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Chapter 13 – The American West

Section Notes                  Video
The Fight for the West         The American West
Mining and Ranching
Farming the Plains             Maps
                               Major Battles and Native American
                                 Territory in the West, 1890
History Close-up               Cattle Trails
Oklahoma Land Rush


Quick Facts
Challenges for Farmers         Images
Visual Summary: The American   Hunting on the Plains
  West                         Lakota Boys
                               Family with Sod House
                               Land Poster
The Fight for the West

                        The Main Idea
Native Americans fought the movement of settlers westward,
     but the U.S. military and the persistence of American
              settlers proved too strong to resist.

                        Reading Focus
• How was the stage set for conflict between white settlers and
  Native Americans in the West?
• What were the Indian Wars and their consequences?
• How did Native American resistance to white settlement end?
• What was life like on the Indian Reservation?
Stage Set for Conflict


• Culture of the Plains Indians
   – Buffalo provided food, clothing, and shelter for the
     nomadic lifestyle of the Indians. They did not believe
     land should be bought and sold, and white farmers felt it
     should be divided.
• Government policy
   – Instead of continuing to move the Indians westward, the
     government changed its policy. Indian land was seized,
     and they were forced onto reservations.
• Destruction of the buffalo
   – The buffalo-centered way of life was threatened, with
     vast herds driven to extinction by reduced grazing lands
     and hunting for sport and profit.
The Indian Wars
                Army troops attacked and massacred surrendering
Sand Creek
                Cheyenne. Congressional investigators condemned
 Massacre
                the Army actions, but no one was punished in the
                Sand Creek Massacre.

                After the massacre, Cheyenne and Sioux stepped
                up their raids. In return for closing a sacred trail,
  Treaties      the Sioux agreed to live on a reservation. Other
                nations signed the Medicine Lodge Treaty and were
                moved to reservation lands in western Oklahoma.


                George Armstrong Custer led his troops in
 The Battle     headlong battle against Sitting Bull and lost. The
of the Little   Battle of the Little Bighorn was a temporary
  Bighorn       victory for the Sioux. The U.S. government was
                determined to put down the threat to settlers.
The Indian Wars
            The Battle of Palo Duro Canyon ended the
Palo Duro
            Indian Wars on the southern Plains. With their
 Canyon
            ponies killed and food stores destroyed, surviving
            Comanches moved onto the reservation.

            The Ghost Dance was a religious movement that
            inspired hope among suffering Native Americans.
The Ghost   Newspapers began suggesting that this signaled a
  Dance     planned uprising. The military killed Sitting Bull
            while attempting to arrest him in a skirmish.


            The Wounded Knee Massacre occurred the day
Wounded     after the surrender. Shooting began after a gun
 Knee       went off, and the fleeing Sioux were massacred.
            This action marked the end of the bloody conflict
            between the army and the Plains Indians.
Resistance Ends in the West
     Resistance in the                 Resistance in the
         Northwest                         Southwest
• The government took back
  nine-tenths of the Nez Percé    • The Apache people were
  land when gold miners and         moved onto a reservation
  settlers came into the area.      near the Gila River in Arizona.
• Fourteen years later they       • Soldiers forcefully stopped a
  were ordered to abandon the       religious gathering there, and
  last bit of that land to move     Geronimo and others fled
  into Idaho.                       the reservation.
• Chief Joseph tried to take      • They raided settlements
  his people into Canada, but       along the Arizona-Mexico
  the army forced their             border for years before finally
  surrender less than forty         being captured in 1886.
  miles from the Canadian         • Geronimo and his followers
  border.                           were sent to Florida as
• Chief Joseph and many             prisoners of war. His
  others were eventually sent       surrender marked the end of
  to northern Washington.           armed resistance in the area.
Life on the Reservation

The government wanted control over all the western
territories and wanted Indians to live like white Americans.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs began to erase the Indian
culture through a program of Americanization. Indian
students could speak only English and could not wear their
traditional clothing. They learned to live like Americans.

The Dawes Act of 1887 broke up many reservations and
turned Native Americans into individual property owners.
Ownership was designed to transform their relationship to
the land. The Indians received less productive land, and few
had the money to start farms. Most of the land given to the
Indians was unsuitable for farming.
Mining and Ranching

                       The Main Idea
 Many people sought fortunes during the mining and cattle
               booms of the American West.

