Title: HIS 132 _ Lesson Two
1Lesson 2.
- The Trans-Mississippi West, 1860-1900.
2Indians of the Great Plains
- Whites moved west.
- Native lives transformed.
- Great Plains
- Flat.
- Treeless.
- Rangeland of buffalo.
- Indians of the Plains
- Sedentary farmers.
- Nomadic tribes.
- Introduction of guns and horses.
3Indians of the Great Plains
- The horse
- Increased hunting.
- Increased mobility.
- Some farmers turned to
- hunting.
- Cheyenne.
- The Horse Culture.
- Nomadic culture.
- Devastated buffalo population.
- Placed many Plains Indians in danger of
starvation.
4The Indian Wars
- The problem of land.
- Indians had the land.
- Whites wanted the land.
- Indian understanding of
- of land was different than
- white understanding.
- Whites considered land a commodity.
- Indians believed land was to be used not owned.
- Differences would bring about war.
5The Indian Wars
- Prior to 1851
- Federal law considered the area west of Arkansas,
Missouri, Iowa, and Minnesota, and east of the
Rockies to be Indian Country. - Farmers, gold seekers, railroad companies cut
path through area. - 1851
- Federal lawmakers designed policy to open the
central plains (route to Pacific).
6The Indian Wars
- Tribes would be given definite territory in which
they would live. - Government to supply their needs.
- Reservation.
- Designed to keep the Indians and settlers apart.
- Conflict broke out.
- 1864 Large-scale war erupted.
- Cheyenne and Lakota raids.
- November Sand Creek, Colorado.
- John Evans massacred innocent Cheyenne.
- Bands of Cheyenne, Sioux, and Arapahoe retaliated
(burning villages, killing families, etc)
reprisals.
7The Indian Wars
- Gold discovered in Montana.
- Construction of forts to protect Bozeman Trail.
- Red Cloud (Lakota Chief)
- Prevented army from keeping the forts.
- 1868
- Treaty of Fort Laramie.
- U.S. accepted defeat.
- Promised Sioux perpetual land and hunting rights.
- Sioux given rights to occupy the Black Hills
(Paha Sap)
8The Indian Wars
- Some southern Plains tribes refused to accept the
Treaty. - Refused to be moved onto reservations.
- Continued to live on traditional lands.
- Attack stage coach stations, ranches, travelers,
and military units. - 1874
- Gold discovered on the Great Sioux Reservation.
- U.S. Govt. could not purchase land.
- Warriors moved to war camps.
- American forces ordered to move in.
9The Indian Wars
- 1874 cont
- Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer rushed
ahead. - The little big horn or Greasy Grass.
- June 25, 1876, Custer and his troops were killed
by a force of several thousand. - Many later surrendered to U.S. Army.
- U.S. Army pursued Apaches.
- Surrendered in 1886.
- Men (including Geronimo) were sent to prison in
Florida. - End of Indian Wars.
10Transformation of Indian Societies
- By 1880, many tribes forced onto reservations but
few had adopted white ways. - The majority on reservations lived in poverty.
- Reformers (Protestants)
- Lobbied the Congress for a program of salvation
through assimilation. - Unmoved by poverty of Indians.
- Some conceded reservation system not working.
1891 Sioux Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
11Reformers
- Some reformers outraged by
- The governments violation of treaties with the
Indians. - Military enforcement of reservations.
- Helen Hunt Jackson
- Reformer.
- Major role in
- The Indian Rights Association.
- Womens National Indian Association.
- Organizations placed Protestant missionaries in
the west to work to end tribal customs and
convert Indians to Christianity.
12Reformers
- 1882
- The Womens National Indian Association.
- Petitioned Congress
- To end reservation system.
- To establish education for Indian children.
- To award Title to 160 acres of land to Indians
who was willing to work the land. - 1887
- Dawes Severalty Act.
- Similar to WNIAs suggestions.
- Established federal Indian policy for years to
come. - Allowed the President to distribute land to
individuals (severed from their tribes). - These individuals could petition for citizenship.
- Native Americans generally did not support the
Act because it had a negative impact on the
tribes. - Examples (next slide)
13Dawes Severalty Act
- The Dawes Act
- Undermined Tribal sovereignty and land without
compensation. - Banned Native religions and sacred ceremonies.
