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 Events and conditions that either force (push) people to move elsewhere, or that entice them (pull) to do so.

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Presentation on theme: " Events and conditions that either force (push) people to move elsewhere, or that entice them (pull) to do so."— Presentation transcript:

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2  Events and conditions that either force (push) people to move elsewhere, or that entice them (pull) to do so.

3  What could be done with the Western Native Americans in order to use the land “more productively”? › Farming › Ranching › Mining

4  Thousands of Americans were displaced by the Civil War  Escape from religious & racial oppression  Eastern farmland was too expensive  2 nd chance for failed entrepreneurs  Shelter for outlaws on the run

5  The Federal Government gave 175 million acres of Western land to the Union & Central Pacific RR companies to ensure completion of the transcontinental railroad  Settlements developed all along the railroad as it was completed  Pull Factors

6  The Federal Government gave state governments millions of acres of Western land to sell  Profits from those sales would be used to found “land grant” colleges specializing in agricultural arts and engineering  Pull factor

7  The Federal Government gave settlers a measured, registered, and deeded plot of 160 acres (1/4 sq. mi.) if they met a certain set of criteria  Pull factor

8  21 years of age; or the head of a household  American citizen; or an immigrant who was pursuing citizenship  Live on the land at least six months a year  Farm/improve the land for five straight years

9  Think about the factors that pushed people West and combine them with the offer of free legal ownership of land – recognized by the U.S. Government!  People with next to nothing were offered the chance of something substantial for five years of hard living.

10  The open, fertile, grasslands in the middle of the United States; stretching from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains

11  Fueled by the philosophy of Social Darwinism, many Americans believed they were superior to Native Americans therefore it was okay to take their land for more productive uses.

12  Farmers, hunters, gathers  Nomads: no permanent home, but always living on the move following the food source… which for nomadic Native American tribes was buffalo!

13  Sign treaties with Native American tribes for the “sale” of traditional tribal lands to the Federal Government  Sign treaties with Native American tribes forcing them to move off of traditional tribal lands to government designated reservations

14  Government negotiators often deemed people “chiefs” who had no power to speak for a tribe, and in some cases had no actual affiliation with the tribe  The government did little to protect tribes from settlers forcibly taking their land  Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA): branch of the federal government overseeing the reservations (supplies, security) highly corrupt

15  Not at all!

16  Disease and diminishing food sources because of increased settlement and a unofficial federal policy of thinning buffalo herds.

17  Little Big Horn  2,000 Sioux warriors annihilated Custer’s 200 soldiers

18  The process by which one society becomes a part of another by adopting their customs, language, etc.

19  It divided reservation lands into individual plots of varying sizes for cultivation  Forced European conceptions of land ownership on Native Americans, who believed nobody owned the land

20  Native Americans depended on the buffalo for everything! › Food › Shelter › Clothing › Tools/weapons  Settlers, the U.S. Army, and others were encouraged to thin the herds

21  Boomers: legal settlers who were given government claims to land in the Oklahoma territory  Sooners: claim jumpers who illegally staked their claim to land in the Oklahoma territory


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