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Title: New%20South%20


1
New South The Last West
  • 1865-1900

2
The Last West New South
  • Final settlement of west, Great American Desert
  • Great Plains, Rocky Mts, Western Plateau
  • Millions of bison/buffalo, 1900 wiped out
  • 250,000 N.A. in the West 1865
  • Life was not easy in the WEST!
  • Fenced lands, railroads
  • 10 new states

3
3 Types of Pioneers
Ranchers Miners Famers
Raising/rounding up cattle Technique from Mexicans Railroad-Helped with the Cattle industry 30-50 a head Joseph McCoy- Cowboy Built a stockyard in Abilene, KS Chisholm Trail- trail to drive cattle up Cowboys Black Mexican 1 p/ day-dangerous Cattles drives end 1880 Destroyed grassland, blizzard, drought, homesteaders (barbwire) Changed eating habits from pork to BEEF!!! Gold Rush, CA 1849 Pikes Peak, CO 1859 Comstock Lode, NV 1859 340 M, GS Boomtowns (overnight) Became Ghost towns (some, after a few yrs) 1/3 were Chinese Whites hated competition Miners Tax CA-20 Chinese Exclusion Act 1882- Immigration law Political and economical effects Crisis over gold or silver N.A. lost lands Homestead Act 1862 160 acres of free land-5 years living there Most ppl paid, best land bought by railroad companies Sodbusters- houses of sod bricks Extreme hot cold weather Plagues of grasshoppers Lonesome life Scarcity of water, wood Joseph Glidden 1874-Bardedwire Challenges bad weather, drop crop prices, high cost of machinery, failure of homesteads
4
Objectives
  • Explain how the southern economy changed in the
    late 1800s.
  • Analyze how southern farmers consolidated their
    political power.
  • Describe the experience of African Americans in
    the changing South.

5
Terms and People
  • cash crop crop such as cotton and tobacco that
    is grown not for its own use but to be sold for
    cash
  • Farmers Alliance network of farmers
    organizations that worked for political and
    economic reforms in the late 1800s
  • Civil Rights Act of 1875 law that banned
    discrimination in public facilities and
    transportation

6
How did the southern economy and society change
after the Civil War?
In the postwar years, railroads crisscrossed the
South and industries grew. Yet challenges
remainedfor the Souths economy and for its
people.
7
In the years following the Civil War, southern
leaders hoped to build a New South.
8
Textile factories and lumber mills sprang up.
So did iron, coal, and steel processing plants.
9
Railroad construction boomed.
New rail lines connected urban hubs with rural
areas, cities with towns.
  • Railroads moved people and products.
  • Cities grew.

10
  • War damage was extensive.
  • The South lacked a well-trained labor force, and
    wages were low.
  • A lack of capital led to a dependence on
    northern bankers.

Yet economic expansion in the South lagged behind
the rest of the country.
11
Life was especially difficult for southern
farmers.
Despite efforts to diversify, most farmers still
depended on cash crops. The price of cottontheir
main cropplummeted after the war.
12
Along with falling prices, cotton farmers faced
another disaster.
Boll weevils wiped out entire crops.
For many farmers, it was a struggle just to
survive.
13
Faced with serious problems, farmers joined
together to form the Farmers Alliance.
  • Worked to negotiate better prices on supplies,
    freight charges, and loan rates
  • Connected farmers in the South and West

14
Black southerners made important political and
economic advances in the postwar years.
  • Most important, they gained
  • the right to vote
  • access to education

15
In time, however, many of the gains were reversed.
  • Groups such as the Ku Klux Klan terrorized
    African Americans.
  • Newfound freedoms were stripped away.
  • Segregation was enforced.

16
The Civil Rights Act of 1875 banned
discrimination in public facilities and
transportation.
The Supreme Court, however, ruled in a series of
cases decided in 1883 that such decisions were
local issues.
Southern towns and cities used the ruling to
further limit the rights of African Americans.
17
Terms and People
  • reservation specific area set aside by the
    federal government for the Indians use
  • Sand Creek Massacre 1864 incident in which
    Colorado militia killed a camp of unarmed
    Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians
  • Sitting Bull Sioux chief respected as a fighter
    and spiritual leader
  • Battle of the Little Big Horn 1876 battle in
    which the Sioux defeated U.S. troops led by
    Colonel George Custer

18
Terms and People (continued)
  • Chief Joseph leader of the Nez Percés who
    surrendered after trying to lead a group of
    Indian refugees to Canada
  • Wounded Knee 1890 confrontation between U.S.
    cavalry and the Sioux that marked the end of
    Indian resistance in the Ghost Dance War
  • assimilate to adopt the culture and
    civilization of the dominant group in a society
  • Dawes General Allotment Act 1887 law that
    divided reservation land into private family plots

19
How did the pressures of westward expansion
impact Native Americans?
As American settlers continued to push west, they
increasingly came into conflict with Native
Americans. Such conflict often led to violence,
with tragic results.
20
After the Civil War, about 250,000 Indians lived
in the lands west of the Mississippi.
  • Had different belief systems
  • Spoke different languages
  • Lived in different types of houses
  • Ate different foods

Native Americans came from many diverse cultures.
21
The diverse Indian peoples, however, shared a
common view toward naturea view that conflicted
with that of many white Americans.
Native Americans saw themselves as part of
nature and viewed nature as sacred.
Many white Americans viewed the land as a
resource to produce wealth.
22
Government Policy Towards Native Americans 1880s
23
Two other crises also threatened Native American
civilizations.
Settlers introduced diseases to which Indians had
no immunity.
Disease
Settlers slaughtered buffalo herds.
Loss of the buffalo
24
Some Native Americans fought to defend their
lands.
The Sand Creek (CO) Massacre (1864) saw an
unarmed camp of Indians under the U.S. Army
protection killed by Colorado militia.
But attacks and retaliation led to distrustand
to tragedy.
Promises were made and peace treaties were
signed, but they often were broken.
25
Frustration turned to violence as the government
moved to crush Indian resistance.
  • The Red River War led to the defeat of the
    Southern Plains Indians.
  • The Sioux were victorious at the Battle of the
    Little Bighorn.
  • Chief Joseph and the Nez Percés surrendered after
    attempting to retreat to Canada.

