1 / 31

Chapter 2

Chapter 2. Changes on the Western Frontier. Section 1. Cultures Clash on the Prairie. The Culture of the Plains Indians. Lower Missouri River Osage and Iowa tribes hunted and planted crops and settled in small villages Farther west Sioux and Cheyenne were nomadic

mpedersen
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 2 Changes on the Western Frontier

  2. Section 1 Cultures Clash on the Prairie

  3. The Culture of the Plains Indians Lower Missouri River Osage and Iowa tribes hunted and planted crops and settled in small villages Farther west Sioux and Cheyenne were nomadic Gathered wild foods and hunted buffalo Plains People abided by tribal law, traded and produced beautiful crafted tools and clothing

  4. The Horse and the Buffalo Spanish brought horses in 1598 Later guns, allowed Natives to travel further and hunt more efficiently By mid-1700’s tribes left their farms to roam the plains and hunt buffalo Mobility led to war when tribes trespassed on other tribes hunting grounds Won prestige by taking part in hunting and war parties Made items from buffalo Tepees, clothing, shoes and blankets Dried meat into jerky and other foods from the fat

  5. Family Life Lived in small extended family groups with ties to other bands Young men trained to become hunter and warriors Women butchered the game and prepared hides Young women chose their own husbands Children learned behavior and culture through stories and myths, games and good examples Believed spirits controlled events Some became shamans Communal way of life No individual was allowed to dominate Ruled by counsel rather than by force Land was held in common

  6. Settlers Push Westward Settlers believed that owning land, making a mining claim, or starting a business would give them a stake in the country Natives didn’t improve the land so they forfeited the land Migrants, therefore, thought the land was unsettled

  7. The Lure of Silver and Gold Discovery of gold in CO in 1859 drew thousands Mining Camps replace beautiful landscape Filthy, ramshackle living quarters, rows of tents, shacks with dirt floors, dirt streets, wooden sidewalks Irish, German, Polish, Chinese, African American men Business-minded women worked as laundresses, freight haulers, or miners Virginia City, Nevada and Helena, Montana

  8. The Government Restricts Native Americans 1834 govt passed an act to make the Great Plains a huge reservation Later in the 1850’s, the govt created treaties and policies to define specific boundaries for each tribe Most tribes did not abide by these treaties Clash between tribes and miner and settlers

  9. Massacre at Sand Creek 1864 Cheyenne returned to CO for the winter Thought they were protected by the US Govt General S.R. Curtis sent a letter to John Chivington “I want no peace till the Indians suffer more” Chivington descended on the Cheyenne and Arapaho Killed 150 mostly women and children

  10. Death on the Bozeman Trail Ran directly through Sioux hunting grounds Chief Red Cloud successfully appealed to the govt to end white settlement on the trail Dec 1866, Crazy Horse ambushed and killed 80 soldiers Natives called it the Battle of Hundred Slain, whites called it the Fetterman Massacre Govt agreed to close Bozeman Trail after a few skirmishes Treaty of Fort Laramie Agreed to live on a reservation along the Missouri River Forced on the leaders of the Sioux Sitting Bull refused to sign it (Hunkpapa Sioux) Ogala and Brule Sioux did sign with every intention to use their traditional hunting grounds

  11. Bloody Battles Continue Treaty temporarily ended warfare Natives resisted the restrictions “[We] have been taught to hunt and live on the game. You tell us that we must learn to farm, live in one house, and take on your ways. Suppose the people living beyond the great sea should come and tell you that you must stop farming, and kill your cattle, and take your houses and lands, what would you do? Would you not fight them?” -Gall, A Hunkpapa Sioux

  12. Red River War Late 1868, war broke out again Kiowa and Comanche US Army responded by herding friendly tribes onto reservations while opening fire on others Gen. Sheridan gave orders “to destroy their villages and ponies, to kill and hang all warriors, and to bring back all women and children” With these harsh tactics, resistance did not go on much longer

  13. Gold Rush 4 years of Fort Laramie Treaty Miners began searching the Black Hills for gold Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho protested 1874 Colonel Custer reported that the Black Hills had gold “from the grass roots down” The Chiefs appealed to the govt with no avail

  14. Custer’s Last Stand Early 1876, Sioux and Cheyenne held a sun dance Sitting Bull had a vision of soldiers and Natives falling from their horses Custer reached the Little Bighorn River, with the awaiting natives Crazing Horse, Gall, and Sitting Bull outflanked the 7th Within an hour Custer and all the 7th were dead By late 1876, Sioux were beaten Sitting Bull took refuge in Canada Remained there ‘til 1881 To prevent starvation, Sitting Bull was forced to surrender Sitting Bull appeared in “Buffalo Bill” Cody’s Wild West Show

  15. The Government Support Assimilation Natives did have supporters Debates over treatment continued Helen Hunt Jackson wrote book A Century of Dishonor exposed the govt’s many broken promises Sympathizers supported assimilation Plan under which natives would give up their beliefs and way of life and become part of the white culture

  16. The Dawes Act Aimed to “Americanize” the Natives Broke up the reservations and gave some of the reservation land to individual Natives 160 acres to each head of household and 80 acres to each unmarried adult Govt would sell the remainder of the reservations to settlers, and the resulting income would be used by native to by farm implements Aby 1932 Whites had taken @ 2/3 of the territory set aside for the natives Natives received no money from the sale of the lands

