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The West. The People, the Place, the Process. Major Questions (people, place, process). What is “the west”? – Myths vs. Realities Who were major actors? What were their interests? What were main conflicts? How and why did “the west” change over time?
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The West The People, the Place, the Process
Major Questions (people, place, process) • What is “the west”? – Myths vs. Realities • Who were major actors? • What were their interests? • What were main conflicts? • How and why did “the west” change over time? • How did late-19th c. history of west affect later history of region and nation?
Defining “The West” • “The West” can be defined as part of a longer historical process • Also an identifiable region and period • Both were defined by particular people with particular interests, vying with others for control of the region and future history
Gast image • What does image represent?
The Real Place: region and environment • Donald Worster: “the story of men and women trying to wrest a living from a condition of severe natural scarcity and, paradoxically, of trying to survive in the midst of entrenched wealth.” • J.W. Powell (1878): arid, need irrigation to make region habitable and useful • Immense mineral and timber wealth • Enviro. conditions necessitated new economic techniques, new patterns of ownership, new social relations
Role of Railroads • Railroad-building made west accessible • Transcontinental railroad finished 1869 • Routes spurred development • Profit motive – spurred new ways of thinking about and exploiting land and region • Led to diff. industries – cattle, towns, mining, agriculture • Necessitated diff. strategies of removal – Native Americans and bison would interfere with white settlers’ goals
The American West “empty” for white settlement: the power of images/maps to shape imagination and ideas of the region
Government Role • Question: when you think of “the west,” how visible is the power of fed. govt.? • Govt. often perceived as absent from west – made invisible • Reality: • National imperial ambitions, goal/process of accession of new territories, then incorporation into nation • Loans and land grants to railroads • Homestead Act, 1862, 160 acres to head of household • National war on Native Americans • Govt. set up and administered reservations • Provided Water – irrigation, dams, water rights • Economic and immigration policies that benefited west
Making the West Safe for White Settlement • Appropriation of Native American land; crowding them out • Part of longer process/history of taking land, moving or killing Native Americans • Change fromborderlands relations (no clear dominance = compromise/trade/better relationships) to dominance (killing/removal relationships) • Population pressure combined with highly-trained small military (27,000 soldiers) • Environmental pressures: killing of bison
Major Conflicts and Eventsbetween whites and N.A. • Shift from removal before Civil War to reservation system • Beginning of reservation system (1867) – N.A. were wards of govt. until they changed their ways • Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, Sioux/Cheyenne defeat Custer at Little Big Horn (1876) - Link • Plains Indian resistance – Nez Perce and Chief Joseph fight, flee, then surrender (1877) • Shrinking reservations in SD and Oklahoma (Sooners) • Dawes Act, 1887 – carved up reservations, individual plots of land, make N.A. become white • 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre, Ghost Dance, Sioux, predicted whites would disappear in spring 1891 - Link
Assimilation into White Society • Whites pushed goal of making N.A. become white: private property, farming, Indian schools = civilization, new language, beliefs, way of life
The West’s Major Economic Areas • Centrality of rail lines and new technologies • Cattle – western long drives only lasted short time (myth much longer); fencing and ranches • Agriculture – grain on Plains; fruits/vegs. in CA • Mining – from prospecting to industry – important to labor history • Women’s roles – western scarcity and life allowed women to break out of Victorian gender roles – worked outside home in non-trad. jobs (farming, merchants, prostitution)
The Real Frontier: Different Frontiers, Changing Class Relations • Three Frontiers: Mining, Cattle, Farming • Short period of individual social mobility • Each frontier quickly changed and consolidated – high capital $$$ needs – companies took over all 3 areas • Need for cheap labor: former cowboys, prospectors, African Americans, Chinese, and other immigrants • As a result, the west became site of class and racial conflict – fought over the spoils
Economic and Environmental Problems • Endangering native species – bison and others • Unsustainable agriculture – wet years raised expectations, then drought, stripping of native grasses • Ag. susceptible to world market, fluctuating prices for grain • Overexpansion; boom and bust in railroads, ag., and mining • Cattle and farming = monoculture, pestilence, introduction of invasive species • Conflicts over land and resources, labor conflicts • Solutions: agricultural cooperation (Grange and Populists); labor unions and parties
Ethnic and Racial Conflict • West was place for whites to prove superiority • Whites vs. Native Americans • Similarities to Reconstruction South – white supremacy, control of land, labor, resources • Appropriation of Hispanic lands • Use of migrant or immigrant labor – Irish, African American, Chinese, Japanese, then Mexican • Labor castes and control • Labor conflict – CA, SanFran’s Workingman’s Party in 1870s and 1880s – who has the right to earn a living? – republicanism/exclusion
Depicting the racial “other” – dehumanizing immigrant Chinese Making Chinese immigrants expendable Rationalizing exclusion (from nation, from work, etc.) – “they” don’t belong here
Chinese Railroad Workers Erased from History of West Thomas Hill, "The Last Spike," c. 1881, completion of the transcontinental railroad
Early Conservation and Environmental Movements • Beginnings of Conservation/ Environmental Movement conflicted with prior visions/uses/methods • John Muir and Yosemite Park, 1864 • Romantic wilderness ideals • Conflicts over water and land – should resources be used or preserved? – where does best “value” lie? • Conservation vs. Preservation • Issues of public land use – who had right to use lands?
Buffalo Bill and Early Films • Bucking Bronco, Edison Film, 1894 • Buffalo Dance, Edison Film, 1894 • Sioux Ghost Dance, Edison Film, 1894 • Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Parade, 1902
The West: Myth and Reality • Case study: Columbian Exposition, 1893: a site where American racial and frontier ideas were worked out, exhibited • Chicago: western city, railroad city, cattle, grain, immigration • 1893 Exposition: 400th Anniv. of Columbus/New World – festival commemorating Euro. settlement • The White City – white progress, civilization – architecture, tech., arts • The Midway offered comparisons to other “races”, “primitives” • Expo. offered vision of what whites wanted the rest of the west to become
The White City 1893 Chicago World’s Fair
Staging the West: Turner and Buffalo Bill • 2 versions, 2 men – enactment of western myth in 1893 • F.J. Turner – historian, “frontier thesis” • Moving frontier, progress, farm families, Indians irrelevant, democracy, individualism, new Americans, econ./phys. mobility • Used images from history: free land, log cabins, stage coaches • 1890 U.S. Census declared frontier closed – Turner wondered about what that would mean for American character • Buffalo Bill – frontier conflict, whites and N.A., whites under attack, justified fight against N.A. • Real and imaginary; used images of conflict, heroic martyr (Custer) • White frontier men “know” Indians, then beat them
Staging the West: Turner and Buffalo Bill (continued) • Similarities: • Whites justified in taking over “empty” continent • Conquest = a good thing • A “clean” story of “progress” • Use of prominent symbols and images, even if not historically correct • Turned attention away from Reconstruction and ‘nigger problem’
Chicago -- The Frontier West Reenacted: Buffalo Bill, The White City, The Midway, and F.J. Turner
Frontier Myth in American History • If American west closed in 1890, and it meant so much to American psyche, then what?
Connections to Larger Themes • Connections to Reconstruction? • Similar themes or issues? • Connections to later U.S. history?