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Chapter 8.  What do I need to be able to do by the end of this chapter? Trace the growth of the mining industry in the west Describe ways in which technology.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8.  What do I need to be able to do by the end of this chapter? Trace the growth of the mining industry in the west Describe ways in which technology."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8

2  What do I need to be able to do by the end of this chapter? Trace the growth of the mining industry in the west Describe ways in which technology changed open- range ranching Explain why/how people began settling the Plains Trace the growth of commercial farming on the Plains Discuss conflicts between settlers and Plains Indians Summarize problems caused by attempts to assimilate native-Americans

3 Gold, silver, and copper strikes in West attracted people and fed the industries of the East Placer Mining – prospectors extracted metals using picks, shovels and pans Quartz Mining – corporations bought out small miners; dug deep into earth to extract metal

4 The Comstock Lode  1859 - Henry Comstock  Virginia City, Nevada  Boom Town  Ghost Town  Law enforcement – vigilance committees

5 Leadville, Colorado  1879  1,000 newcomers per week  Spurred railroad construction through Rocky Mountains  Denver, supply point for miners, became 2 nd largest city in West

6 No future for cattle on Plains due to water, prairie grasses Texas Longhorn Open Range – land owned by government; used by ranchers Many cowboy skills came from Mexican cowboys Spanish words: lariat, lasso, stampede, rodeo

7 Little financial incentive for ranching before Civil War War caused demand for beef to skyrocket Railroads allowed for transport of beef east Cattle Drives - money made by rounding up longhorns and driving them North to railheads Chisholm Trail

8 Cattle drives herded 2,000 - 5,000 head Many cowboys ex- Confederates, blacks, and Hispanics Some cattle bought by ranchers and moved north into Wyoming and Montana Nat Love

9 Range Wars - conflict broke out between ranchers (over water and grasslands), farmers, sheep herders Range fenced off cheaply with new invention – barbed wire

10 End of the cattle drives  Fencing closed off routes  Investors poured money into ranching causing oversupply  Blizzards of 1886 & 1887 killed hundreds of thousands of head  Open range ranching ended – European breeds introduced  Cowboys became ranch hands

11 Great Plains opened to settlement by railroads – land sold at low prices or on credit Railroads advertised in Europe Great Plains – “heaven” due to above-average rainfall US government supported settlement with Homestead Act of 1862 160 acres of land free if lived on >5 years

12 Life on the Great Plains  Lack of water (deep wells)  Lack of trees = sod houses  Harsh climate – summer & winter  Prairie fires  Grasshopper swarms  Wind

13 New Innovations in Farming  Dry farming  Steel plows  Seed drills  Mechanical reapers and threshers  Inventions suited to wheat – became most important crop  The Wheat Belt – Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas

14 Bonanza Farms – investors formed corporations which could buy up land, purchase machines, and reap huge profits Agricultural Decline  Global competition caused glut and drop in prices  Drought of late 1880’s

15 Native-Americans on the Great Plains  Nomadic hunter- gatherers; some agriculture  Usually lived in bands up to 500 people but could gather into larger groups  Religion based on spirits from the natural world

16 Migration of people into Indian lands caused conflict Broken treaties Dakota Sioux Uprising  Annuities  “Let the eat grass”  Uprising put down – Indians exiled

17 The Fetterman “Massacre” 1864 Sand Creek Massacre 1867 Indian Peace Commission – plans for movement of Indians onto reservations failed due to Indian resistance and US corruption

18 Indians lived on buffalo – way of life threatened by near-extermination of the species Settler intrusion into sacred Indian lands of Black Hills caused war Custer’s “Last Stand”

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20 Wounded Knee Assimilation  1887 Dawes Act – broke up reservations into individual plots for Indians to farm  Policy a failure – Indians not farmers  End of the buffalo doomed Indian culture


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