Title: Chapter 15
1Chapter 15The South and West Transformed
- How did the economy, society, and culture of the
South and West change after the Civil War?
2The New SouthSection 1
- How did the southern economy and society change
after the Civil War? - Vocabulary
- cash crop
- Civil Rights Act of 1875
- Farmers Alliance
3Industries and Cities Grow
- New industries spread through the South
- textiles, lumber, cigars, coal, iron, and steel
processing - More diversified farming with smaller farms
- Railroads link cities and towns
- Southern economic recovery is limited
- War damage, lack of capital, limited education,
few southern banks
4Transparency Railroads Connect the South
5Southern Farmers Face Hard Times
- Cotton that once dominated agriculture
- Price was depressed and boll weevil appeared in
the 1890s - Farmers band together Farmers Alliance tried to
convince government to force railroads to lower
the freight prices and regulate interest charged
by banks
6Chart Wholesale Price of Cotton 1865-1890
7Black Southerners Gain and Lose
- Political and economic gains
- Citizenship allowed the right to vote (14th and
15th amendment) - Some opened businesses or bought farms
- African Americans had access to education
- White blacklash
- KKK used terror and freedoms were whittled away
- Civil Rights Act of 1875
- Guaranteed African Americans the right to ride
trains and use public facilities - Supreme Court ruled in 1883 that these were local
issues to be decided by state or local law - Southern governments rolled back rights of
African Americans
8Chart Per Capita Income in the South, 1860 and
1880
9Westward Expansion and the American Indians
- How did the pressures of westward expansion
impact Native Americans? - Vocabulary
- reservation Wounded Knee
- Sand Creek Massacre assimilate
- Sitting Bull Chief Joseph
- Dawes General Allotment Act
- Battle of Little Big Horn
10Railroads and Settlers
- Railroads brought swarms of settlers, who took
Native American lands - Some signed treaties, selling their lands and
went to reservations - Others fought, or did not stay on the reservations
11Diverse Native Cultures Destroyed
- Native Americans viewed land and nature as sacred
- Settlers viewed land as a resource to produce
wealth - Buffalo killed off
- Native Americans are forbidden to practice their
religions - Their land is lost when the Dawes Act gave each
male a plot many sold the land. - The amount of land owned by Indians shrank by 65
by 1934.
12The Sand Creed Massacre
- Sioux rebellion, which began in 1862, inflamed
Indians and whites - In 1864, Colorado militia, under the command of
John Chivington, attacked unarmed Cheyenne and
Arapaho Indians, killing many men, women, and
children - Army continued the fight on the Plains
13The Final Destruction
- Navajo and Apache wars began in 1865 and
continued until Geronimo surrendered in 1886 - The First Sioux War in 1865 occurred when the
government decided to build a road through Sioux
hunting lands in Montana - Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 U.S. would not build
the road Sioux would live on a reservation with
U.S. support - Red River War defeat of Comanches and Kiowas
- The Second Sioux War began in 1875 when miners
went to the Black Hills in SD. Chief Sitting
Bull left the reservation
14Sitting Bull and the Fall of the Sioux
- Lt. Colonel George Armstrong Custer was sent to
locate the Indians - In the Battle of the Little Bighorn, Custer and
more than 200 soldiers were killed. Sitting Bull
escaped to Canada, but returned to the
reservation five years later. - In 1890, more than 200 unarmed Sioux are
massacred at Wounded Knee.
15Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce
- Tribe located in the Northwest
- Youth attacked settlers to get Nez Perce horses
- Chief Joseph tried to escape with his people and
got to within 40 miles of Canada. - Finally settled on a reservation in Oklahoma
16The Fate of Indian Territory
- Nearly 70 Indian nations had been forced into
Indian Territory - In 1889 Congress opened 2 million acres to
settlers - At noon on April 22, hundreds of homesteaders
rushed across the border - Known as Boomers those who sneaked in early were
known as Sooners.
