1 / 54

L king to the West

L king to the West. Question. Who do you think is at fault in the Israeli vs. Palestine conflict? Do you think we will have peace in our life time? Why or Why not?. WHY?. The American West seized upon people’s imagination- adventure and entrepreneurial spirit for profit and conquest

sezja
Télécharger la présentation

L king to the West

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. L king to the West

  2. Question • Who do you think is at fault in the Israeli vs. Palestine conflict? • Do you think we will have peace in our life time? Why or Why not?

  3. WHY? • The American West seized upon people’s imagination- adventure and entrepreneurial spirit for profit and conquest • People moved west because of Push-pull Factors- factors that forced them the west (push) or strongly attracted them (pull) • Push- Civil War, Failed businesses, etc.

  4. Pull Factors • Private Property Laws: Government practice of surveying and deeding land gave people confidence that the land was theirs and prevented a free for all • Pacific Railway Acts: Government gave the Union Pacific and Central Pacific RR huge tracts of land to lay tracks and develop = profit • Morrill Land-Grant Act: Federal government gave state governments land to sell and establish agricultural colleges (Usually bought by land speculators- who bought large amount of land and then sold it)

  5. Pull Factors • Homestead Act: First signed under A. Lincoln, it called for the following • Person to be 21 yrs. Old or head of families • Build a permanent structure of certain size • Live on land for 6 months out of year • Farm the land for 5 straight years • Will become their property • Act gave 372,000 farms and by 1900 gave up 80 million acres

  6. Exodusters • Name given to roughly 50,000 African Americans that followed Benjamin “Pap” Singleton to the west in 1867 to start over • Name based on the Exodus led by Moses

  7. Conflict With Native Americans Ch. 7 Section 2

  8. The Great Plains • Great Plains- vast grassland between the Mississippi River and the Rockies

  9. Great Plains Native Americans • Great Plains- vast grassland between the Mississippi River and the Rockies • Native American tribes on the Great Plains subsisted on the Buffalo for their food, clothing, and shelter • Horses from Spanish had profound affect: • Violence between tribes rose • Many tribes became nomads • Guns from French fur traders & early Americans made the violence and hunting easier

  10. Uneasy Peace • Before the Civil War, Native Americans were able to live on their traditional home lands more or less without problems • Occasionally violence erupted between RR companies laying tracks or settlers going to California in the 1840s • However, soon after, Americans realized that the land was valuable and it was on like donkey Kong

  11. Land Ownership • Settlers justified taking the land from Native Americans because they would make it more productive • Native Americans saw them as invading their homeland and taking something that they shouldn’t and couldn’t own

  12. Treaties • One attempt by the U.S. Government was to make treaties, or agreements, with the Native Americans • These were done to restrict the movement of these nomadic tribes • The government bought Indian land and placed them on Reservations- land set aside for them

  13. Treaties & the BIA • Most of the treaties signed were done in fraud • Federal agents would have people delegated as “chiefs” sign, although they had no authority under Indian law • Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)- part of the Interior Department- was to manage supplies to reservations but widespread corruption caused this system to fail • Many whites still stole the land from the reservations • Increasing violence took place

  14. Battlefield Challenges • Indian Wars last many years because of the following reasons: • Lacked coherent strategy of how to achieve victory • U.S. troops still in south focusing on Reconstruction • Few major “battles”- more of a “hit and run” strategy

  15. Major Battles: Sand Creek Massacre- 1864 • Following battle run ins with settlers- Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle agreed to camp at Sand Creek and to met and discuss • Officer John Chivington- who had not gained a major victory- saw his chance and raided • Black Kettle flew an American and white flag as he had been instructed to show peaceful intentions but this sign was ignored • With 700 men, he raided the camp of Cheyenne Indians and killed around 168 (but possibly up to 500 Indians)- Mostly women and children

