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Cattle Kingdoms and Farming on the Great Plains

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Title: Cattle Kingdoms and Farming on the Great Plains


1
Cattle Kingdoms andFarming on the Great Plains
  • Chapter 5
  • Lesson 3/4

2
Cattle Kingdom The Second Stage of Western
Development
  • Vast herds of cattle roamed wild in Texas, and to
    meet the growing demand for beef, cowboys drove
    large herds northward to the railheads from 1866
    until the cattle market collapsed twenty years
    later. Cattle Kingdom included many ranches that
    stretched from Texas north to Canada.
  • The Cattle Kingdom Rose
  • Industrial expansion in the East and Midwest
    caused a larger demand for food
  • Railroad expansion to the West and McCoys cattle
    pens created transportation lines without hurting
    the farmers

3
Cattlemen
  • http//www.unitedstreaming.com/videos/The20Americ
    an20Industrial20Revolution/chp2914_300k.asf

4
Joseph Mc CoyThe Real McCoy
  • Joseph McCoy was a businessman who created pens
    for cattle in small towns. Settled in Abilene
    Kansas after seeing the strong water supplies.
  • He advertised and made pledges to Texas ranchers
    that if they would drive their Longhorn cattle
    from Texas to Kansas that he would have them
    shipped by rail to other markets and that the
    ranchers would receive a good price for their
    stock

5
Abilene
  • Established by Joseph McCoy
  • as a railhead for cattle shipments
  • Surrounded by the grasslands
    and the end of the Kansas Pacific
    Railroads
  • Through Joseph McCoy's promotional and
    entrepreneurial efforts Abilene became a
    prosperous and famous cattle-town from
    1867 to 1870.
  • LONG DRIVES the overland drive of cattle from
    Texas along one of the trails that ended at a
    railroad line in "cow towns" like Abilene,
    Kansas.

6
Home, Home on the Range
  • Many realized the profits that could be made from
    cattle ranching
  • Rather than buy lands, some ranchers purchased
    range rights, or water rights
  • Control of range rights reduced ranching
    competition because water was scarce

7
The Vaqueros
  • Vaqueros Mexican ranch hands who cared for
    cattle and horses.
  • Early cowboys were white Southerners who did not
    go home after the Civil War
  • The cattle ranching that later emerged in the
    West was a blend of Mexican practices and
    Anglo-American practices, but many of the
    techniques and terms that were used in American
    cowboy culture came from the Spanish
  • From Vaqueros came the western saddle, the
    lariat, leather chaps (chinks)

8
The Longest Cattle Trails
  • The Cattle Trail that extended farthest West is
    known as the Goodnight-Loving.
  • This trail is named for Charles Goodnight
    Oliver Loving and runs from Texas to Denver,
    Colorado then on to Cheyenne,Wyoming.

9
Cattle Drives and Cattle Towns
  • Cattle drives long journeys on which cowboys
    herded cattle to market or to the northern Plains
    for grazing
  • Routes north included the Chisholm Trail, which
    ran from San Antonio, Texas to Abilene, Kansas
  • In Cattle Towns, businesses such as
    boardinghouses, hotels, restaurants served the
    cowboys.
  • Life in the cattle towns could be rough and
    violent, however, sheriffs arrested drunks, fixed
    sidewalks, and collected liquor licenses

10
The End of the Open Range
  • Barbed wire enabled farmers and ranchers to close
    off their land at a low cost
  • 1880s cattle businesses came under domination of
    big companies (large ranchers) that used the
    fences to close off ranges, causing economic and
    environmental disasters
  • Range Wars competition between large ranchers
    and some farmers and small ranchers for remaining
    western lands and valuable water sources

11
The End of the Cattle Kingdom
  • Over-speculation by Eastern and foreign investors
    created a financial bubble that burst
  • Beef prices were driven to low values
  • The severe drought of the mid-1800s was followed
    by the brutal blizzards of 1886 1887
  • Thousands of cattle were frozen to death or
    starved
  • Overgrazing depleted nutrients of grasses and
    grazing land for the cattle

12
Agriculture The 3rd Stage of Western Expansion
  • In 1862, Congress passed two important land grant
    acts that helped open the West to settlers
  • The Homestead Act
  • The Morrill Act
  • The Department of Agriculture helped farmers who
    settled in the West by researching new crops and
    farming methods for farmers

13
Government Acts that Brought People West
  • Homestead Act (1862)
  • Provided 160 acres of free land in exchange for a
    small fee or a promise to live on the land and
    till it for five years
  • Granted land to single women and immigrants who
    would become a citizen to bring new families West
  • Morrill Act (1862)
  • Granted each state loyal to the Union during the
    Civil War 30,000 acres of land for each
    Representative or Senator in Congress
  • Required states to sell land to raise money to
    build colleges
  • Opened land to homesteaders more than 11 million
    acres in Oklahoma

14
Ways the Federal Government Promoted Western
Settlement
  • Passed laws such as the Homestead Act and Morrill
    Act
  • Made land available to former settlers
  • Opened up former Indian lands in Oklahoma to
    settlement
  • Government agencies looked into new farming
    techniques to accommodate the Great Plains climate

15
Settling on the Plains
  • Some settlers came from places such as New
    England, where land was expensive
  • Some settlers were descendents of earlier
    pioneers to the Midwest
  • Single women came West with grants from the
    Homestead Act
  • Exodusters, Southern African Americans migrated
    West in search of economic opportunity and equal
    rights
  • Immigrants were granted land if they became a
    citizen from the Homestead Act

16
Farming on the Plains
  • Challenges
  • Dry Climate
  • Extreme Temperatures
  • Blizzards
  • Tornadoes
  • Tough Soil
  • New Farming Techniques
  • John Deers steel plow cut through thick sod
  • Dry farming
  • Cyrus McCormicks new farming machines
  • Different crops were grown

17
Daily Life on the Plains
  • Wood was scarce, families built houses out of sod
  • Chores
  • Washing clothes included making soap and building
    the fire to heat the water
  • Womens chores included preparing meals and
    growing vegetables
  • Farm families were often large everyone in the
    family was involved with chores

18
Communities on the Great Plains
  • Communities provided aid and assistance to their
    members. Great Plains families worked very hard
    to provide communities for their families
    especially the children
  • Churches often served as a community meeting
    place
  • Schools were often one room buildings in which
    students of all ages learned together
  • Few kids had school books
  • Children only went to school part of the year
    because they were needed on the farms the rest of
    the year

19
Cause and Effect of Western Settlement
  • Long Term Causes
  • Desire for new farm and ranch land
  • Search for natural resources
  • Growth of national and foreign markets
  • Immediate Causes
  • Homestead Act of 1862
  • Completion of the transcontinental railroad in
    1869
  • Effects
  • Increased conflict with American Indian cultures
    in the West
  • Immigrants and migrants come to the West in
    search of a new life
  • Great expansion of the western economy
  • Creation of new states

20
Homework
  • Complete worksheet 5.4 for Wed
  • If you watch the debate, complete the debate
    bingo card, put check marks over how many times
    they say specific words and have parents sign for
    3 points extra credit
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