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Changes on the Western
       Frontier
                      . Indians declines as
The culture of the Plains
 white settlers transform the Great Plains.
  Meanwhile, farmers form the Populist
  movement to address their economic
                   concerns
Section 1
    Cultures
      Clash
  on the Prairie
           The cattle industry booms in the late 1800s,
           as the culture of the Plains Indians declines

Learning Goal:
NJCCCS6.1.12.A.5.a
1. Relate industrial growth to the need for social and
governmental reforms.
CRN Benchmark: 10.11.4 P
2. Describe how westward expansion in the mid- to late 1800s led
to conflicts between American settlers and Native American
Warm Up- Focus & Motivation
Geography of the West
►   Area between the
    Mississippi Valley and the
    Pacific Mountains
►   Areas where settlers and
    Indians lived
►   By 1900 Indians had been
    forced off their lands
    - Transcontinental
    Railroad opened up the
    west for settlement a.
    carried materials and
    people
Minors in the West
►   1859 - Gold found in the
    Rocky Mountains (Clear
    Creek near Pikes Peak)
    - 1st found by George
    Jackson
►   1959 - Gold found in
    Nevada
    - Lode produced 100s of
    millions of dollars worth of
    gold and silver
     - Lode - a deposit of a
    valuable mineral buried
    between layers of rock
Mining Life
► Boom   towns sprang
  up
  - They were rough
  towns
► Women worked in the
  mining towns
  - Cooked
  - Laundry
  - Dance halls
  - Boarding towns
The Business of Mining
► Few prospectors
  became rich
► Lack of technology
  prevented most people
  from becoming rich
  - Most were placer
  mining - where
  people wash the sand
  and gravel from a
  stream
The Business of Mining
► More efficient methods
  developed in the 1870' s
   - Water cannons were used to
  strip the dirt off the hillside
   - Exposed gold
   - Very harmful to the
  environment
► Only companies had the money
  to use water cannons
► Working conditions were brutal
  - 100 degrees fairenhight in
  some caves
  - Workers wore thick boots to
  protect against hot water
  - Accidents such as cave-ins
  and dynamite explosions were
  common
Mining Boom Ends
► Most of the mining
  towns became ghost
  towns
► Gold rush changed the
  geography of the
  United States
Mining Boom Ends
►   The population grew so
    much in some areas that
    they were able to become
    states
     - 1864 - Nevada
    - 1876 - Colorado
    - 1889 - North Dakota,
    South Dakota, and
    Montana
    -1890 - Idaho
Lumber Industry
► Logging became a big
  business in the west
► Pacific Northwest had
  an abundance of trees
  -Redwoods
   - Douglas fur
► Settlers needed
  lumber for homes and
  mine timbers
Alaska
► 1867 - William Seward
  arranged for the purchase of
  Alaska from Russia
► U.S. Senators didn't want to buy
  it
  - Called it "Seward's Folly"
► Gamble paid off
     - Russia lost foothold in North
  America
► Alaska was rich in natural
  resources
   - Gold
  - Copper
  - Oil
  -Timber
Government policy
►   Early 1800's Plains Indians lived and hunted between the
    Mississippi River and Rocky Mountains
    - 1840' s - Whites begin to settle the west coast
    - U.S. Gov. ask Indians to let settlers pass safely
    - Asked the Indians to limit their hunting to certain are
    - Indians had to move with buffalo
►   Mid 1800's - U.S. Gov changes policy
    - Established reservations - special areas used by a
    specific group
     - Indians agreed to live on reservations based on the
    promise that the land would be theirs forever (signed
    Treaties with the U.S. Gov.)
     - They were also promised food, money and other help
Clash of culture
► Indians and settlers looked at the world
  differently
► Settlers felt that the resources were their to
  be used
  - Large scale hunting, mining, and farming
► Plains Indians used only the resources they
  needed for their actual needs
    - They saw the white settlers as being
  greedy and destructive
Fighting begins
► By 1860's - Treaties were being
  broken by both sides
► Settlers continued to pass
  through areas where they were
  not allowed
► Groups of Indians raided white
  settlements and wagon trains
► 1864 - Sand Creek
  Massacre
  - Colorado militia attacked
  Cheyenne and Arapaho at Sand
  Creek
   - Indians thought they were
  under the protection of a nearby
  government outpost
   - Over 100 Indians were
  slaughtered (including women
  and children)
Fighting begins
► 1866 - Chief Red
  Cloud (Sioux:)
  defeated Captain W.J.
