210 likes | 370 Views
Unit 2 Chapter 3 Lesson 2. Essential Question:. How did the settlements of pioneers effect the environment of the West?. Pioneers on the Plains. The Great Plains Great Plains = Great American Desert A dry grassland in the middle of the country. Few trees, harsh weather, low rainfall.
E N D
Essential Question: • How did the settlements of pioneers effect the environment of the West?
Pioneers on the Plains • The Great Plains Great Plains = Great American Desert • A dry grassland in the middle of the country. • Few trees, harsh weather, low rainfall
The Great Plains • Government wanted to encourage pioneers, or new settlers, to move to the Great Plains. • Food and farm goods could be carried by rail back to the growing cities in the East.
Homestead Act • Law offered free land (160 acres) to American citizens and immigrants who were willing to start new farms in the Great Plains.
Homestead Act • A man over 21, or woman who was head of the house • Small fee $10.00 • Farm and live on the land for 5 years, then the land was yours • Improve it by building a 12-by-14 dwelling and growing crops
Homesteaders Settlers who claimed land through the Homestead Act
Settling on the Plains • Farmers who had to bust up the soil that had grass with thick roots were called “sodbusters”
Sodbusters • The farmers would then use the sod to build their house. • They were cool in the summer, warm in the winter, and fireproof • Walls were often full of bugs, worms, snakes, and mice.
American Fever • Families from Germany, Sweden Norway, Russia, and other European countries were coming to the Great Plains. • They brought valuable farming skills
American Fever • Russians brought a type of wheat that would survive the weather of the Great Plains. • Great Plains become the World's most productive wheat growing region.
Exodusters • African Americans who began moving into the Great Plains to escape unfair treatment. (Exodus from the Bible) • Started new towns like Nicodemus, Kansas Nicodemus, Kansas
Nicodemus, Kansas The town symbolizes the pioneering spirit of these ex-slaves who fled the war-torn South in search of “real” freedom and a chance to restart their lives.
Life of the Plains • New technology helped to make farming easier. • Steel plows • Windmills • Barbed wire • Dry farming
New Technology Steel plow Windmills Barbed wire Dry farming, disking deep
Problems • Harsh weather: tornadoes, blizzards, bitter cold, hail, and flooding • Summer: blazing heat and little rain • Grasshoppers ate fences and axe handles after they ate crops
Growth in the West • West shows growth • Japanese immigrants settle in California and are successful farmers. • New railroad lines bring settlers into Washington, Oregon, and California
Review • Describe the purpose of the Homestead Act. • What challenges did the homesteaders face? • Why did the Exodusters come to the Plains? • How did technology help the farmers turn the Great Plains into productive farmland?