >400 Cheyenne killed while

sleeping; bodies mutilatedb. Body parts kept as souvenirs

3. Later discredited by Congress

Page 10: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

“Fetterman Massacre” (1866)

American Horse &

Red Cloud

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Treaty of Laramie (1868)

1. Ended Great Sioux War of 1865-1867

2. Lands in the Black Hills, SD, Wy, and Mt.

3. Deposits of gold discovered, which leads to …

Page 12: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

Battle at Little Bighorn, Mt.(aka Greasy Grass ) (1876)

1. 7th Calvary sent to take lands of Black Hills – found gold

2. Custer and men overtaken and killed by Crazy Horse

3. Public outcry = forcing more onto reservations

4. Same situation with the Nez Perce in the NW Pacific

“Custer’s Last Stand”

Page 13: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

Sitting Bull

Page 14: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

Geronimo

Apache Native American

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The Demise of the Native American The Railroads Diseases Depletion of the buffalo Firewater aka liquor

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http://invasionofamerica.ehistory.org/

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Helen Hunt Jackson (1881)

1. Exposes injustices of the NA by the US gov’t

2. Supporter of assimilationa. Indian Rights Association

b. Women’s National Indian Association

Page 19: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

Dawes Severalty Act (1887)

1. To “Americanize” NA by teaching them that owning land and farming was “right”

2. Reservation lands distributed to head of household; 160 acres; individuality not communal

3. Lands left over sold to settlers; funds for the benefit of the Native Americans

4. NA lost >2/3rd of their lands

5. Later reversed with the Indian Reorganization Act aka Indian New Deal; which returned NA their sovereignty

Page 20: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

Assimilation of the Native American

1. Farming

2. Christianity

3. English

4. Education

“Friends of the Indians”

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Carlisle Indian School, Pa.

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Ghost Dance: prohibited by government1. Return of the buffalo

2. Restorations of their lands

3. Make the white man disappear

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Battle of Wounded Knee @ Pine Ridge Reservation (1890)

1. Started with the arrest and killing of Sitting Bull

2. A few days later, 7th Calvary rounded up ghost dancers and took them to Wounded Knee Camp

3. >200 unarmed NA killed and left to freeze

4. Payback for Battle of Little Bighorn

5. Brought Indian wars to an end

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Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee

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Miners “Striking it Rich!”Mining for Gold and Silver

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Pike’s Peakers/’59ers

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Pros and Cons of Mining

a. Pros

i.Railroads increased

ii.Statehood increased

iii.Cities developed and “Boomed”- economy grew rapidly

b. Cons

i. Increased crime

ii. Destruction of land

iii. “ghost towns”

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Real Winners?a. Mine owners - able to invest capital in industries that supported the miners

i. Equip and technology

ii. RR

iii. Timber

iv. Hydroelectricity

b. The Union/Civil War

http://cprr.org/Museum/Hydraulic_Mining/

Page 34: Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West 1865-1896

Hazards of Mining

The Western Federation of Miners on parade, passing the Southern Hotel in Rhyolite, February 17, 1907.

(Nevada Historical Society)

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Miners & Workers

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From Boom Towns to Ghost Towns

                                                                                                                                                                                       

http://cprr.org/Museum/Hydraulic_Mining/

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Realities of “Helldorados”

  

                                                                                                                                    

 

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Beef Bonanzas and the Long Drive

Let’s play “Life as a Farmer!”

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Cowboys & Cattle

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Life as a Cowboy

1. Hard: Saloons, violence, guns, and prostitutes

2. Range wars = fences; problematic for grazing

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Long Drives & the RR

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B. Collapse of Cattle Industry

barb wire overgrazing

overstocking

extreme weather

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Homestead Act of 1862

1. 160 acres/$30 fee2. 5 yrs cultivation (grow crops)3. Option of purchasing it at $1.25 acre after 6 months

(residency requirement)

4. Land for farming was bad5. Only 10% of farmers received their lands from the

act. Why so little?- Better lands closer to transportation and town/mkts- Plenty of room for corruption

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Farming and Technology

McCormick’s reaper

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Farming and Technology

1. Efficiency = increase trade

2. Dependent on:a. Technology

b. Nature

c. Shipping and RR

d. Global markets

3. Dry Farming techniques

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Bonanza Farms

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Swift’s Refrigerated RR Carts

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Competed on a global market not just domestic = huge debts!

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Manufactured goods vs. agricultureProblems?

Other problems for farmers?

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The Great Plains

Why move to the Great Plains?

(future home of the Dust Bowl!)

a. Homestead Act

b. Advertising

c. RR/towns

d. Farming technology

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Dugouts

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Soddies

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Fredrick Jackson Turner

American historian

Frontier Thesis: American democracy is shaped by each new frontier in the U.S.

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The Grange Aka patrons of Husbandry Social, educational,

fraternal activities By 1875, 800,000

members

Oliver Kelly

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The Grange (1867)

1. Corporations such as RR and banks to blame for their hard times

2. Foreign competition = decrease prices of US crops

3. Banned together to dev. own grain elevators, stores, equip to control prices = Cooperatives

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Coxey’s Army (1894)

1. Unemployed march to Washington, D.C.

2. Wanted federal gov’t to create jobs via public works projects

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Pullman Strike (1894)

1. Wages cut but not rent

2. Il National Guard sent in, then federal troops

3. Led by Eugene Debs ARU-American Railway Union

4. Nationwide strike

5. End result: 25 dead

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Election of 1896 McKinley (Rep)

WJ Bryan (Dem)

“Cross of Gold”