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Western Frontier

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Western Frontier Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Western Frontier


1
Western Frontier
2
Ranching and Farming
  • Cattle Ranching
  • Always existed but on the local level no way to
    get the cows to Eastern cities.
  • What would change?
  • Railroads
  • Could bring cattle from Texas to Eastern cities.
  • As long as the cattle were driven from Texas to
    Kansas they could be shipped to Chicago and from
    there other cities.

3
Ranching and Farming
  • Railroads
  • Cattle industry boomed very inexpensive to
    maintain sold cows for up to 10x their original
    value.
  • Only real cost was Cowhands people who drove
    the cattle
  • The Long Drive
  • Referred to the cattle drive to cow towns along
    the railways.

4
Ranching and Farming
  • Railroads
  • Over time cattle drives followed specific paths.
  • Chisolm Trail
  • Stretched from San Antonio Texas to Abilene,
    Kansas
  • From 1867 1884 over 4 million cattle would be
    driven on this trail.
  • Cowhands
  • Vaqueros First cowhands from Mexico
  • Taught the Spanish, Mexican, and Americans how to
    ranch in the Southwest
  • About 1/3 of cowhands were either Mexican or
    African American

5
Ranching and Farming
  • The Wild West ?
  • Cow towns had no local governments at first.
  • No law enforcement
  • Fights
  • Con-Men
  • Crime became a way of life
  • Jesse James
  • Billy the Kid
  • Citizens took law into their own hands
  • Vigilante Groups
  • People who take the law into their own hands.
  • Often hung suspected criminals from the nearest
    tree w/o trial.

6
Ranching and Farming
  • Citizens took law into their own hands
  • Eventually as towns became more civilized they
    elected sheriffs or asked for a marshal.
  • End of the Drive
  • The drive ended as railroads pushed deeper and
    deeper into the West.
  • End of the Cattle Boom
  • Price of cattle dropped
  • Barbed wire was used to fence in land
  • Winter of 1886-1887 was harsh killing thousands
    of cattle.

7
Ranching and Farming
  • Farming
  • Homestead Act
  • Offered 160 acres of land for free to anyone who
    agreed to live on and improve the land for 5
    years.
  • Exodusters
  • African Americans who escaped the Reconstruction
    era in the south.
  • Many Europeans

8
Ranching and Farming
  • Farming
  • Challenges
  • No trees to build homes
  • Sod Top layer of soil matted with grass roots
  • Sodbusters Nickname given to these new western
    farmers.
  • No Fuel
  • Burned corn cobs or manure
  • Unpredictable Weather

9
Ranching and Farming
  • Farming
  • Improvements
  • John Deere invented the steel plow
  • Windmills were developed to pump well water to
    the surface
  • Barbed wire was used to fence in property
  • Reapers made harvesting easier
  • Threshers helped separate grain or seed from straw

10
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11
Ranching and Farming
  • Farming
  • Farms face price drops
  • Why do you think this occurs?
  • Farms also face a rise in operation costs
  • Needed a solution
  • Grange (Patrons of Husbandry)
  • Goal meet the social needs of farm families who
    lived great distances from one another.
  • Cooperatives Organizations owned and run by
    their owners
  • Bought grain elevators and sold crops directly to
    merchants

12
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13
Ranching and Farming
  • Farming
  • Began demanding government action
  • Regulate shipping and storage rates
  • Government backed farmers
  • Have the right to regulate the railroads because
    they are businesses that served the public
    interest.

14
Ranching and Farming
  • Farming
  • Political Action Formed their own political
    party
  • Populist (Peoples) Party
  • Platform Freely print silver money to create
    inflation which would drive up prices Free
    Silver Policy.
  • Opponents Gold Standard
  • Each dollar is backed with a certain amount of
    gold
  • Less money is produced keeping its value and
    reducing chance of inflation

15
Ranching and Farming
  • Farming
  • Political Action
  • Election of 1892
  • Won by Grover Cleveland
  • Populist party received over a million votes.
  • Election of 1896
  • William McKinley Republican
  • William Jennings Bryan Democrat/Populist
  • McKinley won by 500,000 votes based on his
    eastern industrialist support.
  • Populist begin to decline in popularity

16
Ranching and Farming
  • Farming
  • Closing the Frontier
  • 1889 - Oklahoma Territory was all that was left
  • 1890 Census Bureau declared that the country no
    longer had a continuous frontier line.

17
Mining
  • 1859 Gold and silver strikes attracted people
    to Colorado and Nevada
  • Pike Peak, Colorado
  • Western Nevada
  • Comstock Lode
  • Lode A deposit of a valuable mineral buried in
    layers of rock
  • Produced 300 million is 21 years

18
Mining
  • Boomtowns
  • Towns that have a sudden burst in economic or
    population growth
  • Virginia City, Nevada
  • Population jumped by over 17,000 people in 10
    years.
  • Very few prospectors ever got rich
  • Began to move underground
  • Stripped hillsides of vegetation and left rivers
    polluted.

19
Mining
  • Became dangerous and eventually died out.
  • Many boomtowns were left as ghost towns
  • As a result of the mining boom Nevada, Colorado,
    and South Dakota gained statehood

20
Struggles with Native Americans
  • Plains Indians
  • Relied heavily on the buffalo.
  • Used it for food, shelter, clothing, blankets,
    fuel, weapons, utensils.
  • As a result the tribes were nomadic to keep up
    with the buffalo.

21
Struggles with Native Americans
  • Clashes With Whites
  • The government pushed Indians west promising the
    West would be theirs as long as grass grew and
    water ran.
  • Treaties were usually broken
  • Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851)
  • Bought back Native American land and set
    boundaries for tribal lands
  • Most agreed

22
Struggles with Native Americans
  • Clashes with Whites
  • Treaty of Fort Laramie
  • Reactions
  • Cheyenne and Sioux resisted
  • Government sent troops under Col. John Chivington
  • Opened fire on a Cheyenne village killing 150
  • Sand Creek Massacre (Colorado)
  • Indians fire back ambushing many militias

23
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24
Struggles with Native Americans
  • Clashes with Whites
  • Battle of Little Big Horn (Montana)
  • Sioux were united by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse
    and began to leave the reservation
  • Seventh Calvary was sent out Col. George Custer
  • 211 men were wiped out by the Indians in 2 hours
  • Last major Native American victory.
  • Chief Joseph (Nez Perce)
  • Tried to lead his tribe to Canada
  • Was caught 40 miles from the border and
    surrendered to U.S Troops

25
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26
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27
Struggles with Native Americans
  • Clashes with Whites
  • Geronimo (Apaches)
  • Led raids on settlers homes.
  • Captured many times but always escaped.
  • 1886 surrendered and was thrown in prison

28
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29
End of Plains Life
  • In ten years hunters killed 1,000,000 buffalo
  • Food
  • Sport
  • Leather
  • Ghost Dance
  • Done to bring about a prophesied age in which the
    whites would be removed and Native Americans
    would once again be free.

30
End of Plains Life
  • Many of these ghost dancers prepared for war and
    gathered in South Dakota
  • Tracked down by the army at wounded knee.
  • Shots were fired and around 300 Indians were
    killed.
  • Wounded Knee Massacre.
  • Ended armed Indian resistance in the West
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