350 likes | 359 Views
Explore the transformation of the American West with key events like Indian Wars, mining booms, railroad expansion, and farming challenges. Learn about the impact on Native Americans, settlers, and the economy.
E N D
MR. LIPMAN’S APUS POWERPOINT CHAPTER 26 Changes to the Great West 1860-1896
Key Issues in the Chapter • Indians and what will become of them • Expansion of RR’s and Mining Operations • Population Growth out West and Expansion of Farming as a big business • Farmers and the 4 D’s • (Debt, Drought, Deflation, Depression) • Grange Movement • Populist Movement • Gold vs. Silver Movement
Indians and the reservation system • 1851 treaty at Fort Laramie • 1853 – treaty at Fort Atkinson • establishing boundaries for each tribe; attempted to put tribes in 2 great colonies (to north and south of a corridor of planned settlements for whites) • Problem is that “tribes” and “chiefs” making treaties with whites didn’t represent most Indians • Indians’ nomadic life could not be changed to reservation living
Warfare with Indians • Many Army troops were recent immigrants • 1/5 (20%) of US personnel were blacks • Called “Buffalo Soldiers” by Indians • Massacres and brutal attacks occurred between whites and Indians throughout the Indian wars by both sides but whites clearly killed more.
The Massacres • Sand Creek Massacre : Colorado in 1864 • 400 Indians, who believed they had immunity, massacred by a militia led by Col. Chivington • 1866 massacre at Bozeman Trail in Wyoming • Indians attacked and killed 81 soldiers and civilians, mutilating the corpses • 1874 – Custer attacked 2,500 entrenched Indians at Little Bighorn River (in Montana) who were led by Sitting Bull and all 264 soldiers killed • Sitting Bull escapes to Canada
1877 – the Nez Percé rebelled • Led by Chief Joseph on 3-month, 1,700 mile march, attempting to reach Canada and join with Sitting Bull • Chief Joseph surrendered when he was told the Nez Percé would be able to return to ancestral lands in Idaho • Nez Percé then forced onto reservation in Kansas where 40% of them die from disease • Apache tribes in Arizona and New Mexico most difficult to conquer • Apaches led by Geronimo eventually pursued into Mexico to force a surrender
Battle (Massacre) of Wounded Knee (1890) • Over 200 Indians massacred by US soldiers • Last battle in effort to subdue the Indians • The debate over how to treat the Indians: • Reformers tried to persuade Indians to become like whites (assimilation) • Hard-liners insisted on forced containment and brutal punishment • Neither side was respectful of Indian culture
Late 1800s, Indians ghettoized on reservations • Possible to maintain their cultural independence but In reality, they lived off gov’t charity • Important factors leading to Indian defeat: • Railroad brings more settlers and soldiers • Indians destroyed by white diseases and alcohol • Extinction of buffalo (on which Indians depended)
1887 – The Dawes Act {forced assimilation} • Severalty – ownership of land by individual only • Goal was to destroy tribes and Indian culture • Dissolved tribes as legal entities, ended tribal ownership of land, individual ownership only • All Indians finally gained citizenship in 1924 DAWES ACT ESSENTIALLY A FAILURE AND IN 1924 MOVE TO RESTORE TRIBAL BASIS TO THE INDIANS (INDIAN REORGANIZATION ACT)
Indian Land Losses, 1850 – 2000Perhaps no race suffered more in America
Mining in West: • Gold found in California in 1848 • 1858 – gold and silver found in Colorado Rockies • 1859 – Comstock Lode (Nevada): gold and silver • Boom towns would set up and then disappear and become ghost towns • Corp’s would replace individual prospectors and machines would replace human speculators
Impact of mining • Mining frontier attracted population • Women ran boardinghouses • and worked as prostitutes • Women vote much earlier in West • Gold & silver finance the Civil War & build railroads • Silver discoveries made silver issue in US politics a powerful issue
R.R.’s led to cowboys making the “Long Drive” • Cattle driven north to railroads, & shipped East from giant cattle yards in Kansas City and Chicago • Journey was about 1,000 miles and Cattle grazed on open grass on the way north • The end of the independent cattle drives • Fenced off land with barbed wire (1874) • 1886 – 1887 – terrible cold winter left thousands of cattle frozen to death • Long Drives led to the myth of the Cowboy
Farmers settled the West in great numbers • 1862 – Homestead Act (Morrill Act) • Gave settlers 160 acres of land if they improved and worked the land for 5 years • Before C.W. land sold for money for by gov’t; now land given away to encourage settlement • Problem-land not productive enough and not enough water so most land ends up in Corp. hands after farmers abandon it. • Most settlers actually got land from RRs or real estate agents
Railroads helped bring people to West • Farmers ship crops east, opening up new markets • Advertised to immigrants in Europe to get them to buy land • Adapting to the dry climate and lack of rain water • “dry farming” technique (frequent shallow cultivation) used to adapt to dry environment; leads to Dust Bowl in 1930s because ground lost all its nutrients
Land rush in Oklahoma (1889) • Federal government opens land for settlement • Some “sooners” go before being authorized to, and forcibly evicted by the government – 50,000 settlers dashed for a claim in Oklahoma Territory and in 1907 Oklahoma made a state 1890 US census official determined the frontier was closed • Impact of the closing of the frontier • Americans recognized that land was not inexhaustible and Government began setting aside land for national parks
