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Ch 18 The Western Frontier. 1858-1896. Why did many Americans move to the western frontier in the mid 1800s?. The Mining Booms. Sec 1. Mining is Big Business. After the California Gold Rush ended in the mid-1850s, miners began prospecting in other parts of the West
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Ch 18 The Western Frontier 1858-1896
Why did many Americans move to the western frontier in the mid 1800s?
The Mining Booms Sec 1
Mining is Big Business • After the California Gold Rush ended in the mid-1850s, miners began prospecting in other parts of the West • Most gold was located in underground lodes- rich streaks of ore sandwiched between layers of rock • Large mining companies began to replace the lone miner
Comstock Lode- rich lode of silver found on the banks of the Carson River in Nevada Comstock Lode
Gold strikes created boomtowns- towns that grew up almost overnight around mining sites Mining Frontier
Lively, often lawless Violence was a part of everyday life Many people carried large amounts of cash and guns Vigilantes dealt out their own kind of justice without judge or jury Life in Boomtowns
Many mining booms were followed by busts. Many boomtowns turned into ghost towns as people left when the ore was gone Boom and Bust
Railroads • The nation’s railways expanded rapidly to meet demands of the miners in the west • Miners needed to get their ore to the East and they need to get supplies • Railroad track increased from 35,000 to 150,000 miles
Government and Railroads • To promote growth the government gave the railroad companies 130 million acres of land • Much of the land was purchased or obtained in treaties from Native Americans
Transcontinental Railroad • Transcontinental Railroad- railway that would span the continent and connect the Atlantic and Pacific coasts • TCRR Map
What kind of challenges did the railways face in building the transcontinental railroad?
Challenges • 1700 miles • Weather • Hot plains • Cold mountains • Geography • Rugged mountains • Labor
Transcontinental Railway • Completed May 10, 1869 • Union Pacific working from the east completed 1038 miles of track • Central Pacific working from the west completed 742 miles of track • Met in Promontory Point, Utah
How did the Railroads affect the economy of the United States?
Effects of Trains • Steel Industry • Coal Industry • Timber Industry • Railroad car manufacturing • Creation of time zones
Ranchers and Farmers Sec 2
If you were a settler in the West how would you build a house?
When the Spanish settled Mexico they brought longhorns, a tough breed of cattle with them These cattle eventually spread throughout Texas Cattle on the Plains
At this time, much of Texas was open range, not fenced or divided into lots Ranchers added to their herd by rounding up wild cattle and branding them Branding Open Range
The Long Drive • To sell their cattle ranchers had to drive them to the nearest rail point • The Long Drive- led cattle more than 1000 miles to meet the railroads • Between the late 1860s and the mid 1880s more than 5 million cattle traveled on long drives
Life on the Trail • Hard work • Long hours- up to 15 hour days • Bad weather- hot sun, bad rainstorms, dust storms • Lonely • Rustlers • Geography- raging rivers
Cattle Kingdom Ends • Just like mining the boom eventually bust • Overgrazing depleted farmlands • Too many cattle on the market
Farmers • Early pioneers did not believe the land of the plains could be farmed • Dry • Tough soil
Homestead Act • Homestead Act- law passed by Congress that gave people 160 free acres of land if they paid a fee and lived on the land for 5 years • This brought farmers to the plains to homestead- earn ownership of land by settling on it