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The Transformation of the TransMississippi West

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Title: The Transformation of the TransMississippi West


1
Chapter 17
  • The Transformation of the Trans-Mississippi West
  • 1860-1900

2
Introduction
  • 1.) How and why did Native Americans life on the
    Great Plains change between 1850s and 1900?
  • 2.) What roles did the army and the railroads
    play in the settlement of the West?
  • 3.) How did Anglo-Americans displace
    Spanish-speaking people in the Southwest?
  • 4.) How did the Wild West image of cowboys and
    Indians originate?

3
Introduction (cont.)
  • 5.) Why did some Americans wish to conserve the
    natural resources and beauty of the West, and how
    did this lead to creating the national parks?

4
Native Americans and the Trans-Mississippi West
  • The Plains Indians (mid-1800s)
  • Northern Great Plains
  • the Sioux, Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Crow,
    and other Native American tribes roamed
  • In the central and southern Plains
  • The Five Civilized Tribes, Comanches, Kiowas,
    Pawnees, and others lived
  • Plains Indians
  • Lakota Sioux, Crow, Cheyenne
  • Hunted and migrated buffalo herds
  • They ate the meat and used the hides for tepees
    and clothing

5
The Plains Indians (mid-1800s)
  • In the 1860s, the demand for buffalo hides in
    the eastern markets grew so great that white
    hunters, sometimes aided by the Indians, became
    professional buffalo killers
  • Buffalo Bill Cody
  • 1867-1868
  • Killed over 4,000 animals to feed the crews
    building the first transcontinental railroad

6
The Plains Indians (mid-1800s)
  • By the 1880s, hunting had reduced the once huge
    herds to only a few thousand animals and doomed
    the nomadic, buffalo-centered way of life of the
    Plains tribes

7
The Assault on Nomadic Indian Life
  • By the time of the Civil War, the govt. was
    pressuring Plains tribes to surrender their vast
    hunting grounds
  • Settle as farmers on restricted reservations
  • Some tribes accepted the change peacefully
  • Pueblos, Crows

8
The Assault on Nomadic Indian Life (cont.)
  • From 1860s and 1890 there was almost constant
    warfare
  • 100,000 Native Americans
  • Sioux, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Kiowa, Comanche
  • Over the possession of the Great Plains and the
    Southwest
  • Many atrocities occurred
  • Chivington Sand Creek massacre
  • Nov. 29, 1864
  • In CO
  • About 200 Cheyennes were murdered

9
The Assault on Nomadic Indian Life (cont.)
  • In 1867-1868 the govt. signed peace treaties with
    many of these tribes
  • Assigned most of them to 2 large reservations
  • One in present-day OK (then known as the Indian
    Territory)
  • The other in present-day South Dakota (the Great
    Sioux Reserve)

10
The Assault on Nomadic Indian Life (cont.)
  • Many of the tribes rejected a sedentary farming
    way of life
  • Left the reservations and harried white pioneers
  • The army retaliated by attacking any bands off
    their reservations
  • Even if those groups did not happen to be the
    ones that had committed hostile acts

11
The Assault on Nomadic Indian Life (cont.)
  • After the Red River war in the 1870s, the
    southern Plain tribes gave up
  • By 1886, when Geronimo surrendered, the
    southwestern tribes also capitulated

12
Custers Last Stand, 1876
  • The Sioux refused to report to the govt.-run
    agencies on their reservations
  • They also refused to sell the Black Hills part of
    their reserve
  • the army made war against them
  • The most famous casualties in that campaign were
    Colonel George A. Custer and his Seventh Cavalry
  • The Sioux annihilated at the battle of the Little
    Bighorn in 1876
  • Custer's Last Stand summary

13
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14
Custers Last Stand, 1876 (cont.)
  • Despite their brief triumph, the Sioux were
    subsequently forced to settle near the govt.
    agencies and to surrender the Black Hills
  • In the late 1870s, the army crushed brief
    resistance by Chief Josephs Nez Perce and Chief
    Dull Knifes northern Cheyennes

15
Saving the Indians
  • Humanitarian reformers in the East began to cry
    out against govt. mistreatment of the Indians
  • A Century of Dishonor
  • 1881
  • Helen Hunt Jackson
  • Called attention to the sorry record of the govt.
  • A Century of Dishonor