                       Reading Focus
• How did mining lead to new settlements in the West?
• Why did mining become big business?
• How and why did the cattle boom come to an end?
Striking Gold and Silver



• Discovering gold and silver
  – After the California gold rush, Colorado was next. Most
    who went there were disappointed, but the silver in the
    Comstock Lode in Nevada lasted for more than 20
    years.
• The Klondike gold rush
  – The Yukon Territory was the site of a huge gold rush, but
    getting there was treacherous. Canadians required
    miners to bring a year’s worth of supplies with them, and
    that was a difficult task. Reports of “gold for the taking”
    were false.
Development of Communities


• Mining camps and towns
  – Thousands of men poured into mining areas. Camps
    were hastily built and had no law enforcement. Vigilante
    justice was used to combat theft and violence.
• Camps become towns
  – Some camps developed into towns, with hastily
    constructed buildings of stores and saloons.
  – As towns developed, women and children came to join
    the men, making the towns more respectable.
    Townspeople established churches, newspapers, and
    schools.
Mining as Big Business

Placer mining allowed individuals to pan for gold, but soon
equipment was needed to dig deeper within the earth.

Large companies were formed to invest in hydraulic
mining and hard-rock mining. Prospectors became
employees, working dangerous jobs for these companies.


Miners began to organize unions to negotiate safer working
conditions and better pay. Mining companies resisted, and
violence broke out. At Cripple Creek, Colorado, the Western
Federation of Miners faced off against the corporate mining
interests. When it was over, 30 men were left dead and the
union was defeated.
The Cattle Boom
             The Spanish were the first ranchers in the West,
Origins of
             raising cattle under dry and difficult conditions. They
ranching
             bred the hardy Texas longhorn and started sheep
             ranching. Grazing lands were needed for both.

             Growing populations in the East needed food. The
Demand       age of the cattle drive had arrived. Cowboys drove
for beef     the cattle to towns with railroads to be shipped to
             meatpacking centers such as Chicago. One of the
             most famous cattle trails was the Chisholm Trail.


             Joseph Glidden invented barbed wire, allowing
Ranching     ranchers to enclose grazing lands. Privately owned
 as big      ranches spread quickly, and investors transformed
business     the cattle business into big business. Two years of
             severe winters brought huge losses to the industry.
Farming the Plains

                        The Main Idea
   The government promoted the settlement of the West,
    offering free or cheap land to those willing to put in the
      hard work of turning the land into productive farms.

                        Reading Focus
• What incentives encouraged farmers to settle in the West?
• Which groups of people moved into the West, and why did they
  do so?
• What new ways of farming evolved in the West?
Incentives for Settlement



• New legislation
  – In 1862, Congress passed three acts to turn public lands
    into private property.
     • The Homestead Act gave 160 acres of land to heads
       of household.
     • The Pacific Railway Act gave land to the railroad
       companies to build lines.
     • The Morrill Act gave lands to states for colleges for
       agriculture and the mechanic arts.
Incentives for Settlement


• Railroads encourage settlement
  – Railroads reaped profits by selling some of their land to
    settlers. They placed ads to lure homesteaders to the
    West. The Oklahoma Land Run of 1889 opened
    unassigned Indian land to settlers. Over 50,000 people
    took part in the rush to stake a claim on these 2 million
    acres of land.
• Closing of the frontier
  – In 1890 the Census Bureau issued a report, “there can
    hardly be said to be a frontier line.” Historian Frederick
    Jackson Turner stated in a famous essay that the
    existence of the frontier made the United States
    distinctive.
Migrating West
       White settlers                  European settlers
• Middle-class businesspeople     • Lured by economic
  or farmers from the               opportunity, they came from
  Mississippi Valley moved          Scandinavia, Ireland, Russia,
  west.                             and Germany.
• They could afford money for     • They brought their farming
  supplies and transportation.      experience with them.
     African American                   Chinese settlers
           settlers               • Initially came for the gold
• Benjamin Singleton urged          rush or to build railroads
  his own people to build         • They turned to farming,
  communities.                      especially in California,
• Some fled the violent South.      establishing the fruit industry
                                    there.
• Rumors of land in Kansas
  brought 15,000 Exodusters       • Most Chinese were farm
  who also settled in Missouri,     laborers because they were
  Indiana, and Illinois.            not allowed to own land.
New Ways of Farming

New farmers faced harsh climate, scarce water, and lack of
lumber. Farmers installed windmill-driven pumps and used
irrigation techniques. They used the earth for shelter, first
building dugouts into hillsides, then making sod houses.

