Title: Chapter 13: Manifest Destiny Section 1: Trails West
1Chapter 13 Manifest DestinySection 1 Trails
West
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2Would anyone like to know about Jacksons Tariff
of Abominations?
- Or the crisis of nullification?
- William Henry Harrisons run for the presidency
against John Tyler? - The rise of the Whig party?
- Then read about it in your book were not going
over it in class
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3The west was really beginning to open up in the
mid 1800s
- Some of the first white people in the west were
mountain men - These men were independent, tough, adventurous,
willing to take on anything. - Many of them were trappers looking for animal
skins to eventually send east.
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4- Theyd spend their time trapping animals.
- Theyd agree to meet traders from the east once
in a while. - These meetings were called the rendezvous
system. - (a rendezvous is a meeting)
- Theyd then get supplies to last them while they
hunted some more.
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5The next wave of people went west because of land
- Land speculators (19) bought huge areas of land.
- They would divide it up and smaller pieces to
newcomers in the west and make a good profit.
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6The next group came west as farmers good
productive land.
- Then came groups of people like merchants and
manufacturers trying to make money by selling
farmers products.
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8How would you get west?
- On one of the several main trails west
- The Oregon Trail
- The California Trail
- The Santa Fe Trail
- The Old Spanish Trail
- The Mormon Trail
- The one you took depended on the purpose of your
trip
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9For example The Santa Fe Trail
- Was for American businessmen who hoped to make a
profit selling new products in Mexico and some
of them became VERY rich. - When people heard how much money you could make,
lots more went thats the first time you hear
of the prairie schooner. - From Missouri to Mexico was about 800 miles and
the trip might take 2-3 months.
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11One most people have heard about The Oregon
Trail (29)
- The first white men to Oregon were missionaries.
- Then came stories about the rich land and
thousands decided that Oregon was the place to go.
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12Today if you decide you want to go to Oregon,
you might fly, or at least get in a car and take
a couple of days to drive there.
- But in 1840 it wasnt that easy.
- Indians?
- Animals?
- Sickness/disease?
- Accidents?
- Starvation/no water?
- Freeze to death in the mountains?
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14Your packet has a1st person account of the
Oregon Trail
- Why that might be a good description of what
happened
- Why that might be a bad description of what
happened
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15The one group people sometimes talk about were
the Donner party
- They became trapped in the Sierra Nevada
Mountains and were forced to build a winter camp
with little food to sustain them. When the food
ran out, some survived by eating the corpses of
their companions. It was several weeks before
rescue parties could be sent to help because of
the Mexican War. Even after the war ended, not
everyone could be rescued at once because of the
harsh weather conditions and difficult terrain.
The last of the survivors reached Sutter's Fort
(now Sacramento) almost exactly one year later.
Of the 87 members of the Donner Party, 46
survived.
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16And the Mormon Trail
- Mormons (46) are from the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints - Their religion claims Jesus came to Vermont to
Joseph Smith and told him to start a new
Christian church in the Americas. - Mormons had some ideas that others didnt like
such as polygamy (52) (many wives) - The Mormons were chased out of New England and
moved to Illinois (Nauvoo).
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17In Illinois, an anti Mormon mob killed Joseph
Smith and they decided they needed a place to
live where no-one would bother them
- This place was out west to the Utah Territory
(their new leader was Brigham Young). - Utah at that time was actually part of Mexico.
- When they got there, they settled by the Great
Salt Lake and theyre still there today. - Today, Utah is about 60-75 Mormon
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