16
Saving the Indians (cont.)
  • These reformers thought the best way to end the
    injustice was to assimilate Indians quickly into
    mainstream white society
  • Dawes Severalty Act
  • 1887
  • Ended collective tribal ownership of land
  • Split the reservation into 160-acre farms
  • Assigned to the head of each Indian family
  • Any remaining reservation land was sold to whites
  • At the end of 25 years, the Indians were to
    receive full title to their farms and U.S.
    citizenship

17
Saving the Indians (cont.)
  • Dawes Act
  • Was supported by well-intentioned reformers and
    whites that only wanted the Indian land
  • The govt. also attempted to suppress tribal
    languages and culture
  • The new policies proved disastrous for most
    Indians
  • By 1934, the total acreage owned by Indians had
    fallen by 65
  • What was left was too dry or infertile to be
    farmed

18
The Ghost Dance and the End of Indian Resistance
on the Great Plains, 1890
  • Desperate because of their plight, the Sioux and
    other tribes turned to the Ghost Dance movement
  • Ghost Dance songs
  • The armys decision to stop the Ghost Dance
    movement led
  • to the death of Sitting Bull
  • The last battles between whites and Indians
  • The 1890 Wounded Knee massacre of 300 Sioux

19
The Ghost Dance and the End of Indian Resistance
on the Great Plains, 1890
  • By 1900, most of the remaining 100,000 Plains
    Indians lived in poverty on their reservations
  • Dependent on govt. support to survive
  • The Navajo of the Southwest adjusted more readily
    to reservation life
  • By 1900 had increased their land and livestock
    holding

20
Settling the West
  • The First Transcontinental Railroad
  • May 1869
  • Promontory Point, UT
  • The meeting of the Union Pacific and Central
    Pacific
  • Construction had been authorized by the Pacific
    Railroad Act of 1862
  • Much of the labor was performed by Chinese and
    Irish immigrants along with Mexican-Americans and
    African-Americans
  • Summary of transcontinental railroad

21
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22
Settling the West (cont.)
  • The railroads emerged as the biggest landlords in
    the West
  • Because the govt. granted land to the companies
    for every mile of track laid
  • By the end of the 1800s, 9 major railroads
    linked the country
  • Made westward travel and shipping much faster and
    easier

23
Settlers and the Railroad
  • To encourage railroad companies to lay track
    across the country, state and federal govts.
    granted them millions of acres of land
  • Eager both to sell these lands and create future
    customers for rail service
  • The companies made all-out efforts to attract
    settlers
  • They opened land bureaus
  • Sent agents to the East Coast and Europe
  • Offered easy credit
  • Offered free transportation out west to potential
    purchasers

24
Settlers and the Railroad (cont.)
  • 1870-1900
  • Railroads helped to recruit whole families,
    single women, over 2 million European immigrants
    to farm the Trans-Mississippi West
  • The railroads wielded great economic and social
    influence over western development

25
Settlers and the Railroad (cont.)
  • Their pressure for quick payment from land buyers
    pushed western farmers into concentrating on
    producing a single cash crop
  • Wheat or corn
  • Made them very vulnerable to price fluctuations
    on the world market

26
Homesteading on the Great Plains
  • Homestead Act
  • 1862
  • Helped to drawn settlers to the Great Plains
  • Provided free 160-acre farm to anyone who would
    live on and improve it over a 5-year period
  • Especially attractive to immigrants from western
    and northern Europe
  • Distributed 80 million acres of land to 400,000
    families by 1900

27
Homesteading on the Great Plains (cont.)
  • The most valuable western land ended up in the
    hands of railroads, land speculators, lumber
    companies, and big ranchers
  • Homesteading pioneers on the Great Plains had to
    cope with major trials
  • Isolation
  • Backbreaking work
  • Extreme weather conditions
  • Living in sod houses due to the lack of trees for
    lumber

28
Homesteading on the Great Plains (cont.)
  • Many gave up and left their farms
  • Those who persisted for 10 years or more,
    generally lived comfortable lives

29
New Farms, New Markets
  • Railroads, improved farm machinery, and mounting
    eastern demand for food, all led to the
    development of millions of new farms
  • Also there was a soaring American agricultural
    production between 1870-1900
  • Starting a new farm on the Great Plains was a
    risky business
  • Most settlers had to go into debt to acquire
    horses, machinery, and seed

30
New Farms, New Markets (cont.)
  • To meet debt payments to railroads and banks,
    farmers specialized in growing cash crops
  • Made them vulnerable to world market conditions
  • Also dependent on the railroads to reach the
    markets
  • Uncertain rainfall and severe weather conditions
    added to the farmers problems

