Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClemence Ramsey Modified over 9 years ago
1
AMERICAN HISTORY
2
Major Stephen H. Long called the Great Plains region “The Great American Desert” He believed the area was “unfit for cultivation and … uninhabitable by a people depending on agriculture…” NEW LEGISLATION Congress passed three acts in 1862 “The Homestead Act”
3
--Allowed any head of household over the age of 21 to claim 160 acres of land --Home must be built --improvements must be made --live on the land for 5 years Full ownership would be given after this time period Nearly 2,000,000 people applied for land claims Most good land was claimed before 1900
4
The last homesteader claimed land in 1988! “Pacific Railway Act” (1862) --gave land to railroad companies to encourage construction of railroads and telegraph lines “Morrill Act” (1862) --gave land to states to provide colleges for “agriculture and mechanic arts.” Some states sold the land to fund education First government attempt to aid higher education Iowa State University – first land grant college in USA (1858)
5
RAILROADS ENCOURAGE SETTLEMENT Within a few years of the Pacific Railway Act, the government gave over 125 million acres of land to railroads State and local government contributed and additional 100 million acres Railroads made profits by selling some land to settlers Railroads placed ads encouraging people to settle in the west
6
1906-1918—40,000 homestead claims filed in Montana THE OKLAHOMA LAND RUN OF 1889 2 million acres of land in Oklahoma unclaimed by any Indian population April 22, 1889—thousands of people lined up along the perimeter of the unclaimed land At 12:00 noon, 50,000 people rushed into the Oklahoma interior to stake their claim
7
Between 1889 & 1895, five different land runs brought countless settlers to live in Oklahoma Not everyone who rushed to claim land were prepared to settle Some had few provisions and no money Many hopefully settlers became quickly discouraged and left because they couldn’t survive until the first crop came in
8
CLOSING OF THE FRONTIER Frontier existed when there was a population of 2 people per square mile 1890—U.S. Census Bureau effectively declared the frontier closed to future settlement
9
After the Civil War, people moving west belonged to 3 major groups: --white Americans from the East --African Americans from the South --immigrants from foreign countries WHITE SETTLERS Most whites came from states in the Mississippi Valley
10
AFRICAN AMERICAN SETTLERS 1870s—Massive migration west by African American Some inspired by Benjamin “Pap” Singleton – community builder & former slave Others fled because of violence and oppression from KKK and other groups Rumors spread that the US Government would open up Kansas for African Americans but that was false.
11
15,000 African Americans moved to Kansas within a year searching for a more peaceful life. These settlers became known as EXODUSTERS Tens of thousands of these Exodusters left the south and settled in KS, MO, IN, and IL. EUROPEAN SETTLERS Settlers from Norway, Sweden, and Finland poured into the northern plains in the 1870s
12
Many Irish that had come to build railroads decided to stay and settle on the plains Russian Menonites brought farming experience Huge numbers of Germans came and many settled in the central part of Texas CHINESE SETTLERS 1880s—Chinese immigrants who came for the gold rush and railroad-building turned to farming
13
Chinese brought innovative farming techniques and helped to start California’s fruit industry Most ended up as farm laborers because laws banned Chinese from owning land
14
Journey west was expensive and full of hardships After staking a claim to land there were new challenges: 1) harsh climate – winters were bitterly cold along with snowstorms; summers were fiercely hot, causing crops to shrivel and die 2) water was scarce forcing people to dig wells and install windmill-driven pumps
15
In the Southwest, settlers used Hispanic and Native American irrigation techniques 3) no lumber to build houses Some early settlers built DUGOUTS – shelters built into the sides of hills They soon replaced dugouts with sturdy sod houses FARMING IN A NEW ENVIRONMENT New farming equipment helped settlers succeed
16
James Oliver developed a new plow with sharper edges to plow fields with less effort Combine harvesters cut wheat, separated the grains from the stalks, and removed the husks from the grains in one operation This equipment was expensive and many small farmers went in debt to farm it. FARMING AS BIG BUSINESS Large companies saw a business opportunity on the Plains
17
BBONANZA FARMS created TThese farms operated like factories, with expensive machinery, professional managers, and laborers who performed specialized tasks OOwners of these farms realized great profits during good growing seasons BBad growing seasons meant trouble trying to pay for machinery and pay workers SSmall family farmers handled the boom-and-bust cycles better than big corporate farms BBy the 1890s most big farms had broken up. TTHE END
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.