  Fetterman and 80 U.S.
  army soldiers
    Led them into a trap
     and killed them
Fighting begins
► Little Bighorn (most famous
  battle of the Indian wars)
► The Black Hills of South Dakota
  had been set aside for the Sioux
  and Northern Cheyenne
► 1874 - U.S. Army exploring
  party found gold
  - Settlers went looking for gold
  - Gov. tried to buy the Black
  Hills (Sioux considered land
  sacred)
   - 1875 and 1876 - Sioux warrior
  left their reservations and united
  under the leadership of two
  Sioux chiefs (Sitting Bull and
  Crazy Horse)
Fighting begins
► June 25, 1876 - George
  Armstrong Custer and several
  hundred army soldiers found a
  Sioux camp near the Little Bighorn
  River
  - Custer gained fame fighting in Civil
  War
   - Admirers considered him a daring
  brilliant officer
   - Critics considered him a
  dangerous showoff
► Custer had orders to attack any
  Indians he came into contact with
► When he attacked he was actually
  stepping into a trap
► Custer and all of his men were killed
     - Became known as "Custer's
  Last Stand"
Fighting begins
►   People in the East were shocked by the news of the
    Battle of Little Bighorn
    - U.S. Gov. sent 1000's of troops to fight the Indians
►   The Battle of Little Bighorn was the last Indian Victory in
    the Indian Wars
      - 1876 - U.S. Army defeated the Sioux
      - Sitting Bull and his followers escaped to Canada
►   Crazy Horse was arrested
       - He was fatally stabbed as he was being arrested
        - Not sure if guard or another Indian stabbed him
Chief Joseph
►   Led the Nez Perce people
►   Nez Perce lived in northwest
    (Oregon and Idaho)
      - Fished for salmon, gathered
    food, and hunted
►   Chief Joseph refused to sell
    land to government
►   1877 - Gov. ordered the Nez
    Perce people to move to a
    reservation
       - They fled and tried to evade
    the army
►   Captured about 40 miles south
    of Canada
      - Chief Joseph made speech
      - Said that he would fight no
    more
Southwest Indians
►  Navajo were forced to move to
   reservations in the east
  - March called "The Long
   Walk"
► Reservation was a failure
 - Navajo allowed to return home
► Mid 1870's - Apache were
   forced to move away from their
   traditional territory
  - Geronimo - led his people off
   the reservation
  - Evaded the army many times
   due to their knowledge of
   southern Arizona
   - 1886 - Geronimo captured and
   forced to live far away from his
   people
Indians way of life
                     destroyed
►    Whites killed buffalo
►    Indians depended on buffalo
►    Indians were unable to survive
     without the buffalo
►    Many Indians turned to the Ghost
     Dance Religion
     - It taught that the spirits of the dead
     Indians would return to help the
     Indians reclaim their land
►    Many whites were fearful of this
     movement
     - Asked the army for help
    - Cavalry rounded up Sioux men on
     the Pine Ridge Reservation
     - Place called wounded knee
Indians way of life
             destroyed
► Wounded     Knee
 Massacre
 - 300 men, women,
 and children Sioux
 were killed
  - Considered to be
 the last battle of the
 Indian Wars
Assimilation
► Conditions grew worse as more Indians
  were forced on to reservations
► Reformers began calling for changes
► Many white though that only solution was to
  make the Indians become more like the
  whites
  - Assimilation - to adopt the culture of the
  people around you
Assimilation
► Dawes Act (1887) - intended to make Indians give up their traditions and
  accept White customs
  - Reservation lands were divided up in farm plots for families and individuals
  (40 to 160 acres)
  - Any remaining land was sold to white settlers
   - Profits used to pay for Indian schools
  - Indians who accepted the plots of land could become citizens for the 1st time
► Dawes Act failed
  - Many western Indians didn't want to settle down as farmers
