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The West Looking to the West, 1860–1900

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Page 1: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

The WestLooking to the West, 1860–1900

Page 2: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

The Lure of the WestWhat conditions lured people to migrate to

the West?

Where did the western settlers come from?

Page 3: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Push FactorsWhat were examples of push factors?

Page 4: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Pull Factors: Government Incentives and Private Property

Before the Civil War what issue delayed settlement?

Under the Pacific Railway Acts who gave large land grants to the Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads?

What was the Act that really set the wagons rolling West? What happened under the act?

Page 5: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

The Shifting FrontierThe West was already occupied by whom?

Page 6: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Section 2: Conflict with the Native Americans

Life of the Plains Indian’s What changes occurred in the culture of Plains

Indians before the arrival of settlers?

Page 7: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Indian Wars with Government Policy

Causes of Clashes

Settlers felt justified in taking Indian Land because in their view they would ________________________________.

Native Americans felt the settlers were simply ________.

Page 8: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Making TreatiesHow did the government try to restrict the

movement of nomadic native Americans? Explain.Where did they restrict the Native Americans

to?

Page 9: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Key Battles: Battle of Little Big Horn

What was another name for this battle?The Sioux of the northeastern plains—Dakota,

Wyoming, and Montana territories—powerfully resisted white expansion.

Who was Lieutenant Colonel George A. Custer and what role did he play?

Outcome?

Page 10: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Key Battles: Battle of Wounded Knee

Native Americans saw the rise of religious prophets predicting danger or prosperity.

A prophet of the plains, Wovoka, promised a return to traditional life if people performed what?

Describe the Ghost Dance.

Page 11: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

What was the fear of the U.S. Military? What actions did they take?

What was the outcome of the final clash between federal troops and the Sioux.

Page 12: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Attempts to Change Native American Culture

In 1879, Army Captain Richard H. Pratt opened the United States Indian Training and Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

What was the purpose of this school?

Page 13: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Attempts to Change Native American Culture In 1887, a federal law dismantled the Native

American concept of shared land in favor of the principle of private property highly valued by Americans. What was the purpose of the Dawes Act? Describe.

Keep in Mind: It took a half-century, more than a thousand battles, and the deaths of about 950 United States soldiers to conquer the Native Americans.

Page 14: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Section 3Spread of mining

After the discovery of gold at _______________, fortune hunters looked to the West Coast. Little did they know that on the way to California,

their wagon wheels rolled over mountains even more rich in precious minerals.

_______________ Mine, opened in 1877 in the Black Hills of Dakota, was possibly the richest single mine ever uncovered in the world, producing a billion dollars' worth of ore.

Realm of big business.

Page 15: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Cattle Boom

_____________ taught Americans cattle ranching in the early 1800s. The Americans adopted their ranching equipment

and dress. Learned the advantages of raising the hardy Texas longhorn cattle that thrived on the dry, grassy plains.

What is a “Cow Town”? Example.

Page 16: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

A Cowboys Life: Cattle Drive on the Chisholm Trail.

In the year of Abilene's founding, cowboys drove some 35,000 cattle up the Chisholm Trail. The story of the Chisholm Trail symbolizes what?Why was this an ideal route for Texas

cattle drives ?Describe the geography and the men

of the trail

Page 17: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Farming the PlainsPrairie life is romanticized in novels and

films. But for most homesteaders—those who farmed claims under the Homestead Act—life was relentlessly rugged

What were the hardships for the homesteaders? List and describe three things.

Page 18: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

New Technology Eases Farm Labor The dry climate in parts of the West greatly

reduced the land's productivity. How did the farmers respond to this? What types of techniques?

Knowledge of farming techniques improved during this period as well.

In the 1880s and 1890s, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), which was created under the 1862 Morrill Land-Grant Act, collected statistics on markets, crops, and plant diseases.

What did the USDA provide information on?

Page 19: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?
Page 20: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Farming Becomes Big BusinessNew farm machines and techniques

increased farm output enormously. Owners of large farms hoped to reap a “bonanza” by supplying food to growing eastern populations.

What was the result of this idea? Was there problems? Describe.

Page 21: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Section 4American farmers struggled against

Nature and economyEver since the end of the Civil War, farm

production had risen. So too had debt, as farmers borrowed heavily to purchase the expensive new equipment that made possible such increased productivity.

Indebted farmers found themselves in an increasingly dangerous, even hopeless, position, as competition from abroad increased and crop prices went into a prolonged decline

Page 22: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Farmers and TariffsTariffs on imported goods discourage people

from buying imports by making them more expensive. Tariffs encourage the sale of goods produced at

home.Describe the division: Businesses.How did tariffs help and hurt farmers?

Tariffs helped farmers by …Hurt farmers in two ways:……

Page 23: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

The Money IssueThe value of money is linked to the money

supply, the amount of money in the national economy.

If the government increases the money supply, the value of every dollar drops. This drop in value shows up as inflation, a widespread rise in prices on goods of all kinds.What happened to the nations money supply in

the years following the Civil War? What was the result?.

Page 24: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Gold Bugs and Silverites 1873—the year of the worst economic panic

in U.S. history to that point—supporters of tight money won a victory. Until that time, United States currency had been on a bimetallic standard.

What did congress do next? What did this move do?

Who did this move upset and why?

Page 25: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Bland-Allison Act of 1878 and Sherman Silver Purchase Act

The Bland-Allison Act of 1878What as this act? What affect did it have and

why? Congress passed the Sherman Silver

Purchase ActWhile not authorizing the free and unlimited

coinage of silver that the silverites wanted, it increased the amount of silver the government was required to purchase every month.

Describe what the law required of the Treasury. Outcome?

Page 26: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Organizing Farmer Protests: The GrangeFarmers lived far from one another and usually

relied on their own efforts, they tended not to organize protests against policies they opposed.

In the late 1800s, however, farmers took advantage of improvements in communication and transportation to form several powerful protest groups.

How was the Grange founded? began helping farmers form cooperatives through

which they bought goods in large quantities at lower prices.

What did this pressure state legislators to regulate?

Page 27: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

Farmers Alliance and Government Responses

Although the Grange was popular (and still exists today), eventually farmers formed other political groups.

Farmers AllianceLaunched attacks on __________, such as those that

controlled the railroads.Held important role for _____________, who served as

officers and won support for women's political rights.

Railroad regulationsInterstate Commerce Act

What did this act do?

Page 28: Looking to the West, 1860–1900. The Lure of the West What conditions lured people to migrate to the West? Where did the western settlers come from?

The Populists1890, the various small political parties

associated with the Farmers' Alliances began to enjoy success at the ballot box, especially in the South.

In 1891, the Alliances founded the People's Party, a new national party that demanded radical changes in federal economic and social policies.

The Populists, as followers of the new party were known, built their platform around what issues?