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Looking Into the West Topic 2.2. Moving West Frontier - “the land or territory that forms the furthest extent of a country's settled or inhabited regions.

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Presentation on theme: "Looking Into the West Topic 2.2. Moving West Frontier - “the land or territory that forms the furthest extent of a country's settled or inhabited regions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Looking Into the West Topic 2.2

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3 Moving West Frontier - “the land or territory that forms the furthest extent of a country's settled or inhabited regions Harsh weather Vast area Native Americans

4 “Pull”-Pacific Railway Acts Passed in 1862 and 1864 Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroads received land grants 1 mile of track=10 square miles of public land on both sides Railroad received more than 175 million acres of public land

5 “Pull”-Morrill Land-Grant Act Gave state governments millions of acres of western land Sell the land to raise money for “land- grant” colleges specializing in agriculture and mechanical arts Sold land to bankers and land speculators

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7 “Pull”-Homestead Act Settlers could receive 160 acres for a fee of $10 Settlers must meet Special Conditions By 1900, there were 600,000 claims covering more than 80 million acres

8 Special Conditions Had to be 21years old or head of family American citizen or immigrants filing for citizenship Built a house at least 12’X14’ Lived on the land for six months out of a year Farmed the land five yrs in a row before claiming ownership

9 Settlers from far and wide (DEMOGRAPHICS) Cheap land and new jobs attracted people German immigrants built tight knit farming communities Irish, Italians, European Jews, Chinese were drawn to the west Mexican and Mexican Americans contributed to ranching African Americans rode or walked westward to flee violence and exploitation

10 Frederick Jackson Turner “American intellect owes its striking characteristics to the frontier” Emphasizes the individual effort of settling the west (Manifest Destiny)

11 CausesEffects Homestead Act of 1862 allowed citizens to claim 160 acres for $10.00 filing fee and a pledge to live on and farm the land for five years. Between 1862 and 1900 nearly 600,000 families claimed homesteads Timber Culture Act of 1873 allowed people to claim additional acres of land if they planted trees on one quarter of it within four years. Farmers were able to increase their farms to a workable size. Desert Land Act of 1877 allowed people to buy 640 acres of land in very dry areas (or $1.25 per acre if they promised to irrigate part of it. Many false claims made by people who dumped a bucket of water, claiming they had irrigated the land. The government encouraged completion of the transcontinental railroads by providing land and money. The building of the transcontinental rail­ roads became a race between the Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroads. The more track each company built, the more land and loans it would get. The transcontinental railroads helped speed the settling of the West. They gave hopeful settlers quicker routes to homesteads in the West. The transcontinental railroads helped tie the East and West together. Raw materials from mines, ranches, and (arms could be shipped to the East, while finished goods from the Eastern factories could be more easily shipped to settlers in the West.

12 Miners Ranchers Farmers Topic 2.2

13 Miners

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15 The Klondike Gold Rush 1896-18991896-1899 Actually in CanadaActually in Canada Last great American Gold RushLast great American Gold Rush

16 Finding Gold Individual prospectors look for traces of gold in mountain streams (placer mining)Individual prospectors look for traces of gold in mountain streams (placer mining)

17 Boom Towns Rich strikes created boom townsRich strikes created boom towns saloons, dance-hall girls, vigilantes Many became ghost towns just a few years later.Many became ghost towns just a few years later. Other towns that served the mines became important commercial centers.Other towns that served the mines became important commercial centers. –San Francisco, Sacramento, Denver

18 Mining Towns Similar to industrial citiesSimilar to industrial cities Workers were also from Europe, Latin America, and China.Workers were also from Europe, Latin America, and China. ½ the population was often foreign born½ the population was often foreign born Greatly increased Western populationGreatly increased Western population

19 Foreign Backlash Resentment among whitesResentment among whites Miner’s Tax ( $20 / month ) in CAMiner’s Tax ( $20 / month ) in CA Chinese Exclusion Act ( 1882 )Chinese Exclusion Act ( 1882 ) prohibited further Chinese immigration

20 Ranchers

21 Ranching Civil War – TX is cut off from CSACivil War – TX is cut off from CSA 5 million heads of cattle roam freely TX cattle business – easy to enter FREE CATTLE!TX cattle business – easy to enter FREE CATTLE! Ranchers Kill off the buffaloRanchers Kill off the buffalo

22 Railroads RR starts in Kansas (Cow towns) RR goes to KC, St. Louis, ChicagoRR starts in Kansas (Cow towns) RR goes to KC, St. Louis, Chicago Steers bought for $5 / head and sold for up to $80 / headSteers bought for $5 / head and sold for up to $80 / head Refrigerated railcars made it even cheaper.Refrigerated railcars made it even cheaper.

23 Cattle Drives RR didn’t go into TXRR didn’t go into TX Cowboys drove cattle to Kansas 1 cowboy per 300-500 cattle up to 1,500 miles to Kansas $30 per month, paid in 1 lump sum1 cowboy per 300-500 cattle up to 1,500 miles to Kansas $30 per month, paid in 1 lump sum

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29 End of Cattle Drives 1880s overgrazing destroyed the grass1880s overgrazing destroyed the grass 1885-1886 blizzard and drought (90% of cattle die)1885-1886 blizzard and drought (90% of cattle die)

30 Farmers

31 Farming Homestead Act of 1862Homestead Act of 1862 160 acres is yours after 5 years 500,000 Homestead families500,000 Homestead families 2.5 million families had to buy land from the RR

32 Housing Made of sod strips of grass with thick roots and earth attachedMade of sod strips of grass with thick roots and earth attached No trees to make houses No trees to make fencesNo trees to make houses No trees to make fences

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34 Hard Times Many discover that 160 acres is not enough to survive. 2 of 3 farms fail by 1900Many discover that 160 acres is not enough to survive. 2 of 3 farms fail by 1900

35 The Family Everyone had to work in order to surviveEveryone had to work in order to survive did heavy manual labor –Men did heavy manual labor collected wood & carried water –Children collected wood & carried water did chores around the house, managed the money, raised the children, provided food (crops, butter, chickens, milk) –Women did chores around the house, managed the money, raised the children, provided food (crops, butter, chickens, milk)

36 Bonanza Farms Run like big business High volume Drove down prices Squeezed out the small farmers

37 Dry Farming The only way to farm successfully in the GPThe only way to farm successfully in the GP –Crops that don’t require much water –Keeping fields free of weeds

38 Frontier Myths

39 Not as wild as you thought…

40 The Closing of the Frontier The move westward began in the 1860’s In 1890, the Department of the Interior declared that the frontier was settled. Government begins to reserve land. The West opened and closed in a generation…


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