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Chapter 20 – Section 1. The Modern Era Begins. Disaster Strikes Galveston. On Sept. 8, 1900 a hurricane of unbelievable force struck Galveston 120 mph winds and High-cresting tidal waves left more than half of Galveston completely destroyed Nearly 6,000 deaths
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Chapter 20 – Section 1 The Modern Era Begins
Disaster Strikes Galveston • On Sept. 8, 1900 a hurricane of unbelievable force struck Galveston • 120 mph winds and • High-cresting tidal waves left more than half of Galveston completely destroyed • Nearly 6,000 deaths • Thousands injured and left homeless It was the worst natural disaster in U.S. History!
Galveston Before the Storm • In many ways, Galveston was the mostmodern Texas city – • first electric lights, telephones in the state • a world-class opera house that hosted some of the finest performers in the world
Aftermath of Galveston Could anything positive possibly come out of a disaster like the Galveston hurricane? YES!
U.S. Army Corp of Engineers built a seawall around the shoreline to prevent damaging waves and water surges from battering homes and businesses • Houses buildings jacked up or rebuilt on stilt platforms to raise them • Galveston adopts a new city manager form of government to handle the rebuilding (most common form of city government in Texas) • Galveston is a good model for seawalls and other protective measures to safeguard other coastal cities from tropical storm damage
Question: “How would an emergency such as a hurricane test a city government?”
OIL – TEXAS GOLD! • Less than 4 months after the Galveston hurricane in 1900, oil was discovered nearly 100 miles away. • Lyne T. Barret drilled the first well in Texas, a few miles from Nacogdoches.
Oil – Texas Gold • To process the crude oil, Joseph S. Cullinan built a refinery at Corsicana – the first one west of the Mississippi River • He pioneered the method of using natural gas to heat homes, provide lighting; also using oil to power and run railroad trains
Question: Why were Cullinan’s inventions especially important to the oil industry and consumers?
Spindletop – the First Gusher • On Jan 10, 1901 – at Spindletop, south of Beaumont, a gusher began shooting out 100,000 barrels of oil per day until it was capped 9 days later.
Spindletop – cont’d • Overnight, Beaumont became transformed, as oil prospectors and drillers flocked to the small city. • Oil companies like Texas Company (later TEXACO) began, and within a few months, Beaumont’s population grew from about 9,000 to over 50,000
Activity: 1. Draw a T-chart on paper. 2. On the left side of the T-chart, write “Texas Oil Boom”; on the right side write “California Gold Rush” 3. List as many similarities as you can that these events shared or had in common. Share your responses.
Oil Creates Texas Boomtowns • Early Boomtowns were noisy, dirty, crowded, and sometimes dangerous because some of the escaping gas fumes were deadly when inhaled. • A new settlement near the refinery joined with Goose Creek and Pelly to become the prosperous Baytown.
Question: What does the term “boomtown” mean?
Houston Benefits from Oil Discoveries • Houston became the center of the oil business industry. • Petroleum companies needed the banking, insurance, transportation, and legal services Houston could provide. • On Sept 7, 1914 – the Houston Ship Channel opened which allowed large ships and barges into the port.
Lumber Booms in East Texas • The oil boom in southeast Texas created a demand for products needed by oil companies – such as lumber to build the oil derricks and buildings. • Lumber operations created thousands of acres of deforested land, which some people believed should have been converted into farmland.
Lumber in East Texas – cont’d • Conservationists like W. Goodrich Jones urged replanting of pine trees for trees cut. • Many Texas leaders urged the development of additional industries • Brickmaking was a successful industry, which used local clay deposits to make high quality bricks.
Question: What was the effect of the oil and lumber industries on the environment?
Dallas Dominates Central Texas • By 1900, Dallas became the major city of central Texas. • It became a center for shipping and storing cotton, plus other goods. • It also became a financial center for banking, insurance, and legal services.
Dallas Dominates Central Texas • Neiman-Marcus department store opened in Dallas in 1907; • Sears and Roebuck (later “Sears”), a Chicago mail-order company, opened its southwestern U.S. distribution center in Dallas.
Question: Why would Sears and Roebuck choose to locate in Dallas?