31
Building a Society and Achieving Statehood
  • Out of crude frontier settlements, civilized
    communities began to develop
  • Churches and Sunday schools were usually the
    earliest institutions to emerge
  • Residents drew up state constitutions
  • In 1860s and 1870s the following states entered
    the Union
  • KS, NV, NE, CO
  • Most of the northern portions of the Great Plains
    achieved statehood in the late 1880s and 1890s

32
Building a Society and Achieving Statehood (cont.)
  • Early 20th-century OK, AZ, and NM entered the
    Union
  • The trans-Mississippi West completed its
    transition from frontier territories to states
  • Most western govts. were conservative
  • But they did grant womens suffrage
  • By 1910, ID, WY, UT, and CO had given women full
    voting rights

33
The Spread of Mormonism
  • Persecuted in the East, the Mormons migrated to
    the Great Salt Lake Valley
  • Led by Brigham Young
  • Began in 1847
  • They declared their territory the independent
    country of Deseret
  • Attracted many converts from the East and Europe
  • Created church-directed govt.
  • Practice polygyny

34
The Spread of Mormonism (cont.)
  • In the 1860s, the federal govt. began outlawing
    their practices
  • In the 1870s, the federal govt. won backing for
    repressive and coercive measures from the federal
    courts
  • Under pressure, in 1890, the Mormons renounced
    polygyny and church involvement in govt.
  • Applied for statehood
  • UT as admitted to the Union in 1896

35
Southwestern Borderlands
  • After the Mexican War, American ranchers and
    settlers in the Southwest took over the
    territorial govts.
  • Forced most of the Spanish-speaking population
    off the land
  • The Mexican minority tended to become low-paid
    day laborers
  • Faced discrimination and periodic violent attacks

36
Southwestern Borderlands (cont.)
  • Mexican-Americans fought back by organizing
    groups such as Las Gorras Blancas (the White
    Caps)
  • They had little success
  • The Hispanic struggle for justice and equality
    would continue throughout the 20th century

37
Exploiting the Western Landscape
  • The Mining Frontier
  • Mining booms in the West
  • 1849CA Gold Rush
  • Gold Rush summary
  • 1850sSierra, NV and British Columbia
  • New gold and silver strikes followed in NV, CO,
    ID, MT, WY, SD, AK

38
The Mining Frontier (cont.)
39
The Mining Frontier (cont.)
  • Each new discovery brought a rush of eager
    prospectors who believed in the get-rich-quick
    myth of the West
  • Infamous boomtowns such as Virginia City, NV
    sprang up
  • Virginia City, NV pictures
  • Most quickly declined into ghost towns when the
    mines were depleted
  • Legends of American--Ghost towns

40
The Mining Frontier (cont.)
  • A few individual prospectors with picks, shovels,
    and strainers made a fortune
  • Most barely earned a living though
  • The real profits went to large mining companies
    backed by European and eastern capital
  • Had the expensive equipment necessary to mine the
    gold and silver deposits deep underground

41
The Mining Frontier (cont.)
  • These mining companies did stimulate the U.S.
    economy
  • They also though ravaged the landscape and filled
    the surrounding area with smoke and chemicals
    from their smelters

42
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43
Cowboys and the Cattle Frontier
  • Open range cattle industry was successful
  • Confinement of the Plains Indians on reservations
  • Extension of the railroad into KS
  • Construction of new stockyards at railheads
  • Abilene, KS
  • Railroad promoters enticed thousands of people to
    enter the business by predicting great profits
  • For a time open-range ranchers did make fortunes
  • Ordinary cowboys did not make a profit
  • Tended the cattle on the long drives to the
    railheads

44
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45
Cowboys and the Cattle Frontier (cont.)
  • Most cowboys were poorly paid young men
  • About 1/5 were black or Mexican
  • Peak between 1880-1885
  • The industry declined rapidly
  • Overgrazing
  • Fencing of the open range by farmers
  • Freezing winters of 1885 and 1886
  • Killed 90 of the steers in some regions

46
Cowboys and the Cattle Frontier (cont.)
  • The open range and great cattle drives
    disappeared
  • Cattle ranching still continues today

