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Expanding West. Why did Westward Expansion occur?. Opportunities for land ownership (Homestead Act) Technological advances, including the Transcontinental Railroad Possibility of wealth created by the discovery of gold and silver A new beginning for former slaves Adventure.
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Why did Westward Expansion occur? • Opportunities for land ownership (Homestead Act) • Technological advances, including the • Transcontinental Railroad • Possibility of wealth created by the discovery • of gold and silver • A new beginning for former slaves • Adventure
How did people’s perceptions and use of the Great Plains change after the Civil War? • 1850-1890 - Before 1860, those who crossed the Mississippi generally traveled all the way to the west coast. Few settled in the Great Plains. • Bitter cold winters • Low rainfall: drought and dust storms • Fierce winds: eroded soil • Treeless wasteland • Great American Desert
Free Land • Encouraged by the Homestead Act of 1862 • Gave free public land in the western territories to settlers who would live on and farm the land. • African Americans and Southerners moved west to seek new opportunities after the war. • farmers and immigrants flocked to the Great Plains during the decades after the Civil War • People began to see the Great Plains not as a "treeless wasteland" but as a vast area to be settled. • READ THE HOMESTEAD ACT
New Technology Opened new lands in the West for settlement and made farming prosperous • The Great Plains region was becoming a region of farms, ranches, and towns
New Technology • Railroads: • 1860-1890 RR grew fast • Transcontinental Railroad (1869) • Linked the Atlantic and Pacific Coast • Encouraging industrial and economic growth • Beef Cattle Raising: • Cattle Ranching appeared throughout the Great Plains: Texas • Demand for beef was high; ranchers would “drive” their cattle north to the railroad lines • Barbed Wire: • Allowed farmers to keep cattle from their crops
New Technology • Wheat Farming: • Farmers adopted an improved form of Russian wheat which required less water and grew well in dryer soil of the Great Plains • Steel Plow/Dry Farming: • With improved steel plows, farmers could break up the tough soil • Sod Houses/Windmills • Lacking trees and other materials, settlers on the Great Plains built their homes from sod; a sort of packed dirt held together by roots and cut into squares. • New models of windmills were used throughout the Great Plains to pump water from the ground and to provide power.
Regions Associated with Westward Expansion • Southeast • Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas • Midwest • Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota • Southwest • Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona • Rocky Mountains • Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Montana, Wyoming, Idaho
Cities Associated with Westward Expansion • Midwest • Chicago, St. Louis • Southwest • San Antonio, Santa Fe • Western (Rocky Mountains) • Denver, Salt Lake City • Pacific • Seattle
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