settling the far west

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Settling the Far West. Two Visions of the West. “Mythic West” vs. Pioneers & gunslingers Individualism, freedom, & opportunity. “Tragic West” Greed, irresponsibility, exploitation Destroyed wildlife & nearly exterminated Native Americans. Reasons for Moving West. PUSH Factors Civil War - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Settling the Far West
Page 2: Settling the Far West

Two Visions of the West

“Mythic West” vs.

Pioneers & gunslingersIndividualism, freedom, & opportunity

“Tragic West”

Greed, irresponsibility, exploitationDestroyed wildlife & nearly exterminated Native Americans

Page 3: Settling the Far West

Reasons for Moving West

PUSH Factors Civil War Failure to achieve

prosperity in the East

Repression

PULL Factors Railroad Land availability Natural resources

Page 4: Settling the Far West

Civil War made transcontinental

RR possible – Pacific Railroads Act (1862)

A race between Union Pacific and Central Pacific ended in Promontory, Utah (1869)

Chinese recruited for RR work were later subject to racism

Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) due to resentment of white workers

The Transcontinental Railroad

Page 5: Settling the Far West

Women in the West had

greater equality within the family

Large numbers of immigrants

African American “Exodusters” fled post-Reconstruction discrimination and poverty

“Buffalo soldiers” in the Indian Wars

Diversity in the West

Page 6: Settling the Far West

Began with California Gold

Rush in 1849 Comstock Lode (1873)

generated vast wealth Permanent settlements

resulted In late 1800s, mining

turned commercial

Mining

Page 7: Settling the Far West

Violations of Fort Laramie Treaty (1851)

brought conflict Sand Creek Massacre (1864) and other

violence led to new Indian policies Great Sioux Wars were the result of

Custer’s expedition into Sioux hunting grounds

Despite victory at Little Bighorn, Sioux eventually gave up and were moved to reservations

Great Sioux Wars

Page 8: Settling the Far West

“Tell your people that since the Great Father promised that we should never be removed, we have been moved five times… I think you had better put the Indians on wheels and you can run them around wherever you wish.” – Chief Spotted Tail of the Sioux

“I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed… The old men are dead… I want to have time to look for my children, and see how many of them I can find… Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired. My heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever.” – Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce

Indian Resistance Ends

Page 9: Settling the Far West

Movement started by

Wovoka in 1888 in order to see Indian lands returned

When Lakota Sioux defied the ban on the Ghost Dance, this led to the Wounded Knee Massacre (1890)

Ghost Dance Movement

Page 10: Settling the Far West

Resulted from:OverhuntingClimate changeCompetition for grasslandsDiseaseBarbed wire

Decimation of the Buffalo

Page 11: Settling the Far West

“Many, if not most, of our Indian wars have had their origin in broken promises and acts of injustice on our part.” – Rutherford B. Hayes

A Century of Dishonor (1881) brought attention to the Indians’ plightDawes Severalty Act (1887) was central to the new policy of “Americanizing” Indians

Remaking Indian Policy

Page 12: Settling the Far West

Homestead Act (1862) and railroad land grants made

farm land available for purchase Land is cheap, but life was hard – many claims

abandoned New technologies played a significant role in

conquering the West Small farmers who stayed struggled with indebtedness,

leading to political movement through the Grange

Homesteading

Page 13: Settling the Far West

Shortage of meat after the Civil War created

opportunities Cowtowns emerged, but the boom was shortlived

Cattle Drives

Page 14: Settling the Far West

1890 census showed no end to consistent settlement,

which prompted the issuance of Frederick Jackson Turner’s frontier thesis

Turner believed that American character was shaped by the existence of new areas to conquer

“Four centuries from the discovery of America, at the end of a hundred years under the Constitution, the frontier has gone and with its going has closed the first period of American history.” – Frederick Jackson Turner

End of the Frontier