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Bell Work

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The American West 1858-1896 Chapter 19 ... Abraham Lincoln signed the Pacific Railway Act ... people under Chief Joseph refused to move to a reservation. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bell Work


1
Bell Work
  • Why were the Intolerable Acts passed? What were
    the terms of the Intolerable Acts?
  • This Day in History
  • April 20, 1861- Colonel Robert E. Lee resigns
    from the United States army two days after he was
    offered command of the Union army and three days
    after his native state, Virginia, seceded from
    the Union.
  • April 20, 1871- With passage of the Third Force
    Act, popularly known as the Ku Klux Act, Congress
    authorizes President Ulysses S. Grant to declare
    martial law, impose heavy penalties against
    terrorist organizations, and use military force
    to suppress the Ku Klux Klan (KKK).
  • April 20, 1889- Adolf Hitler is born in Austria.
  • April 20, 1898- William McKinley asks Congress
    for a declaration of war against Spain.
  • April 20, 1999- Two teenage gunmen kill 13 people
    in a shooting spree at Columbine High School in
    Littleton, Colorado.
  • April 20, 2010- The BP Oil Spill begins in the
    Gulf of Mexico.

2
The American West
  • 1858-1896

3
Boomtown
  • In 1859 Henry Comstock discovered silver in
    Nevada.
  • Five years later Nevada was admitted as the 36th
    state.
  • Examples of this happened many times in the west
    creating boomtowns.

4
Statehood
  • Mining lead to statehood for Colorado, Arizona,
    the Dakotas, and Montana.
  • When the mines were exhausted many towns were
    abandoned.

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7
Linking the nation
  • In 1862 Abraham Lincoln signed the Pacific
    Railway Act.
  • The government offered land grants out west for
    every mile of track they laid down.
  • During the 1850s and 1860s the government gave
    away 120 million acres of land.

8
Union Pacific
  • Under the direction of Grenville Dodge.
  • Started pushing westward from Omaha, NE in 1865.
  • Workers included Civil War vets, Irish
    immigrants, and ex-cons.

9
Central Pacific
  • Lead by Leland Stanford.
  • Headed east from Sacramento, CA. Had to deal with
    building through mountains.
  • Hired 10,000 Chinese laborers. Shipped all goods
    around South America.

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11
Changing America
  • In 1883 the American Railway Association divided
    the nation into 4 time zones.
  • U.S. was connected like never before.

12
Open Range
  • Longhorn cattle lived free in Texas.
  • After the Civil War beef prices rose so cheap
    cattle was needed in the east.
  • Cowboys began driving cattle up to Kansas to get
    on the rail lines back east.

13
Homestead Act
  • Stephen Long in 1819 called the Great Plains the
    Great American Desert.
  • In 1862 the U.S. passed the Homestead Act to
    encourage settlement.
  • For 10 people could get 160 acres of land.

14
Closing of the Frontier
  • In 1889 the U.S. opened the last territories for
    settlement in Oklahoma.
  • 10,000 people rushed to claim land in OK.
  • The next year the census said there was no longer
    a frontier in America.

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16
Nomadic People
  • Great Plains Indians largely relied on the
    buffalo.
  • They were nomadic people who followed the herds
    for food.

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18
Dakota Sioux Uprising
  • The Dakota Sioux had agreed to live on
    reservations in Minnesota for annuities.
  • After the rebellion 307 Dakotas were sentenced to
    death.
  • After the Sioux fled Minnesota for the Dakota
    territory.

19
Sand Creek Massacre, 1864
  • John Evans ordered Cheyenne Indians in Colorado
    to surrender.
  • In 1864 Chief Black Kettle looked to negotiate
    peace.
  • He was ordered to camp at Sand Creek where his
    people were massacred.

20
Red Clouds War
  • In the mid 19th Century gold was discovered in
    the Black Hills
  • The Lakota controlled the Black Hills and the
    Bighorn Mountains.
  • In 1866 a group of Lakota under Crazy Horse wiped
    out a group of American soldiers under Captain
    Fetterman.

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23
Plans for Peace
  • The Indian Peace Commission of 1867 proposed two
    large reservations on the Plains.
  • Reservations were meant to assimilate Indians
    into white culture.

24
Battle of the Little Bighorn, Custers Last Stand
  • By the 1870s Indians left the reservations.
  • On June 25, 1876 Lt. Col. George Custer attacked
    a group of Lakota and Cheyenne by the Little Big
    Horn River.

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29
Nez Perce
  • In 1877 the Nez Perce people under Chief Joseph
    refused to move to a reservation.
  • They eventually would surrender and be forced to
    move to Oklahoma.

30
Wounded Knee
  • Defying orders the Lakota Sioux continued to do a
    Ghost Dance ritual.
  • Sitting Bull had returned from Canada and was
    about to be arrested.
  • December 29, 1890 200 Lakota were wiped out by
    the army.

31
Chapter 19 Review
  • Page 544, 1 and 4
  • Page 545, 1-10
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