    - Lacked tools and training
    - Many sold their plots to white settlers cheap
► End 1800's - situation of the American Indians was tragic
  - Lost land, people, and culture
  - 20th century U.S. government finally realizes importance of Indian way of life
Cowboys
► 1/6 were Mexican
  American
► Some were black
  - Nat Love - born in a
  slave cabin
  - Moved west when he
  was a teenager
  - Became famous
  performing in rodeos
Birth of the Cattle Industry
► Cowboys' roots were in Texas
► Small herds - (only sold cattle
  locally)
► Joseph McCoy organized 1st
  cattle drive
  - Drove cattle to Abilene Kansas
  (Railroad)
  - Cattle sold for $40 per head in
  the east ($3 per head in Texas)
► Dodge city also becomes a
  cattle town
Long drives
► Cowboys herded cattle
  over the open plains to
  cattle towns
► 12 cowboys 3000 head
► Made sure that cattle had
  plenty of grass to eat along
  the way
► Drives were tough
  - Had to keep cattle
  together
 - Watch for thieves
Wild West
► Cowboys ended drives in cattle
  towns
  - Were dirty and nasty
  - Weren't always law abiding
  - Had money to spend
► Large spaces with little
  settlement made it hard to catch
  outlaws
  - Frank and Jesse James
  became legendary bank robbers
  - Belle Starr became famous
  cattle thief
► Westerners formed vigilante
  groups
  - Groups that took the law into
  their own hands
The End of the Open Range
►   Late 1800's -long drives
    end
►   Overgrazing, bad weather
    from 1883 to 1887
    destroyed whole herds
►   Ranchers began keeping
    smaller herds that yielded
    more meat per animal
►   Tick fever caused land
    owners to cutoff land from
    the long drives
►   Fence land with barbed
    wire & turn open range
    into separate ranches
Summarizer
► 1. Why do you think assimilation policy of
 the Dawes Act failed?
   Lack of support by the government, abuses of
    the act by white opportunists, and Native
    Americans’ lack of interest in private property.
► What economic opportunities drew large
 numbers of people to the Great Plains
 beginning in the mid-1800s?
   Growth of the railroads, the burgeoning cattle
    industry, and government support of “free land”
Settling on
the Great
  Plains
 Settlers on the Great Plains transform
   the land despite great hardships.
Farming the Plain
► Gov. encouraged
  western settlement
► (1862) Homestead
  Act - Gov. offered 160
  acres to head of family
  over age 21 in return
  for living on the land 5
  years and improving it
  - 1862 to 1900 –
  6000,000 families
  settled in the west
Farming the Plain
►   Exodusters - Southern
    African-American settlers
    in Kansas
►   Gov. created Department
    of agriculture
     Introduced new crops
      (Russian wheat) that could
      survive harsh winters
     Morrill Act of 1862, 1890
      financed agricultural
      colleges
Life on the farming frontier
►   Lumber was scarce
►   Many settlers dug homes into
    sides of ravines or hills
►   Made soddy or sod home by
    stacking blocks of turf
     - Snakes & bugs sometimes
    crawled into cracks
       - Burned cow chips for fuel
►   Grew cash crops (wheat and
    com)
►   Had to fight year around battle
    against weather (blizzards and
    extreme heat)
Life on the farming frontier
►   Homesteaders were
    virtually alone (Had to be
    self-sufficient)
►   Women did men’s work
    (plowing, harvesting,
    shearing sheep)
    - Also did traditional work
    (carding wool, making
    soap, canning vegetables)
     - Some worked for
    communities (sponsor
    schools, churches)
Review- Summarizing 
► How did new           ► Answer:   Inventions
 inventions change       such as barbed wire,
 farming in the West?    the steel plow, and the
                         reaper, helped farmers
                         increase production
                         and led to the
                         development of
                         bonanza farms.