  17. The Destruction of the Buffalo Most significant blow Tourist and fur traders killed for sport Gen Sheridan approved of the slaughter 1800 @ 65 million buffalo roamed 1890 @ 1000 roamed 1900 US Govt sheltered a single wild herd in Yellowstone Park

  18. The Battle of Wounded Knee Sioux facing poverty and disease Turned to Paiute Prophet promised if the Ghost Dance was performed their way of life would be restored Spread fast and worried military leaders Military ordered the arrest of Sitting Bull Friend and bodyguard, Catch-the-Bear shot at one They killed Sitting Bull Chief Big Foot led the Sioux away

  19. Wounded Knee Dec 28, 1890 7th Calvary rounded up 350 starving and freezing Sioux Soldiers demanded they give up their weapons A shot was fired The soldiers opened fire with a cannon 7th slaughtered 300 mostly unarmed natives including children Left the dead to freeze on the ground Brought Indian war to an end “I did not know then how much was ended. When I look back…I can still see the butchered women and children lying heaped and scattered all along the crooked gulch…And I can see that something else died there in the bloody mud., and was buried in the blizzard. A people’s dream died there. It was a beautiful dream” -Black Elk

  20. Cattle Become Big Business With Buffalo gone Cattle and horses began to flourish Cattle ranches opened up the Great Plains to big business Ranching became a profitable investment

  21. Vaqueros and Cowboys Americans never managed large herds on the open range Learned from Mexican neighbors how to round up, rope, brand and care for the animals Texas Longhorns Sturdy, short-tempered breeds accustomed to dry grasslands of S. Spain Today’s American Cowboy stemmed directly from that of those first Spanish ranchers in Mexico Clothes, food, and vocab, first to wear spurs, chaparreras (chaps), ate charqui (jerky) Broncos or bronc ran wild (bronco caballo or “rough horse” Railroads expanded the need for cowboys

  22. Growing Demand for Beef Demand for beef skyrocketed after the Civil War Due to growth of the cities Chicago Union Stock Yards opened in 1865 By 1866 the railroads were running regularly through Sedalia, Missouri TX could now ship their cattle to Chicago and markets in the east Sedalia route presented problems Thunderstorms and rain-swollen rivers Farmers angered over trampled crops Some died of starvation

  23. The Cow Town Joseph McCoy approached town with plans to create a shipping yard where the rails and rail lines met Abilene, KS agreed to the plan McCoy built cattle pens and hotel and then helped survey the Chisholm Trail 35000 head of cattle were shipped out o the yard and Abilene during the first year Business doubled the next year

  24. A Day in the Life of a Cowboy As many as 55,000 worked the plains between 1866 and 1885 Folklore and postcards depicted the cowboy as Anglo-American 25% were African America 12% were Mexican Myth Cowboys rode the open range, herding cattle and fighting villains Truth: they did work nonstop

  25. A Day’s Work Worked 10-14 hrs a day on a ranch and 14 or more on the trail Had to be alert at all times for dangers Some were as young as 15 Most were broken-down by 40 Owned their saddle but his horse usually belonged to the boss Expert rider and roper Gun was used to protect the heard from the wild or diseased animals rather then to hurt or chase outlaws

  26. The Long Drive Animals often lasted about three months Typical drive One cowboy for every 250-300 head of cattle Cook who drove the chuck wagon and set up camp Wrangler who cared for the extra horses Trail boss earned $100 or more a month for supervising the drive and negotiating with settlers and natives In the saddle from dawn to dusk Slept on the ground bathed in the rivers Risked death at river crossings

  27. Chisholm Trail • Jesse Chisholm • Scot-Cherokee trader Jesse Chisholm first marked the famous Chisholm Trail in 1864 for his wagons. It started at the confluence of the Little and Big Arkansas Rivers and went to Jesse Chisholm's trading post, southwest of present day Oklahoma City. • used the trail to trade with the U.S. Army and Native American tribes (Indians) from his trading post at the present site of the Twin Lakes Shopping Center in Wichita to his southern trading post in Indian Territories. The Wichita Indians used the Chisholm Trail when they moved from their native territory to the mouth of the Little Arkansas and also when they returned in 1868.

  28. Legends of the West James “Wild Bill” Hickok Never dealt with cows Served as a scout and a spy during the Civil War Later a marshal in Abilene, KS Violent man who was shot and killed while holding a pair of aces and a pair of eights in a poker game Still called the “dead man’s hand” Martha Jane Burke (Calamity Jane) Expert sharpshooter who dressed as a man She may have been a scout for Custer

  29. The End of the Open Range Overgrazing of the land, extended bad weather and the invention of barbed wire were largely responsible Between 1883 and 1887 patterns of dry summers and harsh winters wiped out whole herds Most ranchers turned to smaller herds of high-grade stock Ranchers fenced the land with barbed wire Invented by Illinois farmer Joseph F. Glidden Cheap and easy to use

  30. 1) Analyzing Causes What economic opportunities drew large numbers of people to the Great Plains beginning in the mid 1800’s? 2) Drawing Conclusions Identify the reasons for the rise and the decline of the cattle industry. Section 1 Review

More Related