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Westward Expansion 1801-1861

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Title: Westward Expansion 1801-1861


1
Westward Expansion1801-1861
  • America establishes its boundaries

2
Big Ideas
  • Between 1801 and 1861, exploration was encouraged
    as America underwent vast territorial expansion
    and settlement.
  • Westward migration was influenced by geography
    and economic opportunity.
  • Prior to the Civil War, most industrialization in
    America was in the North however, the equipment
    produced in the North had an impact on the
    farming society in the South.
  • The abolitionists worked to end slavery.
  • The suffrage movement helped women gain equal
    rights.

3
Post-Revolutionary America
4
The Louisiana Purchase
  • New territories added to the United States after
    1801
  • Louisiana Purchase
  • Jefferson bought land from France (the Louisiana
    Purchase), which doubled the size of the United
    States.
  • In the Lewis and Clark expedition, Meriwether
    Lewis and William Clark explored the Louisiana
    Purchase from the Mississippi River to the
    Pacific Ocean.

5
Lousiana Purchase
6
Other Territories
  • Florida
  • Spain gave Florida to the United States through a
    treaty.
  • Texas
  • Texas was added after it became an independent
    republic.
  • Oregon
  • The Oregon Territory was divided by the United
    States and Great Britain.
  • California
  • War with Mexico resulted in California and the
    southwest territory becoming part of the United
    States.

7
Florida, Texas, Oregon, California
8
Factors affecting westward expansion
  • Geographic and economic factors that influenced
    westward movement
  • Population growth in the eastern states
  • Availability of cheap, fertile land
  • Economic opportunity, e.g., gold (California Gold
    Rush), logging, farming, freedom (for runaway
    slaves)
  • Cheaper and faster transportation, e.g., rivers
    and canals (Erie Canal), steamboats
  • Knowledge of overland trails (Oregon and Santa
    Fe)
  • Belief in the right of Manifest DestinyThe
    idea that expansion was for the good of the
    country and was the right of the country

9
Important Inventions
  • The cotton gin was invented by Eli Whitney. It
    increased the production of cotton and thus
    increased the need for slave labor to cultivate
    and pick the cotton.

10
Important Inventions
  • Jo Anderson (a slave) and Cyrus McCormick worked
    to invent the reaper. The reaper increased the
    productivity of the American farmer.

11
Famous Inventions
  • The steamboat was improved by Robert Fulton. It
    eventually provided faster river transportation
    that connected Southern plantations and farms to
    Northern industries and Western territories.
  • The steam locomotive provided faster land
    transportation.

12
Beliefs about Civil Rights
  • Abolitionist movement
  • Most abolitionists demanded immediate freeing of
    the slaves.
  • Abolitionists believed that slavery was wrong.
  • Morally wrong
  • Cruel and inhumane
  • A violation of the principles of democracy
  • Abolitionist leaders included both men and women.
  • Harriet Tubman
  • William Lloyd Garrison
  • Frederick Douglass

13
Harriet Tubman
  • Supported the secret route, or Underground
    Railroad, that helped escaped southern slaves to
    reach northern free states.

14
Frederick Douglass
  • Former Slave
  • Escaped slavery and became an abolitionist.

15
William Lloyd Garrison
  • Abolitionist leader
  • Believed that slavery was immoral and demanded
    that slaves be immediately freed

16
Beliefs about civil rights
  • Suffrage movement
  • Supporters declared that All men and women are
    created equal.
  • Supporters believed that women were deprived of
    basic rights.
  • Denied the right to vote
  • Denied educational opportunities, especially
    higher education
  • Denied equal opportunities in business
  • Limited in rights to own property
  • The movement was led by strong women who began
    their campaign before the Civil War and continued
    after the war had ended.
  • Isabel Sojourner Truth
  • Susan B. Anthony
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton

17
Isabel Sojourner Truth
  • Suffragist and Abolitionist
  • Was born a slave and worked for equal rights for
    women as well as for the end of slavery

18
Susan B. Anthony
  • Supporter of the suffrage movement
  • Declared that women and men are entitled to the
    same rights in all areas of life, including the
    right to vote and own property

19
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
  • Leader of the Suffrage Movement
  • Worked closely with Susan B. Anthony
  • Wrote The Seneca Falls Declaration

20
Essential Questions
  • What new territories became part of the United
    States between 1801 and 1861?
  • What factors influenced westward migration?
  • How did the inventions affect the lives of
    Americans?
  • What were the main ideas expressed by the
    abolitionists?
  • What were the main ideas expressed during the
    suffrage movement?
  • Check out the following webquest
  • http//www.runet.edu/sbisset/westward.html
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