  16. The Sioux • 1865- Government angered the Sioux by building a road through their hunting grounds and spiritual land in the Bighorn Mountains • Red Cloud launched 2 year war to block the project • Sioux massacred 80 soldiers but later were allowed to remain on a reservation in the Black Hills

  17. Treaty of Fort Laramie • 1868 • Temporarily, restored peace to the region • Acknowledged U.S. defeat in the Great Sioux War, and supposedly guaranteed the Sioux perpetual land and hunting rights in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. • *ADD TO TREATY SHEET

  18. Battle of Little Bighorn • Government sent General George A. Custer to check out rumors of gold in the Black Hills • He reported back that there was gold and the government offered to buy the land back- Red Cloud entered into negotiations • Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, two Sioux chiefs that didn’t sign the treaty, left the reservations and violence started once again

  19. Battle of Little Bighorn • Custer, attempting to round up the Indians, split his army up near the Little Bighorn River in what is now Montana • His company was wiped out by nearly 2,000 Sioux- the largest war party known • The Battle of Little Bighorn is also known as “Custer’s Last Stand”

  20. Major Battles: Wounded Knee • Native Americans are very spiritual • One cleansing, purification ceremony done is the Ghost Dance- it was believed that this dance would return things back to the ways that it once was • The dancing made the army nervous so they attempted to arrest Sitting Bull, who encouraged the dance • In attempt to arrest him, shots were fired and he was shot in the side and head- so murdered by law enforcement

  21. Major Battles : Wounded Knee • His grieving followers- 120 men and 230 women and children surrendered and were rounded up at the Wounded Knee Creek • While being disarmed, some one fired shots and soldiers opened fire killing 200 Sioux. • The Massacre at Wounded Knee was the last major episode of violence in the Indian Wars

  22. Crazy Horse • Crazy Horse was getting a lot of attention from the military and made Red Cloud jealous- rumors that CH was going to flee the reservation began • Chief Joseph, of the Nez Perce Reservation, had escaped • They asked Crazy Horse to help find him since the Sioux and Nez Perce were enemies- Crazy Horse 1st said no, but later agreed and he stated he would fight until the “last Nez Perce are killed” but words were misinterpreted • Prior to a scheduled meeting, Crazy Horse was supposed to have said that he would kill the general-he was arrested • During the arrest, he attempted to escape and was bayoneted and later died

  23. Geronimo

  24. Geronimo • Apache Native American whose family was murdered by Mexican troops/ Turned into a great warrior • One of the last free Native Americans • Escaped to Mexico in attempt to avoid forced removal to the reservations • Tired of running and fleeing he and the other Apache surrendered in 1886, fearing for his life he escaped again, • It took roughly 5,000 white troops and 500 Native American helpers to bring him in • Forced to live on several reservations including in Florida • Died in 1909 of pneumonia at Fort Still, OK

  25. Conspiracy • Secret society at Yale University • Former members include Pres. George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, and John Kerry • Supposedly, George Bush’s grandfather, Prescott Bush, and others stole the skull and bones of Geronimo

  26. Assimilation • Most believed that the Indians needed to be civilized= Give up traditions, learn English, adopt white dress & customs, etc. • Schools were established to help meet this goal. This policy was assimilation- the process by which one society becomes part of another, more dominant society by adopting its culture

  27. Assimilation: Mormons • The Edmunds Act, also known as the Edmunds Anti-Polygamy Act of 1882,is a United States federal statute, signed into law on March 23, 1882, declaring polygamy a felony. The act is named for U.S. Senator George F. Edmunds of Vermont. • Edmunds-Tucker Act: The act disincorporated both the LDS Church and the Perpetual Emigration Fund on the grounds that they fostered polygamy. The act prohibited the practice of polygamy and punished it with a fine and imprisonment. It dissolved the corporation of the church and directed the confiscation by the federal government of all church properties valued over a limit of $50,000. The act was enforced by the U.S. marshal and a host of deputies. Repealed in 1978.