47
The Cattle Towns and Prostitutes
  • The open-range cattle industry produced legendary
    cattle towns
  • Abilene, KS
  • Dodge City, KS
  • Cozad, NE
  • These towns were generally less lawless and
    violent than they have been portrayed in novels,
    films, and TV
  • Did have many saloons and prostitutes
  • Prostitutes came from many different class and
    ethnic backgrounds

48
Bonanza Farms
  • Speculators Believed that enormous profits could
    be made in large-scale wheat growing
  • the late 1870s and the 1880s
  • established ten-thousand-acre farms
  • invested heavily in the latest equipment

49
Bonanza Farm in ND
50
Bonanza Farms (cont.)
  • For a while these bonanza farms did reap handsome
    profits
  • In 1890 many enterprises went into bankruptcy
  • Overproduction
  • Poor weather conditions
  • Falling wheat prices

51
Bonanza Farms (cont.)
  • Large-scale farming did best in CA
  • Big growers irrigated their land
  • Cooperatively marketed their citrus fruit under
    the Sunkist trademark

52
The Oklahoma Land Rush, 1889
  • The federal govt. initially set aside OK as a
    reservation for various Native American tribes
  • National Archives--Indian Territory map
  • Pressure form land-hungry farmers mounted
  • The govt. reconsidered
  • In 1889, Congress opened some 2 million acres in
    the hear of the Indian Territory to white
    settlers
  • Within weeks, OK pioneers filed 6,000 homestead
    claims

53
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54
The Oklahoma Land Rush, 1889 (cont.)
  • In the following years, under the provisions of
    the Dawes Act, more and more OK land passed into
    the hands of whites
  • Curtis Act
  • Congress passed in 1889
  • Proclaimed the end of the Indian Territory
  • Curtis Act--OK Historical Society

55
The West of Life and Legend
  • The American Adam and the Dime-Novel Hero
  • Writers in the middle of the 19th century often
    presented the West as a place to escape from the
    corruptions of civilization
  • Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
  • 1885
  • Description of life along the Mississippi River

56
The American Adam and the Dime-Novel Hero (cont.)
  • In the 1860s and 1870s, eastern dime-novel
    writers created the western novel
  • Frontiersman hero who fights Indians and bad
    guys for right and justice
  • Buffalo Bill
  • Character made famous by Ned Buntline
  • Modeled after William F. Buffalo Bill Cody
  • Cashed in on the fame by founding a Wild West
    touring show that became extremely popular

57
Buffalo Bill Cody
58
Revitalizing the Frontier Legend
  • The dime novels and Wild West shows caught the
    fancy of 3 young members of the eastern elite
  • Theodore Roosevelt
  • Frederic Remington
  • Owen Wister
  • They visited the West and made it the subject of
    their histories, art, and novels

59
Revitalizing the Frontier Legend (cont.)
  • They fostered the frontier legend of the West
  • as a testing ground in which the fittest and best
    survived
  • As the home of the cowboy
  • who embodied the essence of manly virtue

60
Beginning a National Parks Movement
  • The frontier legend aroused some public interest
    in protecting the Wests natural beauty and
    wonders
  • John Wesley Powell, Henry D. Washburn, George
    Perkins Marsh, John Muir
  • The nation created its first national parks
  • Yellowstone and Yosemite

61
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62
Yellowstone and Yosemite
63
Beginning a National Parks Movement (cont.)
  • Sierra Club
  • First organization dedicated to conservation
  • Muir was first president
  • Sierra Club website

64
Conclusion
  • As Americans struggled to adjust to the
    disruptive changes brought by industrialization
    and urbanization
  • They embraced the myth of the West as a paradise
  • Life was simple, moral right and wrong were
    clear-cut, and opportunity abounded
  • That myth was created by popular writers,
    journalists, artists, railroad publicists, and
    politicians

65
Conclusion (cont.)
  • The myth ignored the darker elements of westward
    expansion
  • The use of the army to destroy the way of life of
    the Native Americans and force them onto
    reservations
  • The heedless exploitation of the environment
  • The fact that the individual prospectors,
    ranchers, and homesteaders were increasingly
    overtaken by big eastern-financed companies in
    mining, ranching, and agribusiness

66
Conclusion (cont.)
  • It was also true that the creation of new western
    settlements
  • enhanced the image of the United States as a land
    of opportunities
  • Fostered certain democratic ideas
  • Extending the vote to women
  • Gave birth to the conservation movement
  • The development of the vast western resources
    made the nation one of the worlds richest powers
    by 1900
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