- Banned oral traditions.
- Made shamans/medicine men criminals.
- Indian schools banned Indian hair and clothing
styles.
14Dawes Severalty Act
- Land promised to Indians was poor.
- Not provided with adequate tools.
- Many Indians were unprepared for agricultural
life. - Children left white schools.
- Very few Indians left their traditional religions
for Christianity. - Dawes Act reversed in 1934 Indian
Reorganization Act. - Affirmed the integrity of Indian cultural
institutions and returned some land.
15The Vanishing Americans
- Some tribes occupied land rejected by whites.
- The Hopis, Navajos, etc.
- Tribes found it difficult to survive near white
settlers. - Intermarriage.
- Northwestern tribes remained isolated from white
settlers (until 20th century). - Maintained cultural integrity.
- The Vanishing Americans.
Hopis lived near the Navajo
16Mining Towns
- Americans went west to find their fortunes.
- Largest migration, greatest commercial expansion
in American History. - Became subject of a huge internal empire.
- Only a small number found their fortune.
- Older populations struggled to find their place
in the growing West.
17Mining Towns
- 1848 California Gold!
- Prospectors soon overran the territories and
mining camps. - Boomtowns.
- Mining
- Brought the West a global market for capital,
commodities, and labor. - Grew to large corporate enterprise.
- Buy outs.
- Purchased best technology.
- Gained access to timber.
- Built smelters.
- Financed railroads.
18Mining Towns
- Mining laid the foundation for a new economy and
interim government. - Mining was dangerous and unhealthy.
- 1860s
- Miners organized.
- Demanded better pay.
- Focused in boomtowns.
- Strongest unions by late 19th century.
19Mining Towns
- Western labor unions for whites only.
- Bust Late 1800s
- Prices and ore production fell.
- Bust left environmental disaster.
- Caminettie Act gave the federal government the
responsibility of regulating the mines.
20Mormon Settlements
- Mormons
- Brigham Young.
- Migrated in 1846-1847.
- Midwest to Great Salt Lake Basin.
- Formed independent theocratic state Deseret.
- Legitimized polygamy.
- Built dams for irrigation.
- Harvested crops.
- Utah Territory established in 1850.
- Supreme Court (1879 U.S. v. Reynolds) ruled
against polygamy.
21Mormon Settlements
- 1882
- Edmunds Act Threatened those found guilty of
polygamy with fines and prison. - Utah applied for statehood and turned down over
the issue of Mormon polygamy. - Church leaders disavowed polygamy.
- Utah became a state 1896.
22Mexican Borderland Communities
- Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
- Ended the Mexican-American War.
- Allowed Hispanics north of the Rio Grande to
immigrate to Mexico or stay in the United States. - Economically and socially interdependent zone
emerged. - Mexico would remain underdeveloped.
- Often cited.
- Citizenship not offered until 1930s.
- Considered foreigners by settlers.
- Poorly paid migratory workers.
23Mexican Borderland Communities
- Some Mexicans took jobs on the railroads or in
the mines. - Wives/daughters moved to cities to make ends meet
by selling produce, working as seamstresses, or
laundresses. - Las Gorras Blancas (1880s)
- The White Caps.
- Agrarian rebels in New Mexico.
- Destroyed railroads and farm equipment.
- Posted demands for justice.
- Formed El Partido del Pueblo Unido (The Peoples
Party) in 1890. - Provided aid for Mexican families.
- Mexicanos preserved much of their cultural
heritage.
24The Cattle Kingdom on the PlainsCowboys
- Cattle Industry.
- Most profitable business in the West.
- Texas Longhorn.
- Mexican ranchers developed an open range system.
- Cattle grazed on unfenced plains.
- Cowboys herded the longhorns from horseback.
25The Cattle Kingdom on the PlainsCowboys
- Cowboys
- Young.
- Unschooled.
- African-American or Mexican.
- Former Confederates.
- Worked long hours.
- Faced dangers (stampedes).
- Slept on the ground.
- Ate biscuits and beans.
- Earned 1.00 per day.
- Spent most of their time alone.