Farmers in Debt
► Railroads, investors created bonanza farms
  (huge, single-crop spreads)
► 1885 to1890 - droughts bankrupted single-
  crop operations
► Rising cost of shipping grain pushed
  farmers into debt
Closing the Frontier
►  1872, Yellowstone National
   Park created to protect some
   wilderness
► 1890s - No frontier left
  - miners, ranchers, and farmers
   had swelled the population
► April 22, 1889 - Governemt
   gave signal for settlers to settle
   the Oklahoma territory
  - It was laid out within the day
   - 60,000 people lived there by
   the end of the year
► Sooners - some people snuck
   into Oklahoma before the Gov.
   gave the signal
Summarizer
► Review the changes in technology that
 influenced the life of settlers on the Great
 Plain in the late 1800s.

► Without technology there would have been
 more crop dehydration; wandering animals
 and trampled crops; and crops ruined by
 inclement weather.
Section 3




         Farmers and the
        Populist Movement
   Farmers unite to address their
economic problems, giving rise to the
        Populist movement.
Warm Up- Mary Elizabeth Lease

► Left home to teach on
  the Kansas Plains
► After marrying Charles
  Lease, joined the
  Farmers’ Alliance
  Movement
Unrest in Rural America
► The growth of urban America made possible
  because farmers were so productive
► Farmers felt poor compared to city people
► Farm life seemed boring compared to the
  exciting opportunities of the city
Hard Times for Farmers
► 1867 - Oliver H. Kelley started
  the Patrons of Husbandry
  (Grange)
  - Hoped to fight the loneliness of
  farm life and farming methods
  - Open to both men and women
► Meetings were held at local schools
   - Both social and educational
► Late 1800's - most farmers weren't
  self sufficient
  - Grew cash crops
► Most were in debt
  - Western farmers owed banks
  money for their land and equipment
  - Southern farmers had taken on
  debt to rebuild farms destroyed in
  the Civil War
Low Prices and High Cost
►   Farmer's lives were hard
    - droughts, floods, insects, and animal diseases
►   1870's - faced another problem
    - Low prices for their crops
    - Sank farther into debt
►   Caused by overproduction
     - More people became farmers
     - Farming methods improved
►   Became more expensive to operate a farm
     - Tariffs on imported farm equipment
     - Railroads raised prices
The Granger Movement
►  Turned their attention to economic and political issues
► Economic goal - avoid using middlemen
 - People who made a living storing, transporting and selling product
 - Cut into farmers’ profits and added to cost for buyer
► Grangers created cooperatives
  - An organization owned and operated by those who use its services
  - They shared crops in some places
  - Allowed them to set their prices
► Politically - they elected legislatures that put limits on railroad and
   storage prices
  - Called Granger laws
The Populist Party
► 1880's - Several political parties combined
► Populism - movement of the people
►  Populist Party wants reforms
► Economic: increase money supply, graduated
  income tax, & federal loans
► Political: Senate elected by popular vote, secret
  ballot & 8-hour day
► 1892 - Populist candidates elected at different
  levels of government
► Democratic Party eventually adopted platform
Debate Over Money Policy
►    Pitted debtors against creditors
►    Debtors wanted more money to be put into circulation
►    Wanted the government to coin more silver (bimetallism)
►    Bimetallism - system using both silver and gold to back currency
►    Silverites - would create more money, stimulate economy
►    Creditors wanted to limit the amount of money
    - Favored gold standard
►    Gold standard - backing currency with gold only
►    Paper money considered worthless if cannot be exchanged for metal
►    Gold bugs - gold only would create more stable if expensive currency
Election of
      1892
►  1892 - Populist nominate
   James B. Weaver for
   president
► He had the following proposals
 - Wanted Gov. to control and
   operate railroads, telegraph and
   telephone systems
 - Wanted secret ballot in
   elections
 - Wanted graduated income tax
 - Wanted U.S. senators to be
   elected directly by the people
   rather than state legislatures
 - Demanded shorter working
   hours for labor
► Grover Cleveland won 1892
   election
That’s Just My Baby Daddy
              ► While running for
                president in 1884, New
                York Governor Grover
                Cleveland admitted he
                had a 10-year-old son
                out of wedlock with a
                woman in Buffalo.
