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VUS 8.a

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Title: VUS 8.a


1
VUS 8.a b, Western Settlement, Immigration, and
Industrialization
  • Mrs. Saunders

2
The American West
  • The region between the Mississippi River and the
    Pacific Ocean became populated by settlers at a
    rapid rate following the Civil War.
  • The time period following the Civil war was the
    era of the American Cowboy and was characterized
    by long cattle drives across vast open ranges for
    hundreds of miles, the only way to get cattle to
    market.

Cowboys posed by the chuck wagon in a roundup at
Belle Fouche, Sturgis, Dakota Territory, 1887.
The romantic myth of the cowboy portrayed him as
a man working largely alone. While ranch laborers
did some of their herding work by themselves, the
roundup of cattle ready for market and the long
overland cattle drives to the nearest railheads
provided opportunity for social interaction.
3
The American West
  • Many Americans had to rebuild their lives after
    the Civil War and moved west to take advantage of
    the Homestead Act of 1862, which gave free public
    land in the western territories to settlers who
    would live on and farm the land.

Many of the men who found employment working with
the western herds on the cattle frontier were
former slaves who sought economic independence by
moving west. This group of African-American
cowboys is posed at a fair at Bonham, Texas, in
1909.
4
The American West
Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer (1839-1876), a
West Point graduate and a Union officer during
the Civil War, was by 1874 an experienced Indian
fighter. He had the dubious distinction of having
led his 7th Cavalry in the attack against Black
Kettle's peaceful band of Cheyenne Indians in
November 1867, killing 102 men, women and
children in the Washita Massacre.
Sitting Bull (ca. 1831-1890), Chief of the Oglala
Sioux Sitting Bull joined forces with the great
Sioux warrior Crazy Horse (1849-1877) and rallied
4,000 warriors from the Northern Cheyenne and all
of the Sioux bands. He set up camp along the
Little Big Horn River, and called unsuccessfully
on the Canadian Blackfeet to join him in opposing
Lt. Col. George Custer's army force.
5
The American West
  • Big Foot was a leader of a small band of Sioux.
    An advocate of the ghost dance, he led his band
    of 340, of whom 200 were women and children, off
    the reservation in 1890. In December of that year
    they were forced to surrender to the 7th Cavalry.
    Encamped near Wounded Knee Creek at the
    instruction of Colonel Forsyth, Big Foot's
    warriors were ordered to give up their weapons.
    When there was resistance from some of the
    younger men, Forsyth's troops opened fire on the
    camp with volleys from Hotchkiss machine guns .
    The massacre at Wounded Knee ended with the
    deaths of Big Foot and most of his band, and
    ended the last resistance of the Plains Indians.

The bodies of the Indian dead at Wounded Knee
(now South Dakota). A storm after the massacre
froze the bodies, which were then thrown into
mass graves.
6
The American West
  • A Sioux camp near the Pine Ridge Agency in South
    Dakota, where the population had reached 6,000 in
    1890. The destruction of the buffalo herds left
    the plains Indians dependent upon Indian agents
    for beef and other food supplies. Such agents
    were often political appointees who short-changed
    the Indians of rations and cash payments.

Passage of the Dawes Severalty Act in 1887
attempted to break up the tribal control of
reservations by enforcing individual rather than
group ownership of land. Any surplus reservation
lands remaining when each family head had
received his 160-acre allotment was to be sold to
white settlers. (1891)
7
The American West
  • New Technologies such as railroads and mechanical
    reapers opened new lands in the West for
    settlement and made farming more prosperous. By
    the turn of the century the Great Plains and the
    Rocky Mountains were no longer a mostly unsettled
    frontier, but was fast becoming a region of
    farms, ranches and towns.

Cyrus Hall McCormick (1809-1884), the inventor of
the first American mechanical reaper. Cyrus
McCormick's 1831 invention of an efficient
harvesting machine came to symbolize the
technological changes and inventions in
agriculture that transformed the prairies from
buffalo grazing grounds into vast wheat fields.
8
Buffalo Bill's Wild West show was the creation of
William Frederick Cody (1846-1917), an army scout
and buffalo hunter from Iowa who had worked at
railroad camps before organizing his Wild West
Show in 1883.
  • His combination rodeo/vaudeville/circus shows
    helped feed an avid interest in the myths of the
    old West, even as the frontiers and the "wild
    Indians" that they supposedly recreated were
    rapidly disappearing under the pressures of
    settlement. Chief Sitting Bull spent 1884 touring
    with Buffalo Bill.

9
Immigration
  • Before 1880, most immigrants to America came from
    northern and western Europe. Historians have
    called this first phase of immigration the old
    immigration. Thus, immigrants prior to 1880
    usually came from Great Britain, Ireland,
    Germany, and the Scandinavian countries of
    Norway, and Sweden.
  • Between 1880 and World War I, most immigrants
    came from southern and eastern Europe. This
    second wave of new immigrants came from Italy,
    Greece, Poland, Russia, present-day Hungary and
    Yugoslavia, as well as the Asian nations of China
    and Japan. Like their predecessors (those who
    came earlier), these new immigrants came to
    America seeking freedom (political and religious)
    and better lives for their families (economic
    opportunity).
  • During the new immigration, immigrants from
    Europe usually entered the United States through
    Ellis Island in New York harbor. Their first
    view of America was often the Statue of Liberty,
    standing nearby, as their ships arrived from
    their Atlantic voyage.