26The Cattle Kingdom on the PlainsCowboys
- Practices developed in South Texas transferred to
the range-cattle industry. - Roundups.
- Branding.
- Cattle drivers drove cattle from south Texas,
through Oklahoma, to the railroads being built
going west. - Cattle towns Sprung up along railroads.
- Foreman (trail boss) sold herd paid cowboys.
- Cowboys spent money in town.
27The Cattle Kingdom on the PlainsCowboys
- Combination of vices discouraged the formation of
stable communities (cattle towns). - Vice widespread.
- Violence common.
- The range wars (1870s) produced violent
conflicts. - Texas cattle eventually loaded on eastbound
trains some continued north to northern ranges. - Long drives resulted in the spread of open-range
cattle raising. - Investors swarmed in.
- Introduced new breeds of cattle.
- Bred with Longhorns.
- Produced hardy range cattle that yielded more
meat.
28The Cattle Kingdom on the PlainsCowboys
- Early 1880s
- Too many ranchers.
- Prices began to fall.
- Brutal winter of 86-87.
- Many investors went bankrupt.
- Surviving ranchers
- Fenced in their ranges.
- Made sure they could feed their herds in winter.
- Sheep raising on the rise.
- Chew grass to roots.
- Impossible to raise cattle on sheep grazed land.
29Farming Communities on the Plains
- The Great Desert
- How were the Plains populated?
- Homestead Act of 1862
- Granted a quarter section of the public domain
free to any settler who lived on the land for at
least five years and made improvements. - Or a settler could purchase the land for 1.25
per acre after living on the land for six months. - Homesteaders were most successful in central and
upper mid-west (rich soil, moderate climate).
30Farming Communities on the Plains
- Most settlers did not take advantage of the
Homestead Act. - Unmarried women filed many claims.
- Many purchased land outright.
- State governments and land companies held the
best land (located near transportation routes and
markets). - Many farmers willing to pay top dollar for good
land. - Railroads were key to the growth of the West.
- Railroads were the vehicle promoting the
settlement of the West (not the Homestead Act).
31Farming Communities on the Plains
- Farming the Plains was tough.
- Some made good profits.
- Mens work was seasonal
- In the fields.
- Most demanding during planting and harvest
seasons. - On the off season, most farmers built/repaired
buildings and took care of livestock. - Some young men would pick up temporary work with
railroad companies. - Women took care of the children, cooked, and
cleaned.
32Farming Communities on the Plains
- The harsh climate caused settlers to seek out
friends and neighbors. - Work together.
- Bartered goods.
- Some lost all their land.
- Swift growth of the rural population soon ended.
- The hard reality of the Plains climate and big
business took its toll on many settlers.
33The Worlds Breadbasket
- New technologies allowed farmers to be efficient
in the planting and harvesting of crops. - Farming became closely tied to international
trade. - Modern capitalism ruled Western agriculture, the
mining industry, and the cattle industry. - New Production Technologies
- 1837, John Deeres Singing Plow easily turned
prairie grasses under and turned up highly
compacted soils. - Cyrus McCormicks reaper used to cut grain.
- Mechanized corner planters, mowing, and raking
machines for hay. - Life still tough on the plains.
34The Worlds Breadbasket
- Increased productivity meant that farmers could
make more money putting their crops on the
market. - Family remained primary source of labor.
- Farmers put more emphasis on production for
exchange rather than sustenance. - Wheat farmers did very well.
- International demand for wheat was enormous.
- New technologies and scientific expertise favored
the large, well-capitalized farmer. - Agribusiness surpassed farming in California.
- Rich and powerful dominated California
agribusiness.
35Environmental Impact
- Large-scale farming changed the landscape and the
environment. - The National Reclamation Act of 1902
- Added 1 million acres of irrigated land.
- State irrigation districts added 10 million
acres. - Rarely considered the impact of water policies on
the environment. - The need to maintain the water supply led to the
creation of national forests and the Forest
Service. - General Land Revision Act of 1891
- Gave the President power to establish forest
reserves. - Federal government would play an increasing role
in economic development of the West. - They dealt mainly with corporate farmers and
ranchers who were eager for improvements.
36Reading
- If you have not already done so...
- Read chapter 19.