The Panic of 1893
► Railroads expanded faster
  than markets
 - Some went bankrupt
► Government’s gold supply
  became depleted
 - Led to rush on banks
 - Businesses, banks
  collapse
    - Panic became depression
Election of 1896
► Money was the central
  issue
► Republicans nominated
  William McKinley
 - Supported big business
  (gold standard)
► Democrats nominated
  William Jennings
  Bryan
 - Supported silver
► Populists endorsed Bryan
  & chose own VP to
  maintain party identity
Election of 1896
► Candidates ran different campaigns
 - McKinley didn't go out and campaign
 - Considered undignified
 - Accepted visitors at his home Bryan launched something
  like a modem campaign
  - Traveled by train made speeches
► Bryan carried the south and west (except California)
► McKinley carried northeast and California
    - Won more electoral votes
► Urban America defeated rural America
The End of Populism
► 1896 - McKinley
  elected president
► Populism collapsed
► Left legacy:
  - Showed the
  powerless could
  organize & have
  political impact
 - Agenda of reforms
  enacted in 20th century
Summarizer

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8.1 changes on the western frontier 1877 1900

  • 1. Changes on the Western Frontier . Indians declines as The culture of the Plains white settlers transform the Great Plains. Meanwhile, farmers form the Populist movement to address their economic concerns
  • 2. Section 1 Cultures Clash on the Prairie The cattle industry booms in the late 1800s, as the culture of the Plains Indians declines Learning Goal: NJCCCS6.1.12.A.5.a 1. Relate industrial growth to the need for social and governmental reforms. CRN Benchmark: 10.11.4 P 2. Describe how westward expansion in the mid- to late 1800s led to conflicts between American settlers and Native American
  • 3. Warm Up- Focus & Motivation
  • 4. Geography of the West ► Area between the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific Mountains ► Areas where settlers and Indians lived ► By 1900 Indians had been forced off their lands - Transcontinental Railroad opened up the west for settlement a. carried materials and people
  • 5. Minors in the West ► 1859 - Gold found in the Rocky Mountains (Clear Creek near Pikes Peak) - 1st found by George Jackson ► 1959 - Gold found in Nevada - Lode produced 100s of millions of dollars worth of gold and silver - Lode - a deposit of a valuable mineral buried between layers of rock
  • 6. Mining Life ► Boom towns sprang up - They were rough towns ► Women worked in the mining towns - Cooked - Laundry - Dance halls - Boarding towns
  • 7. The Business of Mining ► Few prospectors became rich ► Lack of technology prevented most people from becoming rich - Most were placer mining - where people wash the sand and gravel from a stream
  • 8. The Business of Mining ► More efficient methods developed in the 1870' s - Water cannons were used to strip the dirt off the hillside - Exposed gold - Very harmful to the environment ► Only companies had the money to use water cannons ► Working conditions were brutal - 100 degrees fairenhight in some caves - Workers wore thick boots to protect against hot water - Accidents such as cave-ins and dynamite explosions were common
  • 9. Mining Boom Ends ► Most of the mining towns became ghost towns ► Gold rush changed the geography of the United States
  • 10. Mining Boom Ends ► The population grew so much in some areas that they were able to become states - 1864 - Nevada - 1876 - Colorado - 1889 - North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana -1890 - Idaho
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 13. Lumber Industry ► Logging became a big business in the west ► Pacific Northwest had an abundance of trees -Redwoods - Douglas fur ► Settlers needed lumber for homes and mine timbers
  • 14. Alaska ► 1867 - William Seward arranged for the purchase of Alaska from Russia ► U.S. Senators didn't want to buy it - Called it "Seward's Folly" ► Gamble paid off - Russia lost foothold in North America ► Alaska was rich in natural resources - Gold - Copper - Oil -Timber
  • 15. Government policy ► Early 1800's Plains Indians lived and hunted between the Mississippi River and Rocky Mountains - 1840' s - Whites begin to settle the west coast - U.S. Gov. ask Indians to let settlers pass safely - Asked the Indians to limit their hunting to certain are - Indians had to move with buffalo ► Mid 1800's - U.S. Gov changes policy - Established reservations - special areas used by a specific group - Indians agreed to live on reservations based on the promise that the land would be theirs forever (signed Treaties with the U.S. Gov.) - They were also promised food, money and other help
  • 16.
