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Goal 4: Western Expansion

Goal 4: Western Expansion . Plains Indians . Great Plains or Great American Desert Thought to be uninhabitable Americans generalized all “Indians” into one group without recognizing the significant differences between tribes Nomadic lifestyle Moved with the herds and the land

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Goal 4: Western Expansion

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  1. Goal 4: Western Expansion

  2. Plains Indians • Great Plains or Great American Desert • Thought to be uninhabitable • Americans generalized all “Indians” into one group without recognizing the significant differences between tribes • Nomadic lifestyle • Moved with the herds and the land • Importance of the horses and buffalo • Apart of the land and not things to own • Communal living • Shared land as it wasn’t seen as a possession or what was produced/hunted from the land • Common use of the tribe’s land • Common good over individual • Sioux, Lakota, Cheyenne, Apache, Nez Pierce, Blackfeet

  3. American Interests • Lands given by treaty to Indian groups • Taken back after gold and silver are found on them • California Gold Rush, 1849 • Drive to acquire and become wealthy • Drastic population increase • Homestead Act, 1862 • 160 Acres given free in exchange for: a road being built, a well dug and a 5 year promise • Transcontinental Railroad building • Massacre of the buffalo herds • Killed 100s and let meat spoil, problematic for railroad so eliminated • Central and Pacific Railroads • Need to connect coast to coast • Central began in California • Pacific began in Nebraska • Promontory Point, Utah, 1869 • Meeting of the Central and the Pacific Railroads

  4. Indian Restrictions • Treatise were broken • Indians forced into reservations • Government limited contact with settlers in order to prevent issues • Government payment and supplies were not delivered as promised • Treatise were agreed to by both sides and both sides did not follow the treatise • Indians uprisings • Dakota Uprising, 1862 • Massacre at Sandy Creek, 1864 • Caused increased violence as Indians were attacked while on reservation • John Chivington leads Army unit in massacre of Cheyenne • Fetterman’s Massacre, 1866 • Fetterman’s small army band crushed by Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and Red Cloud’s warriors • Attack by Indians to prevent a road that was planned for gold mines

  5. Indian Wars – Defeat of Plains Indians • Gold found in the Black Hills of the Dakotas • Sioux try to defend area promised to them • By treatise • Army sends George Custer • Ahead with 250 men • Little Bighorn, 1876 (Montana) • Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull lead warriors as Custer and all his men were killed • Crazy Horse surrenders and Sitting Bull flees to Canada but is captured • Custer is anxious to begin battle and starts before rest of calvary arrives • Nez Perce Indians, 1877 • Led by Chief Joseph, they refused to go to reservation • Had assimilated and “christianized” • Chased by the Army for over 1000 miles until captured • “I will fight no more forever” • Captured and banished to Oklahoma – lobbies Washington for Indian rights

  6. Assimilation • “Century of Dishonor” • Helen Hunt Jackson • Shattered treatise and mistreatment • Recognition of Indians in Court • Some people supported assimilation of Indians • Indian children are educated like white settlers • Civilize and Christianize • Dawes Act passed, 1887 • Attempt to speed up assimilation • Indians treated as individuals and not as nations/tribes • 160 Acres to each family – based on calculation of what was needed in the east to support a family; calculation was too low and was not enough land • Most of land was eventually taken by speculators • Was supposed to stay in the family for 25 years to allow children to learn how to farm

  7. End of Indian Lifestyle • Assimilation – to make apart of the established culture • Destruction of the buffalo • Forcing Indians to become farmers and settle in one spot • Ghost Dance Movement • Believed it would return the land to the Indians and the Buffalo would return as well • Sioux spiritual dance • Dance was outlawed • Sitting Bull was believed to be responsible to they attempt to arrest him and the result is Wounded Knee • Wounded Knee, 1890 • Massacre of several hundred Sioux • Ground was covered in the blood of the dead who had attempted to flee • Indian Era Comes to an End

  8. Goal 4 Ranching and Mining

  9. Open Range • Great Plains area – “Great American Desert” • No boundaries to man or cattle • Texas Longhorn, cattle was branded to tell owner but all cattle roamed freely and was collected for cattle drives in the spring • Low population • No need for fences • No need for law enforcement

  10. Cattle Kingdom • Greater urban populations demanded more food • Immigration increase across the country as well as people getting back to normal after the war • Cattle drives to meet railroads • Access to eastern markets • Developed the legend of the cowboy • Legend of the cowboy • Mexican influence • Trained horses to collect cattle that roamed freely (Texas Longhorn) • Very lonely and lawless lifestyle

