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Go West, Young Man!

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Title: Go West, Young Man!


1
Go West, Young Man!
2
Manifest Destiny
  • Term coined by magazine editor John Louis
    OSullivan in 1845
  • Idea that Americans had been given North America
    by God, who wanted them to settle it all and push
    out Indians, Mexicans

3
Trails West
  • Oregon Trail
  • California Trail
  • Santa Fe Trail
  • Mormon Trail
  • Bozeman Trail
  • Fort Smith Trail
  • Gila Trail

4
Wagon Trains
  • Sometimes employed guides, sometimes followed
    guidebooks
  • Usually no more than 20-40 wagons per train
  • Covered about 15 miles/day for 5-6 months
  • Wagons were circled at night to corral animals,
    not for protection against Indian attacks
  • Attacks by Native Americans were rare more trade
    took place than fighting

5
The Donner Party
  • 87 people
  • Took a new, untested route to California
  • Trapped by winter snows in the Sierra Nevada
    mountains
  • 39 starved, rest resorted to cannibalism to
    survive

6
The Mormons
  • Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
  • Started in NY, but were victims of persecution
  • Moved to Ohio, then Missouri, then Illinois
  • Founder Joseph Smith murdered in 1844
  • Mormons finally settled near the Great Salt Lake
    in Utah (which they called Deseret) in 1847

7
Joseph Smith
  • 1805 1844
  • Recorder of The Book of Mormon received from an
    angel which describes how Israelites arrived in
    America around 600 BC and were later visited by
    Jesus
  • Had numerous legal run-ins in Missouri and
    Illinois which eventually led to his arrest
  • Murdered by a mob in 1844 while awaiting trial

8
Brigham Young
  • 1801 1877
  • President of Mormon church from 1847 -1877
  • Founded Salt Lake City, Utah
  • 1st Governor of Utah
  • Led the Mormons west to Utah to escape
    persecution
  • Practiced polygamy, had 55 wives

9
Oregon Territory
  • First settlers arrived in the 1830s
  • Oregon Trail well-established by 1841
  • 1846 Territory officially became part of US
    after the Oregon Treaty ended the border dispute
    between US and Britain
  • 1853 Territory split into the Oregon and
    Washington Territories
  • 1859 Oregon admitted to Union as a free state

10
California
  • John Sutter granted 50,000 acres by Mexican
    government in 1839, established settlement of
    Sutters Fort, the first American settlement in
    Spanish California
  • Purchased from Mexico at the end of the Mexican
    War (as part of the Mexican Cession) in 1848
  • Discovery of gold later that year would lead to a
    rush of American settlers
  • Became a state in 1850 as part of the Compromise
    of 1850

11
Gold Rushes
  • California in 1849
  • Pikes Peak in 1858
  • Arizona, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming in 1860s
  • Triggered surges of settlers (mostly men) looking
    to get rich quick in these states

12
49ers Sutters Mill
  • After discovery of gold at Sutters Mill, over
    300,000 gold-seekers called 49ers flooded into
    California
  • Led to rise of San Francisco as a major city, but
    also to tensions with Native Americans and
    environmental destruction

13
The Comstock Lode
  • Major silver vein discovered by Henry Comstock in
    1859
  • Virginia City, NV went from zero to pop of 30,000
    then crashed when the lode ran out in 1898
    (today, pop. about 1500)
  • Comstock himself traded away his fortune and
    later committed suicide

14
Mining Lures Settlers
  • Colorado Silver (over 1 billion, led to
    development of Denver)
  • Dakotas gold in the Black Hills
  • Montana copper
  • Created boom and bust cycles where towns would
    be built in a short period of time and then
    abandoned (ghost towns) when the mines were
    exhausted

15
The Great Plains
  • Explored by Maj. Stephen Long in 1819, who
    described the area as the Great American Desert
  • With no wood and no water, many believed that the
    area was useless for settlement and farming

16
Sod Houses
  • Life was difficult
  • No trees for wood, so houses were built from sod
    bricks of tough grass burned sod and dried
    dung
  • Little surface water, so settlers had to drill
    deep wells (300 ft)
  • Summer 100 , winter 0 or less
  • Prairie fires, swarms of grasshoppers, tornadoes,
    blizzards, thunderstorms

17
Pre-emption Acts of 1830 1841
  • Many settlers who went west just picked a spot
    and built a farm they did not have any legal
    claim to the land this is called squatting
  • The Pre-emption Acts protected squatters by
    guaranteeing them the right to claim land before
    it was surveyed by the US government (who
    technically owned all public land) and buy up to
    160 acres for 1.25/acre

18
Homestead Act
  • 1862
  • 10 fee laid claim to 160 acres of public land
    occupant received title after living there for 5
    years
  • Anyone could file a claim, except former
    Confederates!
  • 1.6 million homesteads were awarded

19
Morrill Land-Grant Act
  • 1862
  • States were awarded 30,000 acres of federal land
    for each member of the states Congressional
    delegation
  • States could use or sell that land to fund the
    creation of colleges which would teach
    agricultural and military skills
  • Colleges started under the Morrill Act include
    Auburn, UConn, Florida, Georgia, Purdue, Iowa
    St., Kansas St., Kentucky, LSU, Maryland, MIT,
    Michigan State, Nebraska, Ohio St., Penn St.,
    Clemson, Tennessee, Va. Tech, NCSU

20
Oklahoma Land Rush
  • As available land in the west began to disappear,
    pressure built to open the Indian Territory
    (Oklahoma) to settlers
  • 1889 Congress agreed to open the Territory to
    white settlers
  • April 22, 1889 Thousands gathered on the border
    to race to claim a share of 2 million acres some
    (called Sooners) snuck into the territory early
    to claim the best lands

21
Ranching
  • Spanish had introduced cattle to the region in
    the 1600s herds had been left to roam free and
    had evolved into the tough, lean Texas Longhorns
  • Most cattle ranching took place in New Mexico
    Texas
  • Early ranchers took advantage of the Open Range ,
    the vast open grasslands of the Great Plains
    owned by the government
  • During the Civil War, beef prices soared due to a
    kill off of Eastern cattle to feed troops
  • Railroads built in 1860s allowed western cattle
    to be moved east to meet beef demands
  • Cattle were driven north out of Texas to
    railheads in Abilene Dodge City, KS and
    Sedalia, MO using routes such as the Chisholm
    Trail
  • Cowboys were a mix of former Confederate
    soldiers, Hispanics, and freed slaves

22
Women in the West
  • Outnumbered by men, so they had more
    opportunities
  • Could own property businesses, became
    influential community leaders
  • Most were farmwives
  • Some worked as cooks or laundresses
  • Some worked at hurdy-gurdy houses
  • A few were adventurers, such as Annie Oakley and
    Calamity Jane Burke

23
Immigrants in the West
  • Thousands of Irish immigrants flooded the Midwest
    in the 1840s through 1870s
  • Thousands of Chinese immigrants arrived in
    California to seek job opportunities
  • Both groups would play a key role in building the
    Wests railroads

24
African-Americans in the West
  • Played a major role in the development of the
    West
  • Worked on the railroads
  • Worked as cowboys
  • Settled in as farmers
  • Served as soldiers in the Indian Wars

25
Buffalo soldiers
  • 4 all-black regiments of the US Army created in
    1866
  • Nicknamed buffalo soldiers by the Native
    Americans they fought against for their dark,
    curly hair and fierce fighting ability, both of
    which reminded Indians of the buffalo
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