  • 17. Clash of culture ► Indians and settlers looked at the world differently ► Settlers felt that the resources were their to be used - Large scale hunting, mining, and farming ► Plains Indians used only the resources they needed for their actual needs - They saw the white settlers as being greedy and destructive
  • 18. Fighting begins ► By 1860's - Treaties were being broken by both sides ► Settlers continued to pass through areas where they were not allowed ► Groups of Indians raided white settlements and wagon trains ► 1864 - Sand Creek Massacre - Colorado militia attacked Cheyenne and Arapaho at Sand Creek - Indians thought they were under the protection of a nearby government outpost - Over 100 Indians were slaughtered (including women and children)
  • 19. Fighting begins ► 1866 - Chief Red Cloud (Sioux:) defeated Captain W.J. Fetterman and 80 U.S. army soldiers  Led them into a trap and killed them
  • 20. Fighting begins ► Little Bighorn (most famous battle of the Indian wars) ► The Black Hills of South Dakota had been set aside for the Sioux and Northern Cheyenne ► 1874 - U.S. Army exploring party found gold - Settlers went looking for gold - Gov. tried to buy the Black Hills (Sioux considered land sacred) - 1875 and 1876 - Sioux warrior left their reservations and united under the leadership of two Sioux chiefs (Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse)
  • 21. Fighting begins ► June 25, 1876 - George Armstrong Custer and several hundred army soldiers found a Sioux camp near the Little Bighorn River - Custer gained fame fighting in Civil War - Admirers considered him a daring brilliant officer - Critics considered him a dangerous showoff ► Custer had orders to attack any Indians he came into contact with ► When he attacked he was actually stepping into a trap ► Custer and all of his men were killed - Became known as "Custer's Last Stand"
  • 22. Fighting begins ► People in the East were shocked by the news of the Battle of Little Bighorn - U.S. Gov. sent 1000's of troops to fight the Indians ► The Battle of Little Bighorn was the last Indian Victory in the Indian Wars - 1876 - U.S. Army defeated the Sioux - Sitting Bull and his followers escaped to Canada ► Crazy Horse was arrested - He was fatally stabbed as he was being arrested - Not sure if guard or another Indian stabbed him
  • 23. Chief Joseph ► Led the Nez Perce people ► Nez Perce lived in northwest (Oregon and Idaho) - Fished for salmon, gathered food, and hunted ► Chief Joseph refused to sell land to government ► 1877 - Gov. ordered the Nez Perce people to move to a reservation - They fled and tried to evade the army ► Captured about 40 miles south of Canada - Chief Joseph made speech - Said that he would fight no more
  • 24. Southwest Indians ► Navajo were forced to move to reservations in the east - March called "The Long Walk" ► Reservation was a failure - Navajo allowed to return home ► Mid 1870's - Apache were forced to move away from their traditional territory - Geronimo - led his people off the reservation - Evaded the army many times due to their knowledge of southern Arizona - 1886 - Geronimo captured and forced to live far away from his people
  • 25. Indians way of life destroyed ► Whites killed buffalo ► Indians depended on buffalo ► Indians were unable to survive without the buffalo ► Many Indians turned to the Ghost Dance Religion - It taught that the spirits of the dead Indians would return to help the Indians reclaim their land ► Many whites were fearful of this movement - Asked the army for help - Cavalry rounded up Sioux men on the Pine Ridge Reservation - Place called wounded knee
  • 26. Indians way of life destroyed ► Wounded Knee Massacre - 300 men, women, and children Sioux were killed - Considered to be the last battle of the Indian Wars
  • 27. Assimilation ► Conditions grew worse as more Indians were forced on to reservations ► Reformers began calling for changes ► Many white though that only solution was to make the Indians become more like the whites - Assimilation - to adopt the culture of the people around you
  • 28. Assimilation ► Dawes Act (1887) - intended to make Indians give up their traditions and accept White customs - Reservation lands were divided up in farm plots for families and individuals (40 to 160 acres) - Any remaining land was sold to white settlers - Profits used to pay for Indian schools - Indians who accepted the plots of land could become citizens for the 1st time ► Dawes Act failed - Many western Indians didn't want to settle down as farmers - Lacked tools and training - Many sold their plots to white settlers cheap ► End 1800's - situation of the American Indians was tragic - Lost land, people, and culture - 20th century U.S. government finally realizes importance of Indian way of life