  11. Cattle’s Decline • Too many cattle – supply was higher than demand (surplus) causing prices to drop but expenses to rise to ship cattle and feed cattle • Disease • Drought – brutal winters and hot summers killed grass and cattle • Barbed wire fences blocked open range • Cattle were not able to roam and the food supply disappeared

  12. Mining Towns • Gold Rushes – mass chaos to find gold • Population problems, law enforcement issues, food issues • California, 1849 – 49ers, admittance to the Union as free or slave • Black Hills – Sioux Indian land • Comstock Lade • Alaska • Ghost Towns • Miners leave and follow the legends of the next strike somewhere else • Mines polluted water supply and many people poisoned

  13. Mining Life • Large mix of people • Various backgrounds and expertise • Ethnicities varied • Many opportunities for everyone • Building towns and filling them with businesses • Traveling salesmen to profit off of settlers and Miners • Saloons, gambling • Profiteers from mining rush • Added to the “Wild West” • Hard luck • Very little surface gold for the influx of miners to find • Mining was dangerous

  14. “ Wild West” • Legend of Adventure • Wild Bill Hickok • Calamity Jane • Wyatt Earp • Jesse James • Billy the Kid • Dime novels that told western tales • Glamerized the experience as the “Wild West” • Traveling shows – similar to the circus • Only last about 30 years • By 1890 it was declare there was no frontier – every mile had been settled according the census

  15. Goal 4 Farmers and the Populists

  16. Farmer’s Problems • Weather problems – droughts; tornadoes; harsh winters; flooding • Failing prices – costs to ship and harvest were higher than the price they could sell the produce for; led to surplus which led to decreased prices and high debt • Increasing debt – many became tenant farmers as they were so deep in debt • Dependant upon railroads – only way to transport to the markets back East and West • Need for cheaper money • Deflation and inflation

  17. Railroad Abuses • Construction graft – passed the cost of building the railroad on to the people who used it to transport their goods • Bribes • Stock watering • Unfair pricing • Long haul • Short haul • All of these things lead to the farmer/rancher/settler not trusting the railroad, going further into debt; raising the price of food; the call for Free Silver; the Grange Movement; Populism

  18. The Grange • Also called the “Patrons of Husbandry” • Began as a social group – organized by Oliver Kelley; educated members on new technology and techniques of farming • Evolved into a political group • Called for regulation of railroads • “Granger Laws” – mid-western state laws that regulated railroad abuses • Called for a set price for shipping freight • ICC – Interstate Commerce Act • Federal law that regulates commerce • Currency reform – farmers organize into co-ops to sell produce as a group and therefore reduce the cost to the individual to ship the produce

  19. Populism - • Took the place of the Grange – based on Grange Movement Ideals; grassroots political party • Strong mid-west support – spread East and West quickly • Reform based party – grew quickly as it was not a 3rd party with a single issue • Omaha Platform, 1892 • Increase $ supply – free silver idea • Income tax – introduced as a means to pay for infastructure improvements • Secret ballots – prevent election ballot box corruption (Tammeny Ring) • 8 hour work day – appeal to the Eastern (urban) vote • Immigration control – stealing American jobs

  20. Bryan and End of Populists • 1896 election – modern tactics of traveling the country and appealing to the common person • William McKinley Rep – support base was urban and upper class • Gold Standard • William Jennings Bryan-Dem/Pop • Free Silver – Populist ideal not initially supported by the democrats • “Cross of Gold Speech” – oppression of the American farmer and worker should end • McKinley wins election – beats Bryan again in the next election • Populism dies – Democrats; Bryan looses both elections

  21. Goal 4 Socratic Discussion • Why did people move out West after the Civil War and what problems did they face? (Motivations, Consequences, Success/Failure) • What impact did American settlement in the West have on the Native Americans? • What factors are related to Populist Movement? • What inventions/technology were used in dealing with the American West? • What are some of the people, events, and terms that are associated with a rise in nationalism in America in the1800s?

  22. Free Silver Crusade • Panic of 1893 – Overseas panic spreads to America and the psychological effects created a panic • Nation enters a recession – 4 years • Many people promote silver and gold standard for $ - solutions to the problem of not enough cash flowing • Would create a larger money supply – Silver widely available so high inflation • Gold standard only would decrease money supply – gold was less available and therefore the scarcity would make cash be more scarce as well; stability or deflation

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