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UNIT 2

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UNIT 2 BRIDGE TO THE 20TH CENTURY 1877-1917 Changes on Western Frontier 1877-1900 Cowboy is in saddle from dawn to dusk. He sleeps on the ground and bathes in rivers. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: UNIT 2


1
UNIT 2 BRIDGE TO THE 20TH CENTURY 1877-1917
  • Changes on Western Frontier
  • 1877-1900

2
Introduction
  • White settlers began moving West onto the Great
    Plains where the Native Americans lived. A major
    clash occurred between 2 very different cultures.

3
The Great Plains
  • Great Plains Area

4
Great Plains contd
  • Great Plains
  • broad expanse of flat land
  • much of it covered in prairie, steppe and
    grassland
  • west of the Mississippi River and east of the
    Rocky Mountains in the United States and Canada.
  • parts of the U.S. states of Colorado, Kansas,
    Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota,
    Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming, and
    the Canadian provinces of Alberta, Manitoba and
    Saskatchewan.

5
Culture of the Plains Indians
  • Easterners thought of Plains as vast desert
    occupied by savage tribes, but Native Americans
    were very highly developed.
  • To the East, near lower Missouri River, tribes
    such as the Osage and Iowa, hunted and planted
    crops and settled in small villages

6
  • Farther West, nomadic tribes such as Sioux and
    Cheyenne gathered wild foods and hunted buffalo.
  • They traded and followed tribal law, created
    tools and clothing as well.

7
Culture of Plains, contd
  • Spanish brought horses to New Mexico in 1598.
  • By mid 1700s, because of their horses and guns,
    Native Americans could travel farther and hunt
    more efficiently and almost all tribes left their
    farms to roam and hunt buffalo.
  • Wars occurred because of hunters from one tribe
    trespassing on land of other tribes.

8
  • Plains warrior gained honor by killing his
    enemies and counting coup touching a live enemy
    with a coup stick and escaping unharmed.
  • They also called truces to trade goods, pass
    along news, etc.

9
Buffalo uses
  • Made tepees and arrow shields from hides.
  • Used skin for clothing, shoes, blankets.
  • Meat was dried into jerky or mixed with berries
    and fat to make staple food called pemmican.
  • Skull was considered sacred and was used in many
    of their rituals.

10
  • Horns were carved into bowls and spoons.
  • Bones were made into hide scrapers, tool handles,
    etc. Hoofs were ground up and used as glue.
  • Buffalo provided basic needs and was very
    important to life on the Plains.

11
Family Life
  • Lived in small extended family groups and bands
    with others that spoke the same language.
  • No individual dominated the group. Land was for
    use of the whole tribe and leaders of a tribe
    ruled by counsel not force.

12
  • Young men trained to become warriors and hunters.
  • Women butchered game and prepared hides.
  • Women SOMETIMES chose their own husbands.
  • Children learned behavior/culture through
    stories, myths, games.

13
Importance of Spirits
  • Tribes believed spirits controlled events in the
    natural world.
  • Shamans men or women who showed great deal of
    sensitivity to the spirits.

14
Settlers Push Westward
  • Native Americans believed that land COULD NOT be
    owned.
  • Settlers wanted to own land to have a stake in
    their country.

15
  • Settlers argued Native Americans gave up their
    rights (forfeited) to the land because they
    didnt improve it. So they pushed west along
    railroad and wagon trails to claim the land.

16
SILVER AND GOLD!!!
  • Gold discovery in Colorado in 1858 drew many
    miners to the region.
  • Mining camps and frontier towns had filthy living
    quarters with rows of tents and shacks with dirt
    streets.
  • Fortune seekers included Irish, German, Polish,
    Chinese and African-Americans.

17
  • In 1834, the federal government had passed an act
    that designated the entire Great Plains as one
    enormous reservation, or land set aside for
    Native American tribes.

18
  • In the 1850s, however, the government changed its
    policy and created treaties that defined specific
    boundaries for each tribe.

19
  • Most Native Americans ignored the government
    treaties and continued to hunt on their
    traditional lands, clashing with settlers and
    miners, with tragic results.