10
Immigration
Ellis Island, a primary U.S. immigration port.
From 1855 to 1892, immigrants who reached New
York had arrived by ferry at Castle Garden, where
many of the admission procedures were designed to
protect immigrants from exploitation and
hardship. The explosion of immigration in the
1880s created the need for a more systematic
processing center for the millions of newcomers.
  • Chinese immigrants at the San Francisco custom
    house, 1877. Large numbers of Chinese immigrants
    entered the United States through California
    ports in the middle of the 19th century. The
    first wave, mostly of men, came as laborers
    during the gold rush a second major wave came
    during the railroad-building boom in the 1870s.
    In 1876 alone, 20,000 Chinese immigrants arrived
    in San Francisco.

11
Immigration
  • Immigration contributed to the rapid growth of
    such cities, as Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland,
    Pittsburgh, and New York. These cities became
    both manufacturing and transportation centers.
  • The rapid growth of cities caused housing
    shortages and the need for new public services,
    such as sewage and water systems and public
    transportation. New York City began construction
    of the worlds first subway system at the turn of
    the twentieth century, and many other cities
    built trolley and streetcar lines.

12
Immigration
  • Immigrants often faced hardship and hostility.
    Many Americans resented immigrants. They feared
    immigrants would take jobs for lower pay than
    American-born workers.
  • There was also great prejudice against immigrants
    based on religious and cultural differences.
  • Mounting resentment led Congress to limit
    immigration through both the Chinese Exclusion
    Act of 1882 and the Immigration Restriction Act
    of 1921. The 1921 law effectively cut off most
    immigration to America until the end of World War
    II.

13
Immigrant Contributions
  • Chinese workers helped to build the
    transcontinental railroad. They often faced
    severe racial prejudice and discrimination,
    especially in areas like California where they
    formed a sizeable minority.
  • Slavs, Italians and Poles worked in the coalmines
    of the mid-Appalachian Mountains. Immigrants
    often worked for very low pay and in dangerous
    working conditions to help build the nations
    industrial strength.
  • Immigrants also worked in textile and steel mills
    in the Northeast and the clothing industry in New
    York City.
  • Factories in the large cities provided jobs, but
    workers families often lived in harsh conditions
    crowded into tenements (run-down, low rental
    apartment buildings) and slums.

14
Melting Pot or Tossed Salad?
  • Immigrants began the process of assimilation
    (making similar/molding) into what some American
    historians have termed the American melting
    pot. Under the melting pot thesis (idea),
    immigrants from throughout the world have brought
    their distinct cultures to America. These
    cultures have then melted together much like
    the ingredients in a cake to form a new and
    unique American culture. While often settling in
    ethnic neighborhoods (with people from the same
    country or culture), immigrants and their
    children have worked hard to learn English, adopt
    American customs, and become American citizens.
    Under the melting pot thesis, the public
    schools have served an essential role in the
    process of assimilating (absorbing) immigrants
    into American society.

15
Melting Pot or Tossed Salad?
  • Most recent historians have disagreed with all or
    part of the melting pot thesis. These
    historians compare American society to a salad
    bowl rather than a melting pot. These
    historians argue that many immigrants have worked
    hard to preserve and pass to their children part
    of their old world customs and traditions.
    Therefore, they argue American society is like a
    salad bowl. Likewise, in a salad bowl each type
    of vegetable (ethnic group) keeps its individual
    flavor at the same time, the mixture of
    vegetables with the addition of a salad dressing
    (American culture) creates something new.

16
Melting Pot or Tossed Salad?
  • Finally, critics of the melting pot thesis have
    argued that institutions like public schools have
    hurt, as well as helped, immigrants to America.
    White Anglo-Saxon Protestant native-born
    Americans (WASPS) usually have both controlled
    public schools and insisted that public schools
    teach white Protestant values, history and
    customs. These critics claim native-born white
    Protestants have wanted immigrant children to
    lose their old world customs and adopt WASP
    culture as their own. For that reason, Roman
    Catholics started parochial schools (schools run
    by religious groups) in the United States.
    Thereby, Roman Catholic leaders hoped to prevent
    the Protestant-controlled public schools from
    forcing the children of Roman Catholic immigrants
    to learn and practice Protestant values and
    traditions.

17
Reconstruction to 1920
  • During the period from the Civil War to World War
    I, the United States underwent an economic
    transformation that involved
  • a developing industrial economy
  • the expansion of big business
  • the growth of large-scale agriculture
  • the rise of national labor unions and industrial
    conflict.

