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Title: The West Review


1
The West Review
  • Angela Brown
  • Chapter 15

2
  • 1. What did the Morrill Land-Grant Act and the
    Homestead Act have in common?
  • They provided ways for settlers to acquire
    western lands.
  • 2. Which statement best describes the lifestyle
    of homesteaders?
  • Homesteaders often had to struggle even for the
    necessities.
  • 3. Many agreements between Native Americans and
    the federal government fell apart because
  • Native Americans and settlers had differing
    concepts of land ownership.

3
  • 4. What happened at the Massacre at Wounded Knee?
  • American soldiers killed more than 200 unarmed
    Sioux.
  • 5. In the West, the combination of big business
    and new agricultural techniques resulted in
  • bonanza farms.
  • 6. Which one of the following was a major
    complaint of farmers in the late 1800s?
  • high tariffs on manufactured goods

4
  • 7. Western farmers wanted free silver because
    they felt it would
  • increase crop prices.
  • 8. The Interstate Commerce Act was passed to
  • regulate railroad rates and practices.
  • 9. Which one of the following did the Populists
    support?

5
  • a progressive income tax
  • 10. Which one of the following is a lingering
    myth about the West?
  • Settlers were nearly all white males.
  • 11. The challenges and hardships of settling the
    Great Plains led settlers to
  • depend on help from each other.

6
  • 12. Most African American Exodusters migrated
    west to
  • escape racial violence in the South.
  • 13. What reason was given by settlers as to why
    they had a greater right to western lands than
    the Native Americans?
  • Settlers produced more food and wealth than
    Native Americans.
  • 14. The experiences of Chief Joseph and the Nez
    Percé illustrate how

7
  • violent conflicts arose among settlers, the
    federal government, and Native Americans.
  • 15. One way the government sought to change
    Native Americans was by
  • requiring them to farm individual plots.
  • 16. Farm mechanization resulted in
  • an increase in farm production.

8
  • 17. One reason that the cattle boom ended in the
    mid-1880s was that
  • farmers were using barbed wire to fence in the
    open range.
  • 18. Most American farmers in the late 1800s
    protested
  • high tariffs on manufactured goods.
  • 19. In their platform, the Populists included
    provisions for

9
  • free silver, a progressive income tax, and an
    eight-hour day.
  • 20. Frederick Jackson Turners thesis held that
    the frontier
  • helped create the strong, individualistic
    American spirit.
  • 21. These people bought up large areas of land in
    the hope of selling it later for a large profit.
  • land speculators

10
  • 22. Custer's cavalry was wiped out at the
  • Battle of Little Big Horn
  • 23. Native Americans called African American
    Cavalry-men ________________ .
  • buffalo soldiers
  • 24. This chief led the Nez Perce' in their flight
    from the United States Army.

11
  • Chief Joseph
  • 25. This candidate ran as the Democratic and
    Populist party nominee in the presidential
    election of 1896.
  • William Jennings Bryan
  • 26. This 1887 Act gave separate plots of land to
    each Native American family headed by a male.
  • The Dawes Act

12
  • 27. These people snuck past the government
    officials to mark their land claims in advance.
  • sooner
  • 28. Planting crops that did not require a great
    deal of water and keeping the fields free of
    weeds was called
  • dry farming
  • 29. This American became famous by playing up the
    myths of the American West in his Wild West

13
  • William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody
  • 30. In 1912 this American woman founded the
    American Girl Scouts because she feared that
    civilization had made girls too soft.
  • Juliet Low

14
Open Response One
  • The conquest of the Native Americans resulted
    from a clash of cultures. Based on prior
    knowledge and class activities and discussion
    provide evidence to both support and refute this
    statement.

15
  • Weather or not it was a clash of cultures between
    the native Americans and the Americans
  • The two did NOT get along. They did not like each
    other because there ways were different. Their
    religion was different. Their dress was
    different. Their homes were different. Every
    thing between the two were different. We tried to
    control the and what they did and believed. We
    didnt like their culture so we tried to destroy
    it. For example the dews act giving heads of
    houses land to farm. We even killed women and
    children
  • NOT A CULTURAL CLASH
  • Americans believed in manifest destiny and that
    we were destined to take over the American
    continent no matter who lived there. Weather it
    be French, English, or Canadians we would have
    still taken over the land regardless.

16
NOT A CULTURAL CLASH Americans believed in
manifest destiny and that we were destined to
take over the American continent no matter who
lived there. Weather it be French, English, or
Canadians we would have still taken over the land
regardless.
17
Open Response Two
  • Discuss the rationalization used by white
    Americans to justify violating treaties and
    taking Native American land. Under what biases
    were the reformers operating who wanted to
    civilize the Native Americans? What
    assumptions did the federal government make in
    passing the Dawes Act? What examples of these
    issues do we continue to see in the world today?

18
  • The rationalization is that the native Americans
    are doing nothing. They are riding horses and are
    not doing anything with the land.
  • We on the other hand were going to produce things
    and make things out of what we are given. More
    than the Indians did
  • What were the bias that people had?
  • That we would do more and that the Indians ways
    of life was not productive. These two cultures
    could not strive together
  • The white men believed that they were doing the
    Indians a favor. That it was the American way so
    it was right

19
  • What assumptions did we make of the Indians?
  • That they could and would want to farm. That is
    not true. They pretty much lived of buffalo.
    There way of life does not call for farming and
    vegetables.
  • Where else in this world do we see this today?
  • Iraq. The American people are changing there
    culture to be more like ours. We think that our
    culture is superior to theirs so we should take
    it over and help for the better. Americans
    continue to intervene and try to help other
    cultures.
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