  • 29. Cowboys ► 1/6 were Mexican American ► Some were black - Nat Love - born in a slave cabin - Moved west when he was a teenager - Became famous performing in rodeos
  • 30. Birth of the Cattle Industry ► Cowboys' roots were in Texas ► Small herds - (only sold cattle locally) ► Joseph McCoy organized 1st cattle drive - Drove cattle to Abilene Kansas (Railroad) - Cattle sold for $40 per head in the east ($3 per head in Texas) ► Dodge city also becomes a cattle town
  • 31. Long drives ► Cowboys herded cattle over the open plains to cattle towns ► 12 cowboys 3000 head ► Made sure that cattle had plenty of grass to eat along the way ► Drives were tough - Had to keep cattle together - Watch for thieves
  • 32. Wild West ► Cowboys ended drives in cattle towns - Were dirty and nasty - Weren't always law abiding - Had money to spend ► Large spaces with little settlement made it hard to catch outlaws - Frank and Jesse James became legendary bank robbers - Belle Starr became famous cattle thief ► Westerners formed vigilante groups - Groups that took the law into their own hands
  • 33. The End of the Open Range ► Late 1800's -long drives end ► Overgrazing, bad weather from 1883 to 1887 destroyed whole herds ► Ranchers began keeping smaller herds that yielded more meat per animal ► Tick fever caused land owners to cutoff land from the long drives ► Fence land with barbed wire & turn open range into separate ranches
  • 34. Summarizer ► 1. Why do you think assimilation policy of the Dawes Act failed?  Lack of support by the government, abuses of the act by white opportunists, and Native Americans’ lack of interest in private property. ► What economic opportunities drew large numbers of people to the Great Plains beginning in the mid-1800s?  Growth of the railroads, the burgeoning cattle industry, and government support of “free land”
  • 35. Settling on the Great Plains Settlers on the Great Plains transform the land despite great hardships.
  • 36. Farming the Plain ► Gov. encouraged western settlement ► (1862) Homestead Act - Gov. offered 160 acres to head of family over age 21 in return for living on the land 5 years and improving it - 1862 to 1900 – 6000,000 families settled in the west
  • 37. Farming the Plain ► Exodusters - Southern African-American settlers in Kansas ► Gov. created Department of agriculture  Introduced new crops (Russian wheat) that could survive harsh winters  Morrill Act of 1862, 1890 financed agricultural colleges
  • 38. Life on the farming frontier ► Lumber was scarce ► Many settlers dug homes into sides of ravines or hills ► Made soddy or sod home by stacking blocks of turf - Snakes & bugs sometimes crawled into cracks - Burned cow chips for fuel ► Grew cash crops (wheat and com) ► Had to fight year around battle against weather (blizzards and extreme heat)
  • 39. Life on the farming frontier ► Homesteaders were virtually alone (Had to be self-sufficient) ► Women did men’s work (plowing, harvesting, shearing sheep) - Also did traditional work (carding wool, making soap, canning vegetables) - Some worked for communities (sponsor schools, churches)
  • 40.
  • 41. Review- Summarizing  ► How did new ► Answer: Inventions inventions change such as barbed wire, farming in the West? the steel plow, and the reaper, helped farmers increase production and led to the development of bonanza farms.
  • 42. Farmers in Debt ► Railroads, investors created bonanza farms (huge, single-crop spreads) ► 1885 to1890 - droughts bankrupted single- crop operations ► Rising cost of shipping grain pushed farmers into debt
  • 43. Closing the Frontier ► 1872, Yellowstone National Park created to protect some wilderness ► 1890s - No frontier left - miners, ranchers, and farmers had swelled the population ► April 22, 1889 - Governemt gave signal for settlers to settle the Oklahoma territory - It was laid out within the day - 60,000 people lived there by the end of the year ► Sooners - some people snuck into Oklahoma before the Gov. gave the signal
  • 44. Summarizer ► Review the changes in technology that influenced the life of settlers on the Great Plain in the late 1800s. ► Without technology there would have been more crop dehydration; wandering animals and trampled crops; and crops ruined by inclement weather.