18
Economic Transformation of America
  • First, the federal government generally followed
    a policy of laissez faire capitalism.
    (Capitalism is an economic system based on
    private ownership and free competition.) Under
    capitalism the goal of businesses is to make a
    profit. The Scottish philosopher Adam Smith had
    first introduced the policy of laissez faire in
    his 1776 book The Wealth of Nations. Laissez
    faire was the theory that government should not
    interfere in economic affairs. Government should
    leave business alone. It should neither help nor
    hinder business. Throughout the nineteenth
    century, the United States government followed
    laissez faire in that it never hindered business
    by government regulation. However, the federal
    government did give business special
    consideration through such practices as
    protective tariffs and land grants to railroad
    builders in the West. In short, the American
    governments version of laissez faire did not
    regulate business, but it did help it.

19
Economic Transformation of America
  • Second, the increasing labor supply, caused by
    both immigration and migration of Americans from
    the farms to the cities, caused the economic
    transformation of America.

Third, Americas possession of a wealth of
natural resources and navigable rivers also
contributed to economic change in the United
States.
20
Inventions and Innovations
  • Technological change spurred growth of industry
    primarily in the northern cities. Both
    inventions and innovations caused this
    technological change.

21
The Corporation
  • One major innovation was the development of the
    modern corporation
  • replaced family owned businesses as the main
    form of business organization
  • a type of business that raises capital (money)
    through the sale of stock. Stock is shares of
    ownership in a corporation, and stockholders are
    part owners of the corporation.
  • Two advantages of a corporation are its ability
    to raise large amounts of money and limited
    liability.

22
The Corporation
  • Limited liability (responsibility) means the
    corporation acts as an artificial legal person.
    It can sue and be sued, pay taxes, go into debt.
    Therefore, the corporation itself, rather than
    the individual stockholders, is responsible for
    the businesss actions.
  • For example, cancer victims, who were smokers,
    have successfully sued tobacco companies for
    damages. However, only the tobacco corporation
    itself is liable the individual stockholders are
    not personally responsible for causing the
    smokers to develop cancer.

23
Inventions
  • Bessemer steel process made possible the
    large-scale production of steel. Since steel is
    both lighter and stronger than the iron from
    which it is made, steel permitted the
    construction of skyscrapers in modern American
    cities.

Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919) transformed the iron
and steel industry by organizing it, introducing
new technologies and the economies of large scale
investment and manufacture. Born in Scotland,
Carnegie served a management apprenticeship at
the Pennsylvania Railroad. He took the risk of
investing in the expensive technology of the
Bessemer steel process, and in 1872 built a giant
steel plant just south of Pittsburgh, winning the
contract to supply steel for the Brooklyn Bridge
in 1878. In 1901 he sold it for 500 million to
capitalist J. P. Morgan (1837-1913), under whom
it became U. S. Steel. He spent the rest of his
life giving the money away.
24
Inventions
  • Thomas Edison invented the light bulb. Soon
    electricity became a major source of power and
    light.
  • Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone.

Telephone and electric wires on a New York City
Street, 1884. Like other new industries, the
electric industry grew rapidly. Edison supplied
his first 85 customers with electricity in 1881
by the mid-1880s, the electric light industry was
a highly visible fixture in urban areas. The
telephone, invented by Alexander Graham Bell in
1876, also depended upon electric overhead wires
to transmit its services to customers. The result
was a tangle of overhead wires in most major
cities in the nation.
25
Inventions
  • Wright brothers flew the first successful
    airplane. on December 17, 1903, with the first
    powered flight of a heavier than air machine, at
    Kill Devil Hill, Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.
    Orville Wright (1871-1948), a bicycle maker from
    Dayton, Ohio, piloted the airplane on a flight
    that lasted twelve seconds and covered 120 feet
    (less than the 196-foot wingspan of today's
    Boeing 747 airliner). Later that day, Wilbur
    Wright managed to stay aloft for 59 seconds,
    covering 852 feet.

The Wright 1903 airplane engine. The Wrights were
unable to find a light-weight engine which would
produce the necessary power, so they built this
one in their bicycle shop. Photographed at the
Wright shop in 1928.
26
Inventions
At the new Ford plant at Highland Park, Michigan,
in 1913, Henry Ford introduced to automobile
production the principle of the moving assembly
line which was already revolutionizing the meat
packing industry. Rewarding his workers with the
highest minimum wage in the industry and a
profit-sharing plan, Ford pushed them to a rate
of production in which a car could be assembled
in 93 minutes. In 1914 he produced 248,000 Model
T's.
  • Henry Ford used the first conveyor belt assembly
    line in the manufacture of automobiles. The
    conveyor belt brought the cars to the workers,
    each of whom performed a specific task in the
    assembly process.

27
Captains of Industry
  • The expansion of big business in the late
    nineteenth century produced several extremely
    wealthy businessmen, or captains of industry.
  • Andrew Carnegie in steel
  • J.P. Morgan in finance
  • John D. Rockefeller in oil
  • Cornelius Vanderbilt in railroads.
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