Growth of a New Nation
SS8H5 The Student will explain significant factors that affected the development of Georgia as part of the growth of the US
between 1789 and 1840. (a, b, c, d )
To interact with this presentation…
• Use your device and go to www.socrative.com• Select student login.• Enter the room number for your teacher:• Wallace- b450dd5d
Map of the United States : exhibiting the post-roads, the situations, connections & distances of the post-offices, stage roads, counties & principal rivers / by Abraham Bradley Jun'r
CREATED/PUBLISHED[5th ed.]Philadelphia : Made and sold by Caldcleugh and Thomas, [1804]
Following the American Revolution, the United States began to expand. There was a thirst for land and for the independence it brought to its owners. Farming was the country’s main occupation and source of income.
Thomas Jefferson negotiated the purchase from France that doubled the size of the United States for just $15,000,000.
Socrative.com Question
• True or False.
Thomas Jefferson had the power, under the US Constitution, to negotiate the Louisiana
purchase.
• Even though he knew that there was no executive authority in the Constitution to purchase the territory, he feared Spain and France had the power to block American trade access to the port of New Orleans.• Then, in 1804 he sent an expedition
(Corps of Discovery) into this unknown territory to find a “Northwest Passage”.
Corps of Discovery 1804-1806• Lewis and Clark explored the newly acquired
land for a water route through the continent. https://www.
youtube.com/watch?v=D7vCQpqolXw
Age of Expansion and Economic Growth
• Even though the Revolution left the U.S. in financial ruin and few people had any money to pay taxes, there were many new inventions that soon brought prosperity.– mechanized farming tools, steamboats, and
railroad engines– advances in industry, business, and commerce
Socrative.com Question
• Which invention was said to have been the catalyst for the Industrial Revolution?
Canal boat being towed by a mule.
Early steamboat
Advances in transportation created business opportunities and the movement of goods andpeople was made easier and consequently caused economic growth.
Economic impact of new inventions
• Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin
Date Created/Published: 1869 Dec. 18.
•Increased the speed at which the seeds could be removed from the cotton.•Cotton now becomes a profitable cash crop.•Increased the demand for labor to tend the new fields of cotton that were now being planted.
Video Clip
• http://www.gpb.org/georgiastories/story/king_cotton_and_the_cotton_gin
Innovations in Reaping and Threshing change agriculture and food stores
Threshing is removing the grains from the stalk.
Reaping is the cutting down of the wheat.
Land policies
• Georgia tries to attract new settlers• Georgia uses different systems to give land away– Headright system was the first method used and gave
the land to the white male “head’ of the family which had the “right” to receive up to 1,000 acres (lands east of the Oconee River)
– Land lotteries began around 1803 when any white male at least 21 years of age could buy a chance to spin the lottery wheel for a designated land lot (lands west of the Oconee River)
Yazoo Land Fraud of 1795
• One of the worst political scandals in GA history
• When GA borders still went west to the Mississippi River
• Native tribes such as the Creek and Cherokee still lived there
Yazoo River located in the present day state of Mississippi
• Land speculators tried to make profits from the sale of this land
• First needed to own it in order to sell it for profit
• Bribed the governor and legislators to pass the Yazoo Act which sold this land (35 million acres) to four main speculation companies for merely $.02 an acre
(See map on slide 14)
Yazoo Fraud discovered• New settlers bought this land• Citizens of Georgia discover the bribery (fraud) and replace
all the legislators the following year in the next election• Newly elected General Assembly repeals the Act which
now causes confusion on ownership of the land• Laws suits are filed by those who bought the land and did
not want to give up their claims• This went all the way to the Supreme Court which settled
by paying off all the claims• Georgia’s new border now becomes the Chattahoochee
River, Georgia ceded the disputed land to the federal government in exchange for $1,250,000