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Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis. Louisiana Purchase. Good Deal: Paid France $15 million Doubled the size of the country Gained control of the Mississippi River Meriwether Lewis and William Clark Explored geography Created maps ( routes to the Pacific Ocean)
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Louisiana Purchase • Good Deal: Paid France $15 million • Doubled the size of the country • Gained control of the Mississippi River Meriwether Lewis and William Clark • Explored geography • Created maps (routes to the Pacific Ocean) • Studied how Indian tribes lived • Was helped by Sacagawea
Hmmmmmm.. • Sounds interesting, but I am afraid of the journey and leaving what I know and where I feel safe. • Would you leave your home to explore and settle on a new land?
Homestead Act:To expand the west • May 20, 1862 • Qualifications: Head of House • 21 years or older • Citizen • Can not bear arms against the United States
Land Allotment: • ¼ section or less • Approximate 160 acres Filing Requirement: • Swear for personal use only • Application at land office • Ten dollars
DEATH! • If the head of the house dies: • Spouse inherits the land • If they both die – oldest child
LOSS OF LAND: • If you have not worked on it for five years • Can’t lose land due to previous debt • If no one has lived there for more than 6 months
1841-1866: approximately 350,000Americans traveled West for a variety of reasons: • a fresh start • fertile farmland • religious persecution • adventure • prospects of riches
Four Jump-Off Points St. Joseph, Missouri • Independence, Missouri • Council Bluffs, Iowa • Nauvoo, Illinois
The Cost of Traveling West: • $800.00 -$1,200.00 • Most people who traveled west were fairly well off • According to a “Guide To California” published in 1849 necessary supplies for a party of four could cost near $600.00.
Other items the travelers brought with them included: Candles Soap 60 lbs. Coffee Bedding 100 lbs. Sugar Tools 200 lbs. Lard Clothing 40 lbs. Salt 8 lbs. Pepper
The Journey: • six (6) months to complete • Must start in the early Spring • Too early, could face flooded rivers, and late snows • Too late they faced possible of severe weather conditions while crossing the Rockies.
Oregon Trail • Fur trappers -attracted to the plentiful animals. • Settlers/farmers -attracted by the fertile land in certain areas. • Used guidebooks to travel - often wrong • Donner Party – took a cut-off and was snowed in on the Sierra Nevada Mountain. Resorted to extremes to survive.
Westward Transportation • Walking: most people, except for the aged and ill, walked 2,000 miles in about 6 months • Disney World (Florida) is approximately 1,100 miles away!
Scores of wagons traveled over the same tracks. Usually, wagons traveled several columns across, and several wagons deep. A view from the sky would reveal perhaps a dozen or so tracks parallel to these.
Canals • Rivers were easy for transporting both people and goods. (cheaper and quicker) • River “towns” became crowded like the cities – people moved farther away • Connecting rivers were also needed
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Koj5yGigFNU • Canalswere the answer – man-made “rivers” used to move goods and for quicker travel. • Barges moved along the canals, pulled by mules or horses which walked along the edge of the water. • Erie Canal (363 miles) – took 8 years and $7 million. http://www.songsforteaching.com/folk/eriecanal.htm
Canals were dug by men with shovels and horses • Carried goods, such as furniture and clothing to the west. • Brought back goods, such as grain and lumber to the east.
Challenges: • Terrain, ranging from wide open prairie to the desert like Badlands, made travel difficult. • Mountains could be impassable, and they always feared the lack of fresh water and food. • Hardships along the trails were common, and varied. Weather could turn severe without notice.
Hardships: • Indians, although usually helpful, could always pose a threat. • Daily routines were exhausting. Food and water had to be obtained. Fires had to be started, meals cooked, pots cleaned, etc. • Accidents and disease was all to common, and unfortunately deadly.
Accidents were common • Children fell or jumped off, crushed to death by the wheels or oxen • Bison stampede smashed wagons • Adults and children drowned in river crossings. • Bitten by poisonous snakes (land and water)
Homes • Log Cabins • Sod Houses: • No tress on the Great Plains • Used chunks of sod • Often built into a hill • Leaked, insects, dark, uncomfortable
Manifest Destiny – President James Polk believed in this doctrine • It is the idea that it was the will of God for the U.S. to extend from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean.
The Mexican War (1846) Causes • Mexico was opposed to Texas becoming a U.S. territory • The U.S. and Mexico disagreed where about the southern boundary of Texas.
Did I “Polk” and provoke the war with Mexico? Maybe! • President Polk used this border dispute to justify moving U.S. troops into Mexican territory. • “Remember the Alamo”
The Alamo: About 200 Americans, including Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett, versus over 6,000 Mexican troops. • Americans held the mission for 12 days, but the Mexicans won. Most Americans eventually were killed. • Overall: U.S. Army was too strong for the Mexicans – won easily.
http://www.pibmug.com/files/map_test.swf Results • Mexico agreed that the Rio Grande River was the southern boundary of Texas. • Mexico gave all of present-day California, Nevada, and Utah, as well as part of New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming • The U.S. paid Mexico $15 million for this land – called Mexican Cession.
The Gadsden Purchase • 5 years later – U.S. paid Mexico $10 million for more land in southern New Mexico and Arizona. • U.S. Railroad companies wanted to build train routes to California on this land
Ideas Move EAST • Ideas about equality and democracy moved Who was allowed to vote? • East – Only white males over 21 who owned property • West – ALL white males over 21 Voting rules were eventually changed in the east.