1893 – Frederick Jackson Turner’s essay, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History” • Frontier acted as a “safety valve”, allowing immigrants and poor in cities to move west and prosper, instead of staying in cities and spreading discontent (strikes, socialism, rebellion, etc.) as the poor did in Europe . • Not all historians accept this “safety value” theory
The Farm Becomes a Factory • Post Civil War through 1870s – high prices for farm commodities led farmers to expand into “cash” crops and production farming rather than subsistence farming • Money made from selling crops would be spent on goods at general store in town or through mail order
Large-scale farms become big business: • Worked with banks, railroads, manufacturers so incurred large debts • Had to buy expensive machinery to farm (that also greatly increased speed of harvesting) • Small farmers, driven off land • Frequently blamed railroads, banks, global markets and Gov’t instead of their lack of management skills
Many farmers became 1-crop farmers (like wheat and corn) and heavily in debt • No longer independent; if prices declined on competitive world market, farmers would be hurt • 1880s – 1890s – farming prices fell because of foreign competition and over production • Deflation becomes a major problem as money supply gets tight but interest rates continue to rise and many farmers lose their land and become merely tenant farmers
Farmers faced Environmental problems • Grasshoppers (in West) and boll weevils (in South) • Flooding and erosion took away fertile topsoil • Droughts in West in mid 1880s • Farmers also faced Governmental problems • High taxes • Protective tariffs helped Eastern manufacturers but forced farmers to pay higher prices • Farmers had to sell goods on competitive, unprotected world market
Farmers faced Corporate problems • Large trusts that made things could raise prices to very high levels • Middlemen took large cut on needed goods • Grain operators who stored farm products before sale raised rates whenever they wanted • Railroad charged high rates to ship goods • Grange movement started to solve problems • Organized in 1867 by Oliver H. Kelley • Gave farmers sense of belonging & quickly became economic tool to combat monetary problems
Grangers get states to help them • State laws passed to regulate R.R. rates and fees from grain elevators and warehouses • State laws overturned by Supreme Court • Wabash v. Illinois (1886) – states had no power to regulate interstate commerce; only Congress could do that • Grange movement faded as laws stricken
Farmers’ Alliance • Organized late 1870s to socialize and work together to fight R.R. and manufacturers • Failed when landless tenant farmers, sharecroppers, and farm workers; excluded blacks in South because of white racism • Failure leads to the Populist Movement
Populist (People’s) Party Platform: • Nationalize railroads, telephone, telegraph • Graduated Federal income tax • Government loan’s to farmers using crops stored in government-owned warehouses; crops held until prices rose • Free, unlimited coinage of silver • Weak in South (because of racial divide), but very strong in West • 1893 – panic and depression hurt farmers and workers, making their arguments even stronger
Crusaders for Populism • William Hope Harvey • advocating free silver • Ignatius Donnelly • Elected congressman from Minnesota • Mary Elizabeth (“Mary Yellin’”) Lease • Kansans should raise “less corn and more hell” 1894 – Jacob S. Coxey and his “army” marched from Ohio to Washington, DC demanding gov’t work programs
1894 – Pullman Strike • Pullman Company (built luxury RR cars) cut wages by 1/3 but did not cut rent prices • R.R. workers, led by Eugene V. Debs, go on strike • Pres. Cleveland orders troops to break up strike because “interferes with delivery of U. S. mail”. • Debs does 6 months in jail and becomes socialist • Populists argue big business using courts to their advantage at expense of the “little guy”
McKinley (gold) vs. Bryan (silver) • Election of 1896 centered on whether to maintain gold or silver as currency standard • Mark Hanna leads push to get McKinley the Republican nomination • Believes in “trickle down” theory and protective tariffs as well as gold standard Democrats refuse to nominate Cleveland at their convention – blame him for Panic of 1893
William Jennings Bryan’s Cross of Gold speech (fighting for silver to bring inflation) • Bryan nominated on platform of unlimited coinage of silver (16 to 1 ratio, instead of market 32 to 1) • Populists • Endorsed Bryan (because of his support for coinage of silver) so lose identity as 3rd party
“You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.”
Widespread fear of Bryan unites Republicans (savings would be devalued if silver coined) • Rich donate huge amounts to McKinley ($16 million total, to Bryan’s $1 million) • Fear and dirty tricks used: industrial workers told that orders, jobs, pay might be taken away if Bryan won • McKinley wins close popular vote with heavy majority in large East Coast cities
Importance of the 1896 election • Eastern workers did not unite with debtor farmers against big business • Big business, fiscal conservatives, middle-class values won • Political power shifted from rural areas to cities • Republicans dominated politics for next 36 years (except for 1912 – 1920) • Parties weakened, less voter participation in elections, regulation of industry and worker welfare became important issues
McKinley and the tariff issue • Business wants higher tariff because tariffs not high enough to cover gov’t expenses (want budget balanced) • Dingley Tariff Bill (1897) passed making average tariff rate over 40% • Prosperity returned to US erasing gold and silver issue • 1900 – Gold Standard Act passed • All paper money redeemable in gold • New gold discoveries and new processes put enough money into economy to introduce inflation and help debtors