17Wounded Knee
- Religious revival Ghost Dance to banish whites
and restore buffalo - 1890 Sitting Bull was killed
- Army killed over 100 at Wounded Knee in South
Dakota
18Note Taking Reading Skill Recognize Sequence
Reading Skill Recognize Sequence
NOTE TAKING
19Infographic Assimilation by Force
Assimilation by Force
INFOGRAPHIC
20Government Promotes Assimilation
- Reformers criticize policy Helen Hunt Jackson
fought for recognition of Indian rights in the
courts - Congress passes the Dawes General Allotment Act
in 1887 Replaced the reservation system with the
allotment system each Indian family was given a
160-acre farm, but with the arid land, the farms
were too small - Many Indian children were sent to boarding schools
21Progress Monitoring Transparency Section 2
PM TRANSPARENCY
Progress Monitoring Transparency
22- Transforming the West
- Section 3
23Transforming the West
- What economic and social factors changed the West
after the Civil War? - Vocabulary
- vigilante open range
- Homestead Act land grant
- transcontinental railroad
- Exodusters
24Sec 3 Transforming the West
Transforming the West
Miners Hope to Strike It Rich Main Idea Mining
was the first great boom in the West. Gold and
silver were the magnets that attracted a vast
number of people. Prospectors from the East were
just a part of a flood that included people from
all around the world. Railroaders Open the
West Main Idea As industry in the West grew,
the need for a railroad to transport goods
increased as well. The effects of the new
railroads were far reaching. They tied the nation
together, moved products and people across the
continent, and spurred industrial
development. Ranchers Build the Cattle
Kingdom Main Idea Cattle ranching fueled
another western boom. This was sparked by the
vast acres of grass suitable for feeding herds of
cattle. Once the railroad provided the means to
move meat to eastern markets, the race was on for
land and water. Farmers Settle on
Homesteads Main Idea The Great Plains were the
last part of the country to be heavily settled by
whites. It was originally set aside for Indians
because it was viewed as too dry for agriculture.
Yet, with the coming of the transcontinental
railroad, millions of farmers moved into the
West. Continued
25Mining Frontier
- Sutters Mill in CA
- Pikes Peak
- Comstock Lode
- Placer mining shoveled dirt into a pan and
washed it in water, looking for gold or silver - Large corporations will move in with mining
equipment, placing a burden on the water supply. - Mining will help the industrial development
26Transparency Boom Town
Boom Town
TRANSPARENCY
27Big Business Receives Land
- Pacific Railway Acts of 1862 and 1864 gave the
Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroad
companies 10 square miles on each side of the
tracks. - Sold land to settlers who wanted farms
28The Cattle Industry
- Americans adopted Mexican ranching ways,
equipment, and dress. - Huge demand for beef
- Long drive transporting cattle from ranges to
the cow towns - Chisholm Trail linked Texas to Kansas and the
railroad - Barbed wire will end the open-range system
29Two Land Laws
- Morrill Land-Grant Act of 1862 provide support
for state colleges the federal government
distributed millions of acres of western lands to
state governments the land was sold to fund
agricultural colleges - Homestead Act, 1862 offered 160 acres of land to
those who met the requirements - 1. 21 years old
- 2. American citizens or have filed for
citizenship - 3. Pay 10
- 4. Build a house and live in it at least 6
months a year - 5. Farm the land for 5 consecutive years
- Problems Many too poor, no farming experience,
fraud
30Settlers Work Together
- Water was scarce, contaminated 1880s had
well-drilling equipment - Backbreaking labor
- Men often had to leave and work in towns for
cash, leaving families alone - Families cooperated in building houses, barns,
sewing quilts, corn-husking, caring for the sick
31Farming on the Plains
- Challenging conditions
- New technology-dry farming, planting crops that
do not require much water - Agricultural knowledge
- Bonanza farms controlled by big businesses
- Farm debt machines were costly, land
speculation, and low prices for crops
32Transparency Cattle Drive
Cattle Drive
TRANSPARENCY
33African Americans
- Exodusters 50,000 African Americans who moved to
the West - Benjamin Pap Singleton led a group
- Life was hard due to poverty, lack of experience
with prairie crops like wheat and corn - Most were happier than if they had stayed in the
South
34Women on the Frontier
- Long periods alone
- Men often had to leave to find jobs for cash
- Women stayed to protect homestead from squatters
- Western women led the fight for the right to vote
- 1890 Wyoming was the first state to give women
the right to vote
35Note Taking Reading Skill Identify Main Ideas
Reading Skill Identify Main Ideas
NOTE TAKING
36Competition, Conflict, and Change
- Economic Rivalries Conflicts between miners,
ranchers, sheepherders, and farmers led to
violence biggest losers were Native Americans - Prejudices and discrimination West was most
diverse area of country with Asian, Mexican and
Mexican American, and Native American residents
37The West by 1900
- Number of tenant farmers grew in the West
- Corporations owned many large farms
- Farmers were deeply in debt
- Census of 1890 frontier ended
38Frederick Jackson Turner
- Frontier closed claimed that the frontier had
played a central role in forming the American
character - Frontier had produced individualistic, restless,
and socially mobile Americans who were ready for
adventure
39Progress Monitoring Transparency Section 3
PM TRANSPARENCY
Progress Monitoring Transparency