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Test Coming Up Chapter 18: Moving West STUDY GUIDE Key Terms:
culture, ethnocentrism, culture diffusion, reservations, vaqueros Check your Binders: Components of Culture Chart Plains Indians notes Plains Indians Way of Life Ends Mining Cowboys Homesteaders Farming and Populists Know and Understand: The Components of Culture How the Native American way of life came to an end How mining, cattle ranching and the railroads changed the appearance of the west The Homestead process and the life of people on the frontier **There will be a map of cattle drives and railroads on the test**
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On Your Own Today… SKIM vs. SKAN Vs. READ
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Notes: Text pgs. 590-592 & 602-605 Pony Express Transcontinental RR
The Great Race Golden Spike The National Grange Deflation/Free Silver Movement Populist Party The End of the Frontier
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Chapter 18 Notes: Railroads
Pony Express – messengers on horseback that brought information out west (1860’s) Transcontinental Railroad – a railroad that would cross the continent from East to West The Great Race – a competition by the Union Pacific and Central Pacific companies to complete the transcontinental railroad, ended in Promontory Utah at the Golden Spike The Golden Spike – a symbol of where the two new railroad lines would meet What were conditions like for railroad workers? Low pay, long hours, using explosives, dangerous weather conditions What sad irony exists between the Chinese railroad workers in the 1800’s and some immigrant workers today? They took dangerous and low paying jobs because the pay and conditions were still better than their mother countries. How did the railroad affect the development of the west and the economy? Provided many jobs, transported people/goods, shortened travel times, encouraged settlement
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Chapter 18 Notes: Politics (page 602 - 605)
National Grange – social and educational organization for farmers Populist Movement – called for the government to own railroads and telegraph and telephone systems Why did the Populist Party want the government to own railroads and telegraph and telephone systems? To help control prices Do you think farmers were successful in bringing about economic change and political change? Explain. Yes, Interstate Commerce Act ensured fair rates. No, their financial recovery was very slow. Why did the frontier cease to exist in the United States? Americans had settled all of the frontier land and there was no more open range left.
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Page 604 Barter—Trading goods and services for other goods and services without using money. Deflation—A general, sustained downward movement of prices for goods and services in an economy. Fiat money —A substance or device used as money, having no intrinsic value (no value of its own) or representational value (does not represent anything of value, such as gold). Inflation—A general, sustained upward movement of prices for goods and services in an economy. Medium of exchange —Anything that is generally accepted in exchange for goods and services.
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• The California Gold Rush of 1849 added to the gold supplies of the country. The Gold Rush added to the money supply and caused inflation. • Lincoln financed the Civil War ( ) with greenbacks, money that was not backed by gold—it was fiat money. The dramatic increase in the money supply caused inflation. • After the Civil War, leaders attempted to withdraw the greenbacks. The decrease in the money supply led to deflation and economic depression. • Further deflation led to the Long Depression—the Depression of , which lasted 65 months. • Farmers were having financial difficulty because the money they received for their crops was decreasing but their farm debts remained fixed, which means that because of periods of deflation, running their farms became more expensive over time. • Those in the Free Silver Movement wanted to return to “bimetallism”: They wanted money backed by silver to be added to the money supply, which was backed by gold. Adding to the money supply would have ended the deflation and created the possibility of inflation. • The Democratic Party chose William Jennings Bryan, a supporter of “bimetallism,” as its candidate for president in the election of The Republicans wanted to protect the gold standard and chose William McKinley as their candidate. The “bimetallism” debate became a central issue in the campaign. • William Jennings Bryan lost the election of A surge in gold production at the end of the nineteenth century reversed the deflationary trend, which helped indebted farmers and ended the call for a bimetallic money standard. • The United States had a number of policy changes during the Great Depression that led to a weakening of and later break from the gold standard. The United States broke all monetary ties to gold, even for international trade, in 1973.
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I’ve Been Workin’ on the Railroad
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