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Looking to the West, 1860-1900

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Title: Looking to the West, 1860-1900


1
Looking to the West, 1860-1900
2
Great Plains, Pacific Northwest, and the
Southwest develop
3
Pacific Railways Acts of 1862 and 1864
  • Passed during the Civil War when the Northern
    Republics dominated the Congress (no Southern
    opposition)
  • Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads
  • Received huge land grants from the federal
    government
  • 10 square miles of public land on each side of
    track
  • Railroads profited from selling land near tracks
  • Farmers needed railroads to transport goods to
    city

4
Morrill Land Grant Act of 1862
5
Homestead Act 1862 160 acres of public land to
anyone who met these requirements
6
By 1900 600,000 claims of 80 million
acresPROBLEMS
7
Life in the West
8
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9
African Americans in the West
10
Frontier Women
11
Womens Suffrage in the West
12
Native Americans 1830s Jackson removed to the
Great Plains
13
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14
Indian Territory
  • Located in todays Oklahoma
  • Page 181 Look at Map

15
Railroads and Settlers
  • Settlers felt they had a right to the land
  • Some settlers signed treaties with natives, but
    both sides had different intentions of what the
    treaties meant
  • The Federal Government wanted to place natives on
    Reservations (federal land set aside for natives)

16
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17
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18
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19
Sioux fought westward expansion!
20
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21
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22
Nez Perce - Northwest
23
Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce
24
  • September 30, 1877
  • Nez Perce headed to Canada, but was blocked by
    the military
  • Many died while being held in the Indian
    territory, including all of Josephs children
  • Eventually Nez Perce were moved to a reservation
    in Washington state

25
Change in Culture of the West
26
Dawes Act of 1887
27
Indian Territory (Oklahoma)
28
Farming on the Plains
29
Farming
  • Dry farming crops that do not require a great
    deal of water
  • 1870s improvements plow, harrows to break
    ground, seed drills
  • 1875 steam powered threshers
  • 1890s corn huskers and corn binders

30
  • 1862 Department of Agriculture added under
    the Morrill Act
  • 1880s and 1890s formulated statistics on
    markets, studied crop and plant diseases
  • Distributed publications on crop rotation,
    hybridization, topsoil

31
  • Bonanza farms farms controlled by large
    businesses and managed by professionals
  • Single cash crops
  • Surplus prices fell

32
Debt
  • Farmers bought to much land and had to mortgage
  • 1849 California Gold Rush (Sutters Mill,
    California 1848)
  • 1859 rumors of gold strikes in the area of
    Pikes Peak, Colorado
  • Pikes Peak or Bust!
  • Nevada Comstock Lode
  • Mining towns led to gambling and drunkeness

33
Mining Techniques
  • placer mining shoveled loose dirt into boxes
    and ran through water
  • 1850s and 1860s deeply buried gold which was
    harder to get
  • Larger companies had to do the mining

34
Cattle Industry
  • Texas early 1800s
  • Longhorn cattle
  • 1860s and 1870s booming period
  • Plains areas to pasture
  • Demand for beef in large cities
  • Railroad aided in cattle industry
  • Long drive cowboys would move cattle from place
    to place (18 hours in the saddle)

35
Changes in the cattle industry by the 1880s
  • 1874 Joseph Glidden invented barbed wire
  • Overstocking of cattle
  • 1885 beef prices began to fall
  • 1885 1886 hard winter (loss of 85 of cattle)

36
Problems
37
Tariffs
  • Tariffs encourage the sale of goods produced at
    home by taxing imports
  • Hurt farmers
  • Raised price of manufactured goods
  • Foreigners had no to buy American crops
  • Helped farmers
  • Protecting them from farm imports from other
    countries

38
Money Issue
  • Value of money is linked to amount in circulation
  • If money supply goes up value of money goes down
  • CAUSES INFLATION
  • Reduce the supply of money and the value of money
    goes up
  • CAUSES DEFLATION
  • After Civil War period of deflation

39
  • Monetary policy printing/producing money or not

40
Disagreement over which is best
41
  • Farmers want more money in circulation
  • Manufacturers and other businesses want less
    money in circulation

42
  • 1873 nation went on the Gold Standard
  • Silverites were mad! Silver miners and western
    farmers are furious.
  • Want free silver unlimited coining of silver to
    increase the supply of money

43
  • 1878 Bland Allison Act required government to
    purchase and coin more silver, increase supply,
    and cause inflation
  • Vetoed by President Hayes
  • Congress Overrode his veto
  • However, the treasure refused to buy more than
    the minimum under the law and refused to
    circulate silver dollars

44
1890 Sherman Silver Purchase Act
  • Government was required to purchase an amount of
    silver each month
  • Repealed in 1893

45
  • 1867 The Grange (Patrons of Husbandry)
  • Farms form cooperatives
  • Save money by buying in large quantities

46
  • Greenback Party wanted to circulate more paper
    money to cause inflation
  • Elected 14 members to Congress in 1878
  • Power faded because of the focus on silver

47
Farmers Alliances
48
Natural Disasters with no Federal Help
  • 1882 Mississippi flooded
  • 1886 1887 drought
  • 1887 - blizzard

49
  • 1876-1892 no president won a majority of the
    popular vote
  • Not powerful presidents usually protected
    American industry

50
  • 1887 Texas Seed Bill seed grain to aid
    drought victims
  • Grover Cleveland vetoed it
  • though the people support the government, the
    government shouldnt support the people

51
  • 1887 Interstate Commerce Act
  • Regulated railroad prices
  • Illegal to give special rates
  • Developed the Interstate Commerce Commission

52
  • 1890 Sherman Anti-trust Act
  • Curb power of trusts and monopolies
  • Lax enforcement

53
Populists
  • 1890s success in the South
  • Peoples Party Populists
  • 1. increased circulation of
  • 2. unlimited minting of silver
  • 3. progressive income tax percentage increases
  • 4. government ownership of communication and
    transportation
  • 5. 8 hour workday opposed use of Pinkertons
    (private police forces)

54
Populists
  • Focused on poor whites and blacks
  • 1892 James Weaver won barely a million votes
  • Grover Cleveland won
  • Angered laborers when he ended the Pullman strike
  • Angered farmers by supporting gold
  • Angered manufacturers by supporting tariff
  • 1893 depression millions out of work

55
  • 1896 William McKinley vs. William Jennings
    Bryan
  • McKinley for the gold standard
  • Bryan for silver LOST
  • Bryan most known for his Cross of Gold speech

56
  • Silver movement died
  • Returned to gold standard (more gold found
    worldwide)
  • Farm prices rose
  • Populism died
  • Progressivism developed

57
Frontier - disappearing
  • 1900 West
  • U.S. territories, state constitutions, statehood
  • Frontier fading
  • Tenant farming on the rise
  • 1872 Yellowstone National Park (Wyoming,
    Montana, Idaho) 1st National Park
  • 1890 Superintendent of the census declared the
    end of the frontier

58
Turner Frontier Thesis 1893
  • Frederick Jackson Turner
  • Speech detailing the importance of the frontier
    and the end of the frontier
  • Frontier individualistic, restless, socially
    mobile America
  • Didnt take into account women, minorities,
    government

59
Frontier Realities
  • Men and women
  • Whites, African Americans, Chinese, and Japanese
  • Chinese railway workers
  • 9,000 African American cowhands
  • buffalo soldiers all black regiments
  • 1883 Buffalo Bill Cody Wild West Shows
  • 1912 Juliet Low Girl Scouts girls have been
    made too soft
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