Title: Cowboys and Indians
1Cowboys and Indians
2The Settling of the West
- First large-scale white settlements mining camps
- Boomtowns and mining corporations followed
3The Settling of the West
- Next wave cattle ranchers
- Large scale cattle operations made possible by
trains, refrigerated cars
4The Mythical West
JESSE JAMES
WYATT EARP
DODGE CITY, KS
OK CORRAL
5Buffalo Bills Wild West Show
6Settling of the West
- 1862 Homestead Act 160 acres of free land given
to farmers - Thousands move west new agricultural techniques
allow for more production
7The End of the Indian Culture
- Causes
- Technology advances
8The End of the Indian Culture
- Causes
- Reservation system, run by corrupt US Dept. of
the Interior
9The End of the Indian Culture
- Causes
- the near extermination of the buffalo
10Major Indian Battles
- Sand Creek, CO 1864
- US Army massacres Cheyenne, incites Plains
Indians to retaliate against settlers
Col. John Chivington
11Major Indian Battles
- Ranald Mackenzie vs. the Comanches
- Palo Duro Canyon
- 1874
12Little Big Horn
- Caused by gold hunters entering Black Hills of
South Dakota, violating Indian treaties. - Combined Indian army, led by Crazy Horse and
Sitting Bull, left reservation and began attacks
13Little Big Horn
- US Army sent to force Indian
return - led by George Custer
-
- Sitting Bull
14Little Big Horn
- June 25th, 1876 Little Big Horn River, MT
Custer and entire command wiped out - Shocked the country renewed push to eliminate
Indian threat in the West
15Last Defeat of the Indian
- Geronimo and the Apaches, 1882
- Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce, 1883
16Wounded Knee, 1890Last Indian Battle
- The Ghost Dance religious ritual performed by
Sioux Indians would bring back spirits of dead
Indians to reclaim the land and defeat the whites
17Wounded Knee, December 1890
- Sioux leave the reservation when forced to give
up ritual - US Army massacres over 300 Sioux, force the rest
to return
18Attempts to Assimilate the Indians
19Attempts to Assimilate the Indians
- 1887 the Dawes Act 160 acres given to every
head of Indian household, with equipment for
farming - Failed policy most land stolen from or sold by
Indians by 1895
20The Closing of the West
- Frederick Jackson Turner and The Significance of
the Frontier in American History (1893) there
is no longer a frontier in the West, thus
American expansion has filled up the continent - The safety valve theory the West offered a
second chance to millions, thus relieving social
and political pressures in the cities
"The existence of an area of free land, its
continuous recession, and the advance of American
settlement westward explain American
development."
21The Closing of the West
- Impact of the closing of the West
- land more expensive more immigrants stay in
cities, ex-farmers move to cities - expansion moves overseas (i.e. American
imperialism) - 1889 Oklahoma Land Rush
-
22The Farmers
Jay Gould
- Problems of the farmer
- 1 enemy the railroads and pools higher
rates than for other customers - Real problem overproduction, leading to lower
prices - Also higher prices caused by the tariff and the
trusts
23The Issue Over Money
- Hard money (specie) vs. Soft money (issued by
the government) farmers wanted to increase
money supply to cause inflation - Higher prices makes it easier to pay debts
24The Issue Over Money
- Inflation causes farm prices to rise deflation
causes a fall money supply based on amount of
gold in economy - More money in the economy causes inflation
- Proposed solution add silver to the economy to
increase money supply - First proposed by William Coin Harvey
25The Farmers Unite
- Formation of the National Grange of the Patrons
of Husbandry
Oliver Kelley
Original purpose social and educational events
soon began political activity, focusing on the
money supply and the railroads
"We propose meeting together, talking together,
working together, buying together, selling
together, and, in general, acting together for
our mutual protection and advancement, as
occasion may require." -- 1874 Declaration of
Purposes of the National Grange
26The Farmers Unite
- The Grange emerges as political force in the
Midwest - The Greenback-Labor Party first party that
represented labor in elections -
Candidate James B. Weaver
27Granger Laws
- The Granger States farmers take over state
governments in the Midwest in the 1880s - i.e. Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota
- Targeted railroads for rate controls
- Thrown out by Supreme Court in Wabash v. Illinois
28The Beginning of the Peoples (Populist) Party
- Wabash case destroys the Grange, replaced by the
Farmers Alliances - Foundation of the Peoples Party, called by most
the Populist Party