New farming equipment helped. James Oliver developed a
sharper plow edge. Combine harvesters used one operation
to cut wheat, separate grains, and remove the husks.

Giant bonanza farms operated like factories, and they
reaped great profits during good seasons. However, they
could not handle the boom-and-bust farming cycles well,
and by the 1890s, most bonanza farms had been broken
up.
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Chapter 13 Looking to the West Presentation

  • 1. Chapter 13 – The American West Section Notes Video The Fight for the West The American West Mining and Ranching Farming the Plains Maps Major Battles and Native American Territory in the West, 1890 History Close-up Cattle Trails Oklahoma Land Rush Quick Facts Challenges for Farmers Images Visual Summary: The American Hunting on the Plains West Lakota Boys Family with Sod House Land Poster
  • 2. The Fight for the West The Main Idea Native Americans fought the movement of settlers westward, but the U.S. military and the persistence of American settlers proved too strong to resist. Reading Focus • How was the stage set for conflict between white settlers and Native Americans in the West? • What were the Indian Wars and their consequences? • How did Native American resistance to white settlement end? • What was life like on the Indian Reservation?
  • 3. Stage Set for Conflict • Culture of the Plains Indians – Buffalo provided food, clothing, and shelter for the nomadic lifestyle of the Indians. They did not believe land should be bought and sold, and white farmers felt it should be divided. • Government policy – Instead of continuing to move the Indians westward, the government changed its policy. Indian land was seized, and they were forced onto reservations. • Destruction of the buffalo – The buffalo-centered way of life was threatened, with vast herds driven to extinction by reduced grazing lands and hunting for sport and profit.
  • 4. The Indian Wars Army troops attacked and massacred surrendering Sand Creek Cheyenne. Congressional investigators condemned Massacre the Army actions, but no one was punished in the Sand Creek Massacre. After the massacre, Cheyenne and Sioux stepped up their raids. In return for closing a sacred trail, Treaties the Sioux agreed to live on a reservation. Other nations signed the Medicine Lodge Treaty and were moved to reservation lands in western Oklahoma. George Armstrong Custer led his troops in The Battle headlong battle against Sitting Bull and lost. The of the Little Battle of the Little Bighorn was a temporary Bighorn victory for the Sioux. The U.S. government was determined to put down the threat to settlers.
  • 5. The Indian Wars The Battle of Palo Duro Canyon ended the Palo Duro Indian Wars on the southern Plains. With their Canyon ponies killed and food stores destroyed, surviving Comanches moved onto the reservation. The Ghost Dance was a religious movement that inspired hope among suffering Native Americans. The Ghost Newspapers began suggesting that this signaled a Dance planned uprising. The military killed Sitting Bull while attempting to arrest him in a skirmish. The Wounded Knee Massacre occurred the day Wounded after the surrender. Shooting began after a gun Knee went off, and the fleeing Sioux were massacred. This action marked the end of the bloody conflict between the army and the Plains Indians.
  • 6. Resistance Ends in the West Resistance in the Resistance in the Northwest Southwest • The government took back nine-tenths of the Nez Percé • The Apache people were land when gold miners and moved onto a reservation settlers came into the area. near the Gila River in Arizona. • Fourteen years later they • Soldiers forcefully stopped a were ordered to abandon the religious gathering there, and last bit of that land to move Geronimo and others fled into Idaho. the reservation. • Chief Joseph tried to take • They raided settlements his people into Canada, but along the Arizona-Mexico the army forced their border for years before finally surrender less than forty being captured in 1886. miles from the Canadian • Geronimo and his followers border. were sent to Florida as • Chief Joseph and many prisoners of war. His others were eventually sent surrender marked the end of to northern Washington. armed resistance in the area.
  • 7. Life on the Reservation The government wanted control over all the western territories and wanted Indians to live like white Americans. The Bureau of Indian Affairs began to erase the Indian culture through a program of Americanization. Indian students could speak only English and could not wear their traditional clothing. They learned to live like Americans. The Dawes Act of 1887 broke up many reservations and turned Native Americans into individual property owners. Ownership was designed to transform their relationship to the land. The Indians received less productive land, and few had the money to start farms. Most of the land given to the Indians was unsuitable for farming.
  • 8. Mining and Ranching The Main Idea Many people sought fortunes during the mining and cattle booms of the American West. Reading Focus • How did mining lead to new settlements in the West? • Why did mining become big business? • How and why did the cattle boom come to an end?