20
  • One of the most tragic events occurred in 1864.
    Most of the Cheyenne, assuming they were under
    the protection of the U.S. government, had
    peacefully returned to Colorados Sand Creek
    Reserve for the winter.

21
  • Yet General S.R. Curtis, U.S. Army commander in
    the West, sent a telegram to militia colonel John
    Chivington that read, I want no peace till the
    Indians suffers more.

22
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23
  • In response, Chivington and his troops descended
    on the Cheyenne and Arapaho, about 200 warriors
    and 500 women and children, camped at Sand Creek.

24
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25
  • The attack at dawn on November 29, 1864 killed
    over 150 inhabitants, mostly women and children.

26
  • The Bozeman Trail ran directly through Sioux
    hunting grounds in the Bighorn Mountains. The
    Sioux Chief, Red Cloud, had unsuccessfully
    appealed to the government to end white
    settlement on the trail.

Chief Red Cloud
Red Cloud and his Council.
27
  • In December 1866, the warrior Crazy Horse
    ambushed Captain William J. Fetterman and his
    company at Lodge Trail Ridge. Over 80 soldiers
    were killed.

Crazy Horse
28
  • Native Americans called this fight the Battle of
    the Hundred Slain. Whites called it the Fetterman
    Massacre.

29
  • Skirmishes continued until the government agreed
    to close the Bozeman Trail. In return, the Treaty
    of Fort Laramie, in which the Sioux agreed to
    live on a reservation along the Missouri River.

30
  • Sitting Bull , leader of the Hunkpapa Sioux, had
    never signed it. Although the Ogala and Brule
    Sioux did sign the treaty, they expected to
    continue using their traditional hunting grounds.

Sitting Bull
31
  • The Treaty of Fort Laramie provided only a
    temporary halt to warfare. The conflict between
    the two cultures continued as settlers moved
    westward and Native American nations resisted the
    restrictions imposed upon them .

Fort Laramie
32
  • In late 1868, war broke out yet again as the
    Kiowa and Comanche engaged in six years of
    raiding that finally led to the Red River War of
    1874-75.

33
  • The U.S. Army responded by herding the people of
    friendly tribes onto reservations while opening
    fire on all others.

34
  • General Philip Sheridan, a Union army veteran,
    gave orders to destroy their villages and
    ponies, to kill and hang all warriors, and to
    bring back all women and children.

The only good Indian is a dead Indian.
- General Philip Sheridan
35
  • Within four years of the Treaty of Laramie,
    miners began searching the Black Hills for gold.
    The Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho protested the
    trespassing of their sacred grounds.

36
  • In 1874, Colonel George A. Custer reported that
    the Black Hills had gold from the grass roots
    down, a gold rush was on in the Black Hills.

37
  • In early June 1876, the Sioux and Cheyenne held a
    sun dance, during which Sitting Bull had a vision
    of soldiers and some Native Americans falling
    from their horses.

38
  • When Colonel Custer and his troops reached the
    Little Big Horn River, the Native Americans were
    ready for them.

39
  • Led by Crazy Horse, Gall, and Sitting Bull, the
    warriors, with raised spears and rifles,
    outflanked and crushed Custers troops.

40
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41
  • Within an hour, Custer and all of the men of the
    Seventh Cavalry were dead.

42
  • By late 1876, the Sioux were beaten. Sitting Bull
    and a few followers took refuge in Canada, where
    they remained until 1881.

43
  • Eventually, to prevent his peoples starvation,
    Sitting Bull was forced to surrender.

44
  • Sadly, in 1885, Sitting Bull appeared in William
    F. Buffalo Bill Codys Wild West Show.

45
  • Many Indian sympathizers supported assimilation,
    a plan under which Native Americans would give up
    their beliefs and way of life and become part of
    the white culture.

Before and After.
46
  • In 1887, Congress passed the Dawes Act aiming to
    Americanize the Native Americans. The act broke
    up the reservations and gave some of the
    reservation land to individual Native Americans,
    160 acres to each head of household and 80 acres
    to each unmarried adult.

Indian boarding school in Colorado.
47
  • The government sold the remainder of the
    reservations to settlers, and the resulting
    income would be used by Native Americans to buy
    farm equipment.

