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The West: Gilded Age

The West: Gilded Age. Words to know. Hydraulic: relating to, or operated by a liquid moving in a confined space under pressure Extract: remove or take out, especially by effort or force Migration: movement from one part of something to another

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The West: Gilded Age

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  1. The West: Gilded Age

  2. Words to know • Hydraulic: relating to, or operated by a liquid moving in a confined space under pressure • Extract: remove or take out, especially by effort or force • Migration: movement from one part of something to another • Open Range: a large area of grazing land without fences or other barriers. • Homestead: a house, especially a farmhouse, and outbuildings. • Exterminated: destroy completely or kill

  3. After the Civil War, the area west of the Mississippi River was settled by miners, ranchers, and farmers Land use in 1860 Land use in 1880

  4. Mining was the first industry to attract settlers to the West after the Civil War Before the Civil War, miners discovered gold in California, Colorado, Nevada After the Civil War, miners resumed their migration into the West to find more gold and silver

  5. Some miners found huge discoveries of gold and silver By 1880, miners at the Comstock Lode extracted $270 million in gold and $400 million in silver Silver miners in Leadville, CO

  6. In the Gilded Age, mining corporations used expensive hydraulic mining techniques to extract most of the gold and silver in the West

  7. Mining towns helped develop the West because each town created a need for businesses and government

  8. Ranchers drove longhorn cattle across the open range to railroad towns After the Civil War, demand for beef led to a cattle boom in the West

  9. Life on the Open Range: Cattle Drive • The men who worked the cattle in the treeless expanses of the West, at least one-fourth of them blacks, became known as cowboys. The image of the courageous, spirited horseman living a dangerous life carried with it an appeal that refuses to disappear. Driving a thousand to two thousand cattle hundreds of miles to market; facing lightning and cloudbursts and drought, stampedes, rattlesnakes, and outlaws; sleeping under the stars and catching chow at the chuckwagon—the cowboys dominated the American galaxy of folk heroes.

  10. The Cattle Drive • The typical drive comprised 1,500-2,500 head of cattle. The typical outfit consisted of a boss, (perhaps the owner), from ten to fifteen hands, each of whom had a string of from five to ten horses; a horse wrangler who handled the horses; and a cook, who drove the chuck wagon. The wagon carried the bedrolls; tents were considered excess luxury. The men drove and grazed the cattle most of the day, herding them by relays at night. Ten or twelve miles was considered a good day's drive, as the cattle had to thrive on the route. They ate grass; the men had bread, meat, beans with bacon, and coffee. Wages were about $40 a month, paid when the herd was sold

  11. Cattle were sold in Western cattle towns like Dodge City for $40... Cattle bought for $4 in Texas were driven 3 months across the open range ..and shipped by train to meatpacking plants in cities like Chicago Cattle drives led to new towns in the West Dodge City, Kansas

  12. Cattle ranching faced difficulties by the 1880s Overgrazing and drought left little grassland for grazing cattle The open range was closing as farmers used new barbed wire fencing to close off their farms By 1900, the glory days of the cowboy were over

  13. The majority of migrants into the west were farmers In 1862, Congress passed the Homestead Act, giving 160 acres of free western land to anyone who promised to farm the land for 5 years Hundreds of thousands of migrants moved into the Great Plains to gain free farm land

  14. Homestead life was difficult on the Great Plains Farming was difficult, but homesteaders learned dry farming techniques and planted new varieties of crops

  15. Homesteaders built sod houses because of the lack of trees in the Plains Tornados and droughts were constant problems 60% of homesteaders failed to make it the required 5 years… …but those who were successful transformed America into a food exporter

  16. Some African Americans known as “exodusters” took advantage of the Homestead Act to escape the Jim Crow South Nicodemus, Kansas

  17. Miners, ranchers, and farmers were connected to Eastern cities in 1869 with the completion of the transcontinental railroad The federal government encouraged railroad construction by giving millions of acres of land to railroad companies

  18. The Union Pacific was built from East to West by Irish workers The Central Pacific was built from West to East by Chinese workers

  19. On May 10, 1869 the two tracks met at Promontory Point in Utah By 1890, there were five railroads that extended to the Pacific Coast

  20. Railroad innovations included time zones to coordinate train schedules …luxury trains called Pullman Palace cars and refrigerated train cars

  21. Railroad Cars

  22. Chinese workers were recruited to America to build the railroad… European immigrants also helped build the railroads. They included the Irish and Scots Irish.

  23. The migration of Americans into the West left no unorganized territories by 1890…the western frontier had closed Homestead Sales, 1870-1940

  24. What changes did western expansion bring to America during the Gilded Age?

  25. The Gilded Age brought devastation to the Indians By the end of the Civil War in 1865, 2/3 of all Indians lived on the Great Plains Plains Indians like the Sioux, Comanche, and Cheyenne tribes were dependent upon the buffalo and the horse

  26. Importance of the Buffalo

  27. In the 1830s, Jackson used the Indian Removal Act to relocateIndianstolandswestoftheMississippiRiver... …This “Indian Country” was located in the Plains and was protected from white settlers

  28. In the 1840s, Manifest Destiny led to the acquisition of new western territories... …as a result, Indians were concentrated ontosmallreservations

  29. The flood of miners, ranchers, and farmers during the Gilded Age violated Indian territories… …This led to a series of violent conflicts known as the “Indian Wars” Last of the Sioux (3.48)

  30. In 1864, Colorado militia attacked and murdered Cheyenne Indians, mostly women and children, in the Sand Creek Massacre

  31. In the 1870s, Americans flooded into Sioux territory in South Dakota when gold was discovered The Sioux, led by Sitting Bull, retaliated by ambushing Colonel Custer and all 197 soldiers in the Seventh Cavalry at Little Big Horn

  32. The most effective way to defeat the Indians was by killing off the buffalo The Buffalo (2.52) Hunters killed buffalo for their hides which were sold in the East The U.S. government and railroad companies hired hunters to kill buffalo

  33. A hunter could kill 100 buffalo per day; The buffalo hunters in the West killed as many as 3 million per year By the end of the Gilded Age, less than 1,000 buffalo remained in the Plains Buffalo skulls

  34. Buffalo Skulls

  35. The last Indian battle in U.S. history was Wounded Knee in 1890 The U.S. army attacked the Sioux after tribal leaders refused to stop their “ghost dances” At Wounded Knee, 200 men, women, and children were killed; Indians never fought the U.S. again

  36. With the buffalo all but exterminated and the frontier closed by white settlers, the Indian wars ended in 1890 By 1890, Indians were restricted to small reservations in isolated locations

  37. Change in Policy towards Native Americans Assimilation: Indian society becomes a part of American society through education.

  38. Dawes Act Divided reservation land into individual plots. 160 acres would be given to each Native American family. Most land was unsuitable for farming. It was an attempt by the federal government to make Indian families self supporting and create pride through land ownership. Most Native Americans sold their land.

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