  28. Dawes Act • 1887- Law dismantled the Native American idea of community land sharing (ownership) and replaced it with America’s prized private land ownership concept • The Dawes Act divided Reservations land into individual plots of land- usually 160 acres. • Wanted to force them to be farmers and accountable to laws of America • In some cases, this severely limited their culture and beliefs

  29. Opening of Indian Territory • During the 1880s, squatters overran the land of the Indians and Congress bought out the Indians • In 1889, tens of thousands of settlers lined up at the border to flood the land and lay claim. These people were the Boomers • Some boomers got there and realized some land was already taken by the Sooners- people who slipped past the government and laid claim sooner than allowed

  30. Mining, Ranching, and Farming Chapter 7 Section 3

  31. Mining • California Gold Rush 1848-49 • More gold and silver was discovered in the Rockies- Near Denver, Black Hills, etc. • Soon there after, the mining of these precious metals became more advanced and corporations became involved

  32. Cattle • Mexicans taught Americans cattle ranching • 1/5 of all cowboys were African Americans or Mexicans • Prior to the Civil War, Pork was the meat of choice but later beef would become it. Cattle sold for $3 – 6 before the war and $40 after the war • Shipping the cattle to the east on railroad was expensive until the refrigerated car was invented and they could slaughter the animals before shipping

  33. Destruction of the Buffalo • Buffalo were nearly hunted to extinction • 25 million in 1840 – 1,100 in 1889 • Buffalo fur robes were popular in the East, their leather made strong belts for machines in factories, Buffalo hunting became a popular sport • Government also encouraged the destroying of buffalo to force Native Americans to grow their own food and assimilate

  34. Chisholm Trail & Cow Towns • Abilene, Kansas was the first town built specifically for receiving cattle • Many used the Chisholm Trail (from TX to KS)- roughly 2 million animals made the journey from good land in San Antonio to Cow towns • Cow towns were the wild part of the West until the farmers came in wanting to make it better • Cattle business then shifted to Wichita but was, liked Abilene, fenced in • Dodge City became known as the Cowboy Capital of the World • 1/5 of all cowboys were African Americans or Mexicans

  35. Tombstone: Shoot Out at the OK Corral • Wyatt, Morgan, Virgil Earp and Doc Holiday vs. Frank and Tom McLaury, Billy Claiborne, and Ike and Billy Clanton • The Earps represented law and order and the other represent lawlessness • The “Cowboys” were actually liked in the town for the most part • Some felt the Earps were corrupted police • Supposedly, Wyatt Earp tried to bribe Ike Clanton to win election but Clanton backed out • Also, Wyatt Earp and Doc Holiday were suspected of robbing a stage coach of the Wells Fargo Company so they could become more popular

  36. The Shootout • Didn’t become known as the Shootout (Gunfight) at the OK Corral until a 1950s movie • Some of the cowboys had guns and the Earps and Holiday attempted to get them to surrender and take them • The cowboys drew guns • Shootout lasted about 30 seconds with 20-30 shots fired • 3 were killed. Wyatt Earp was unhurt and the others were hit in various locations

  37. Ike Clanton Virgil Earp Morgan Earp

  38. Wild West Myths • Romantic views of the west began as early as the 1870s in dime novels • The stories promoted stereotypes- exaggerated or oversimplified descriptions of reality • 1883- Will F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody created his Wild West Shows that further played on the stereotypes by having roping contest, battle recreations, and even featured Sitting Bull

  39. Populism Chapter 7 Section 4

  40. Tough Times for Farmers • Tariffs- Little competition from foreign markets allowed businesses to raise prices • Money Supply- Government took money out of circulation after the Civil War making each dollar more valuable- causes deflation – drop of prices • 1873- Worst economic panic in U.S. history

  41. Silver • Many farmers favored Free Silver- the unlimited coining of silver dollars to increase the money supply • Bland-Allison Act- Called for the government to coin more silver and increasing the money supply but it was vetoed

More Related