48
  • By 1932, whites had taken about two-thirds of the
    territory that had been set aside for Native
    Americans. In the end, the Native Americans
    received no money from the sale of these lands.

49
  • Perhaps the most significant blow to tribal life
    on the plains was the destruction of the buffalo.
    Tourists and fur traders shot buffalo for sport.

50
  • In 1800, approximately 65 million buffalo roamed
    the plains, by 1890, fewer than 1000 remained.

51
  • The Sioux continued to suffer poverty and
    disease. In desperation, they turned to a Holy
    Man who promised that if the Sioux performed a
    ritual called the Ghost Dance, Native Americans
    lands and their way of life would be restored.

52
  • The Ghost Dance movement alarmed military
    leaders, who then ordered the arrest of Sitting
    Bull. Sitting Bulls bodyguard shot one of
    police. The police then killed Sitting Bull. The
    remaining Sioux fled.

53
  • On December 28, 1890, the Seventh Cavalry,
    rounded up about 350 starving and freezing Sioux
    and took them to a camp at Wounded Knee Creek in
    South Dakota.

54
  • The next day, the soldiers demanded that the
    Native Americans give up their weapons. A shot
    was fired, and soldiers opened fire with deadly
    cannons.

55
  • Within minutes, the Seventh Cavalry slaughtered
    300 unarmed Native Americans, including several
    children. The soldiers left the corpses to freeze
    on the ground. The Battle of Wounded Knee brought
    the Indian wars to an end.

56
CATTLE
  • With buffalos gone, horses and cattle take center
    stage in Great Plains
  • Mexicans taught settlers how to manage large
    herds
  • Animals were called Texas longhorns, sturdy,
    short-tempered breeds

57
  • The cowboys way of life stemmed from Spanish
    ranchers in Mexico.
  • Cowboys clothes, food, vocabulary was influenced
    by the Mexican vaquero his leather overalls,
    called chaparreras became known as chaps and
    he ate charqui, known as jerky. The Spanish
    bronco caballo (rough horse) became known as the
    bronco.

58
Wheres the Beef???
  • Cowboys werent in great demand until railroads
    reached the Great Plains.
  • After the Civil War, demand for beef skyrocketed
    because of fast-growing cities.

59
  • Texas ranchers were having a hard time shipping
    the cattle to Chicago in 1865/66 because of the
    route they had to take to get to the railroads in
    Missouri. So

60
  • Cattle dealer Joseph McCoy created a shipping
    yard through several towns where the trails and
    railroad came together. He built cattle pens, a
    hotel and helped survey the Chisholm Trail, a
    major cattle route from San Antonio, Texas
    through Oklahoma to Kansas.

61
  • It was a great success. Ranchers were hiring
    cowboys to drive their cattle to Abilene, Kansas.

62
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63
A Cowboys Day
  • About 25 of these cowboys were African-American
    12 were Mexican.
  • Real-life cowboys did nonstop work, working 10 to
    14 hours a day on a ranch and 14 or more on the
    trail.
  • As young as 15 and done by 40.
  • Trail horse usually belonged to his boss.
  • Guns were used to protect herd from diseased
    animals, not to hurt or chase outlaws.

64
A Cowboys Day contd
  • Season began in the spring. They gathered and
    branded their herd and then the trail boss would
    choose a crew for the long drive which lasted
    about 3 months.

65
  • It was 1 cowboy for every 250-300 cattle a cook
    who drove a chuck wagon and set up camp and a
    wrangler who cared for the extra horses. Trail
    boss earned about 100 a month for supervising
    the drive.

66
  • Cowboy is in saddle from dawn to dusk. He sleeps
    on the ground and bathes in rivers. They risked
    death and loss every day and lightning was a
    constant danger as well.

67
End of Open Range
  • Between 1883-1887, dry summers, bad winters,
    overgrazing of land and invention of barbed wire
    wiped out whole herds.

68
  • Ranchers then started caring for smaller herds
    that would yield more meat per animal. They
    fenced the land with barbed wire (Joseph F.
    Glidden invented it).
  • The era of wide open West was over!
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