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The Western Crossroads

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By 1850, 360,000 Native Americans lived west of the Mississippi River ... In 1896 gold was discovered in the Klondike area of Alaska. Mining Camps ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Western Crossroads


1
The Western Crossroads
  • Mr. Polomis
  • US History
  • Chapter 5

2
Native American Resistance (Sec 1)
  • Indian Country
  • By 1850, 360,000 Native Americans lived west of
    the Mississippi River
  • Some were confined on reservations in Oklahoma.
  • 1851 The US govt promised the Sioux, Cheyenne,
    and other tribes control of the plains with the
    Treaty of Fort Laramie
  • In return the US got the right to build roads and
    forts Indians could not attack westward
    settlers
  • The govt broke their end of the treaty
  • 1000s of non Indians went onto Indian territory
    in search of mineral wealth and fertile land

3
Continued
  • More Indians were forced to reservations
  • The job of running the reservations fell into a
    govt agency called the Bureau of Indian Affairs
    run through the War Dept.

4
Years of Struggle
  • Plains tribes fought back against the US armys
    20,000 soldiers
  • 4,000 were African Americans nicknamed Buffalo
    soldiers
  • Sand Creek Massacre 1864 Colorado Territory
  • Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle and his followers
    surrendered to the US govt
  • Colonel John Chivington attacked the Indian
    camp when the men were out hunting
  • The US govt killed some 200 Cheyenne women and
    children

5
Continued
  • 1867 Treaty of Medicine Lodge and the 2nd Treaty
    of Fort Laramie made the Sioux and Plains Indians
    move to reservations

6
Sioux Resistance
  • US government wanted the Siouxs sacred ground
    the Black Hills because gold was discovered there
  • Sioux leader sitting Bull urged his tribe to
    fight
  • Crazy Horse joined the fight with Sitting bull
  • Made their camp with 2,000 men on the little
    Bighorn River
  • June 25, 1876 George Armstrong Custer attacked
    the Sioux tribe
  • Less than an hour Custer and his battalion were
    killed

7
The Ghost Dance
  • A Paiute holy man named Wovoka began a Ghost
    Dance religion on the reservation
  • Sioux living on the reservations began to wear
    ghost shirts designed to stop bullets
  • Some Sioux left the reservation and the U.S. Army
    were sent to capture them
  • The two sides met at Wounded Knee Creek
  • 300 Native Americans were killed 30 U.S.
    soldiers died
  • Wounded Knee Massacre was the last Indian Wars
    on the Plains

8
Conflict in the Far West
  • Navajos Indians
  • U.S. government destroyed their homes and sheep
    herds were killed
  • Were forced to Bosque Redono, a reservation in
    eastern New Mexico
  • This became known as the Long Walk

9
Nez Perces Indians
  • Lived in NE Oregon
  • Were forced off their land and they tried to
    escape to Canada
  • Their leader was Chief Joseph and they were
    captured 30miles from the Canadian border

10
Apache Indians
  • Fought reservation life in New Mexico and Arizona
  • Their leader was Geronimo
  • His surrender marked the end of armed resistance
    to the reservation system

11
Rethinking Indian Policy
  • People became outraged at the way Native
    Americans were forced off their land and put on
    reservations
  • Helen Hunt Jackson wrote a book A Century of
    Dishonor about the govt broken promises
  • Sarah Winnemucca A Paiute Indian who wrote a
    book Life Among the Piutes
  • Govt officials tried to make Native Americans
    assimilate, or adapt to white America
  • Set up school and farms for Indians to attend
  • Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania was
    one example of a school

12
continued
  • Govt wanted Indians to give up tribal ownership
    of land in favor of private ownership
  • Congress passed the Dawes General Allotment Act
    in 1887 that established private ownership of
    Indian land

13
Section 2 Western Farmers and Cattle Ranchers
  • Economic Development of the West
  • People moved west for free or cheap land
  • Homestead Act gave 160 acres to any citizen
    willing to live on the Great Plains for 5 years
  • Pacific Railway Act gave land to railroad
    companies to build a transcontinental railroad
  • Morrill Act gave land to states to help finance
    agricultural colleges which would train young
    farmers

14
Continued
  • Companies built 4 transcontinental railroads
    across the U.S.
  • 3 groups of people moved west after the Civil War
  • Easterners
  • African Americans
  • Immigrants from Europe and Asia
  • Black settlers were known as Exodusters (settled
    in Kansas)

15
Western Farms
  • Few trees, built houses out of sod
  • U.S. Dept of Agriculture helped farmers adapt to
    the plains environment
  • Their agents also taught dry farming techniques
    planting and harvesting methods that conserve
    moisture
  • New farm equipment also helped farming on the
    Plains
  • Bonanza farms were created out west - Large
    scale farms usually owned by a large company and
    run like a factory
  • These farms were broken up in the 1890s
    because family farms were better at keeping the
    costs down.

16
The Cattle Boom
  • New breed of cattle called a Texas Longhorn
  • Breed of Spanish and English cattle
  • These cattle could survive long drives, treks of
    hundreds of miles to a railhead town along the
    railroad
  • Govt allowed ranchers to use common grazing land
    or open range farming
  • Cattle Boom ended because of
  • Overgrazing
  • Invention of barbed wire (patented by Glidden)
  • Bad weather on the Plains

17
Sec. 3 A Mining Boom
  • Gold was discovered in Colorado and Nevada
  • Also discovered in Nevada was the Comstock Lode-
    a rich silver vein that was the center of frantic
    prospecting
  • Miners in Arizona used the patio process- used
    mercury to extract silver from the ore.

18
Mining in the far North
  • Miners began to move to Canada, this made the
    country of Russia worry because they owned Alaska
  • 1867- Russia offered to sell Alaska to the United
    States for about 2 cents an acre
  • Americans thought the purchase worthless and
    called it Sewards Folly named after the Sec.
    of State Willard Seward
  • In 1896 gold was discovered in the Klondike area
    of Alaska

19
Mining Camps
  • Mining camps were dominated by men at first and
    violent, but with prosperity came families,
    community life and law and order
  • Example- Denver, Colorado

20
Mining as Big Business
  • In order to get ore, miners used one of two
    methods
  • Hydraulic mining- used water pressure to wash
    away mountains of gravel and expose the minerals
    underneath
  • Hard rock mining- sinking deep shafts to get ore
    locked in veins of quartz
  • These methods were expensive, so big business
    dominated mining
  • Workers formed unions to protect working
    conditions
  • The environment suffered because miners were
    concerned with only getting rich.
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