  • 45. Section 3 Farmers and the Populist Movement Farmers unite to address their economic problems, giving rise to the Populist movement.
  • 46. Warm Up- Mary Elizabeth Lease ► Left home to teach on the Kansas Plains ► After marrying Charles Lease, joined the Farmers’ Alliance Movement
  • 47. Unrest in Rural America ► The growth of urban America made possible because farmers were so productive ► Farmers felt poor compared to city people ► Farm life seemed boring compared to the exciting opportunities of the city
  • 48. Hard Times for Farmers ► 1867 - Oliver H. Kelley started the Patrons of Husbandry (Grange) - Hoped to fight the loneliness of farm life and farming methods - Open to both men and women ► Meetings were held at local schools - Both social and educational ► Late 1800's - most farmers weren't self sufficient - Grew cash crops ► Most were in debt - Western farmers owed banks money for their land and equipment - Southern farmers had taken on debt to rebuild farms destroyed in the Civil War
  • 49. Low Prices and High Cost ► Farmer's lives were hard - droughts, floods, insects, and animal diseases ► 1870's - faced another problem - Low prices for their crops - Sank farther into debt ► Caused by overproduction - More people became farmers - Farming methods improved ► Became more expensive to operate a farm - Tariffs on imported farm equipment - Railroads raised prices
  • 50. The Granger Movement ► Turned their attention to economic and political issues ► Economic goal - avoid using middlemen - People who made a living storing, transporting and selling product - Cut into farmers’ profits and added to cost for buyer ► Grangers created cooperatives - An organization owned and operated by those who use its services - They shared crops in some places - Allowed them to set their prices ► Politically - they elected legislatures that put limits on railroad and storage prices - Called Granger laws
  • 51. The Populist Party ► 1880's - Several political parties combined ► Populism - movement of the people ► Populist Party wants reforms ► Economic: increase money supply, graduated income tax, & federal loans ► Political: Senate elected by popular vote, secret ballot & 8-hour day ► 1892 - Populist candidates elected at different levels of government ► Democratic Party eventually adopted platform
  • 52. Debate Over Money Policy ► Pitted debtors against creditors ► Debtors wanted more money to be put into circulation ► Wanted the government to coin more silver (bimetallism) ► Bimetallism - system using both silver and gold to back currency ► Silverites - would create more money, stimulate economy ► Creditors wanted to limit the amount of money - Favored gold standard ► Gold standard - backing currency with gold only ► Paper money considered worthless if cannot be exchanged for metal ► Gold bugs - gold only would create more stable if expensive currency
  • 53.
  • 54. Election of 1892 ► 1892 - Populist nominate James B. Weaver for president ► He had the following proposals - Wanted Gov. to control and operate railroads, telegraph and telephone systems - Wanted secret ballot in elections - Wanted graduated income tax - Wanted U.S. senators to be elected directly by the people rather than state legislatures - Demanded shorter working hours for labor ► Grover Cleveland won 1892 election
  • 55. That’s Just My Baby Daddy ► While running for president in 1884, New York Governor Grover Cleveland admitted he had a 10-year-old son out of wedlock with a woman in Buffalo.
  • 56.
  • 57. The Panic of 1893 ► Railroads expanded faster than markets - Some went bankrupt ► Government’s gold supply became depleted - Led to rush on banks - Businesses, banks collapse - Panic became depression
  • 58. Election of 1896 ► Money was the central issue ► Republicans nominated William McKinley - Supported big business (gold standard) ► Democrats nominated William Jennings Bryan - Supported silver ► Populists endorsed Bryan & chose own VP to maintain party identity
  • 59. Election of 1896 ► Candidates ran different campaigns - McKinley didn't go out and campaign - Considered undignified - Accepted visitors at his home Bryan launched something like a modem campaign - Traveled by train made speeches ► Bryan carried the south and west (except California) ► McKinley carried northeast and California - Won more electoral votes ► Urban America defeated rural America
  • 60.
  • 61. The End of Populism ► 1896 - McKinley elected president ► Populism collapsed ► Left legacy: - Showed the powerless could organize & have political impact - Agenda of reforms enacted in 20th century
  • 62.