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Bethel Elementary School Westward Expansion

5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. Bethel Elementary School Westward Expansion.

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Bethel Elementary School Westward Expansion

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  1. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. Bethel Elementary School Westward Expansion

  2. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. • The journey West brought both cooperation and conflict: • The discovery of gold and silver brought men westward • Prospectors competed with one another causing a lawless society.

  3. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. • Boom towns grew quickly to serve the needs of the miners and just as quickly turned to ghost towns once the ore vein had been depleted. 2 min. Video Boomtown to Ghost Towns

  4. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. Ranchers and Cowboys cooperated to develop the cattle raising industry. Cowboys drove the herds, owned by the ranchers, across the open plains to the nearest railroad depot and shipped them to processing plants farther east.

  5. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. • They competed with rustlers and often came in conflict with the townspeople. • When farmers settled and fenced large parts of the plains, they interfered with the open ranges which cowboys drove the herds.

  6. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. • Cowboys did not want to be fenced in, and the farmers, who built the fences, fought over how the western lands should be used and who should use them. The era of the cattle drive did not survive the creation of farms on the plains. Cattle Drives 2 min video

  7. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. At first, many Native Americans welcomed and cooperated with explorers of the West. RR destroyed buffalo and Native American culture and cause hostile relationships farmers and miners claimed the lands that the Native Americans believed to be theirs.

  8. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. Native Americans were forced to live on reservations. Those who resisted were hunted down by the United States army.

  9. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. Mexican Americans were also driven from their land. The south western part of the US had belonged to Spain then Mexico until the mid 1800’s. Once this land became part of the US, the Mexicans living there were discriminated against. Many lost title to their lands.

  10. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. Some European Americans moved to the West to start new lives—many were too poor to travel west. Those who did formed communities that engaged in cooperative activities, such as barn raisings, and helped each other to be successful in this new land

  11. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. • Asian immigrants came to the US to search for gold and later, to build the transcontinental railroads.

  12. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. • While European immigrants, such as the Irish, built from the east to west, Chinese workers laid rails from west to east. They were often paid less than white workers and suffered from discrimination because of their unique culture.

  13. 5-2.4- Provide examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the West, including miners, ranchers, and cowboys; Native Americans and Mexican Americans; and European and Asian immigrants. • Once the major projects were completed, the Chinese attempted to compete with white men in mining and other jobs. Soon, the United States government passed a law excluding the Chinese from entrance as immigrants to the United States. Chinese Exclusion Act Video 4 min.

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