  • 9. Striking Gold and Silver • Discovering gold and silver – After the California gold rush, Colorado was next. Most who went there were disappointed, but the silver in the Comstock Lode in Nevada lasted for more than 20 years. • The Klondike gold rush – The Yukon Territory was the site of a huge gold rush, but getting there was treacherous. Canadians required miners to bring a year’s worth of supplies with them, and that was a difficult task. Reports of “gold for the taking” were false.
  • 10. Development of Communities • Mining camps and towns – Thousands of men poured into mining areas. Camps were hastily built and had no law enforcement. Vigilante justice was used to combat theft and violence. • Camps become towns – Some camps developed into towns, with hastily constructed buildings of stores and saloons. – As towns developed, women and children came to join the men, making the towns more respectable. Townspeople established churches, newspapers, and schools.
  • 11. Mining as Big Business Placer mining allowed individuals to pan for gold, but soon equipment was needed to dig deeper within the earth. Large companies were formed to invest in hydraulic mining and hard-rock mining. Prospectors became employees, working dangerous jobs for these companies. Miners began to organize unions to negotiate safer working conditions and better pay. Mining companies resisted, and violence broke out. At Cripple Creek, Colorado, the Western Federation of Miners faced off against the corporate mining interests. When it was over, 30 men were left dead and the union was defeated.
  • 12. The Cattle Boom The Spanish were the first ranchers in the West, Origins of raising cattle under dry and difficult conditions. They ranching bred the hardy Texas longhorn and started sheep ranching. Grazing lands were needed for both. Growing populations in the East needed food. The Demand age of the cattle drive had arrived. Cowboys drove for beef the cattle to towns with railroads to be shipped to meatpacking centers such as Chicago. One of the most famous cattle trails was the Chisholm Trail. Joseph Glidden invented barbed wire, allowing Ranching ranchers to enclose grazing lands. Privately owned as big ranches spread quickly, and investors transformed business the cattle business into big business. Two years of severe winters brought huge losses to the industry.
  • 13. Farming the Plains The Main Idea The government promoted the settlement of the West, offering free or cheap land to those willing to put in the hard work of turning the land into productive farms. Reading Focus • What incentives encouraged farmers to settle in the West? • Which groups of people moved into the West, and why did they do so? • What new ways of farming evolved in the West?
  • 14. Incentives for Settlement • New legislation – In 1862, Congress passed three acts to turn public lands into private property. • The Homestead Act gave 160 acres of land to heads of household. • The Pacific Railway Act gave land to the railroad companies to build lines. • The Morrill Act gave lands to states for colleges for agriculture and the mechanic arts.
  • 15. Incentives for Settlement • Railroads encourage settlement – Railroads reaped profits by selling some of their land to settlers. They placed ads to lure homesteaders to the West. The Oklahoma Land Run of 1889 opened unassigned Indian land to settlers. Over 50,000 people took part in the rush to stake a claim on these 2 million acres of land. • Closing of the frontier – In 1890 the Census Bureau issued a report, “there can hardly be said to be a frontier line.” Historian Frederick Jackson Turner stated in a famous essay that the existence of the frontier made the United States distinctive.
  • 16. Migrating West White settlers European settlers • Middle-class businesspeople • Lured by economic or farmers from the opportunity, they came from Mississippi Valley moved Scandinavia, Ireland, Russia, west. and Germany. • They could afford money for • They brought their farming supplies and transportation. experience with them. African American Chinese settlers settlers • Initially came for the gold • Benjamin Singleton urged rush or to build railroads his own people to build • They turned to farming, communities. especially in California, • Some fled the violent South. establishing the fruit industry there. • Rumors of land in Kansas brought 15,000 Exodusters • Most Chinese were farm who also settled in Missouri, laborers because they were Indiana, and Illinois. not allowed to own land.
  • 17. New Ways of Farming New farmers faced harsh climate, scarce water, and lack of lumber. Farmers installed windmill-driven pumps and used irrigation techniques. They used the earth for shelter, first building dugouts into hillsides, then making sod houses. New farming equipment helped. James Oliver developed a sharper plow edge. Combine harvesters used one operation to cut wheat, separate grains, and remove the husks. Giant bonanza farms operated like factories, and they reaped great profits during good seasons. However, they could not handle the boom-and-bust farming cycles well, and by the 1890s, most bonanza farms had been broken up.
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