26
As their way of life slipped away, some Indians
turned to a religious revival based on the Ghost
Dance.
Fearful of insurrection, government officials
tried to ban the practice.
27
In an effort to end the Ghost Dance, the
government attempted to arrest Sitting Bull.
However, he was killed in a confrontation with
U.S. troops. More than 100 Indians who fled were
killed at Wounded Knee. The Indian Wars were
over.
28
Some critics attacked government policies and
defended the Indians way of life.
Most leaders, however, hoped that Native
Americans would assimilate into American life.
29
In 1887, Congress passed the Dawes General
Allotment Act to encourage assimilation.
  • Replaced the reservation system with an allotment
    system
  • Granted each Indian family its own plot of land
  • Specified the land could not be sold for 25 years

30
Objectives
  • Analyze the impact of mining and railroads on the
    settlement of the West.
  • Explain how ranching affected western
    development.
  • Discuss the ways various peoples lived in the
    West and their impact on the environment.

31
Terms and People
  • vigilante self-appointed law enforcer
  • transcontinental railroad rail link between
    the eastern and western United States
  • land grant land given by the federal
    government for building railroads
  • open-range system system in which ranchers did
    not fence in their property, allowing cattle to
    roam and graze freely

32
Terms and People (continued)
  • Homestead Act 1862 law in which the government
    offered farm plots of 160 acres to anyone willing
    to live on the land for five years, dig a well,
    and build a road
  • Exodusters African Americans who migrated from
    the South to the West after the Civil War

33
What economic and social factors changed the West
after the Civil War?
In the late 1800s, miners, rail workers,
ranchers, and farmers moved to the frontier in
hopes of building better lives. The industrial
and agricultural booms they created helped
transform the West.
34
The discovery of gold and silver created the
first great boom in the Westmining.
Mining camps quickly sprang up. Many camps grew
into thriving communities.
  • With each new find, prospectors rushed to the
    site, hoping to strike it rich.
  • Others followed, bringing food and supplies.

35
  • In the early days, vigilantes took the law into
    their own hands.
  • As towns grew, they hired marshals and sheriffs.

Because they had no judges or jails, miners
often set their own rules for administering
justice.
Some towns, however, disappeared as quickly as
they appeared. Boomtowns turned to ghost towns
when the gold and silver ran out.
36
Large companies soon took over the mining
business from individual prospectors.
  • Could afford the heavy equipment needed to bring
    mineral ores out from deep underground
  • Were supported by the government with cheap land

37
The railroads soon began work to fulfill a
longtime goalto build a transcontinental
railroad linking the East and the West.
As industries grew in the West, so did the need
for railroads to transport goods and people.
38
In 1863, the Central Pacific headed eastward from
Sacramento. The Union Pacific headed westward
from Omaha.
They finally met at Promontory, Utah, in 1869.
39
Effects of the Transcontinental Railroad
  • Tied the nation together
  • Moved products and people
  • Spurred industrial development
  • Stimulated the growth of towns and cities
  • Encouraged settlers to continue to move west

40
The railroad boom encouraged another western
boomthe cattle boom.
  • Property not fenced in
  • Cattle were branded, then grazed freely
  • Cowboys rounded up the cattle each spring

For years, ranchers had used an open-range system
for raising livestock.
41
Cowboys then drove cattle north to the rail
lines, so they could be transported to market.
The long, hard cattle drives could last for
months. They ended at railroad towns, called cow
towns.
42
Mid-1880s Cattle Boom Ended
Reasons the open- range system ended Invention of barbed wire made fencing cheap.
Reasons the open- range system ended Supply of beef exceeded demand and prices dropped.
Reasons the open- range system ended Extreme weather led to the death of herds.
43
Farmers also moved west, looking for a better
life.
Under the 1862 Homestead Act, the government gave
land to farmers willing to tend it. 160-5 years
Encouragement of Western Settlement- made by
railroad companies and govt
Easterners, Exodusters, and immigrants soon
poured onto the Great Plains.
44
Life on the Plains was difficult and lonely.
With little wood available, homesteaders made
houses from sod. Storms, droughts, and locusts
ruined crops.
45
New inventions and farming methods, however, made
life easier.
  • Barbed wire
  • Stronger plow
  • Grain drill
  • Windmill
  • Dry-farming techniques

46
For many Americans, the West was a place to
build new lives. But it also was a place of
conflict.
  • Cattle destroyed crops
  • Sheep ruined grasses
  • Mining runoff polluted water
  • Control of resources disputed

Economic rivalries
  • Prejudice
  • Discrimination
  • Ethnic tensions

Social conflicts
47
The last land rush took place in 1889, when the
government opened the Oklahoma Territory to
homesteaders.
boomers lined up to stake claims
sooners sneaked in early to take the best ones
The next year, the government declared there was
no land left for homesteading. The frontier
closed.
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