Expanding Into the Great Plains

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Chapter 26 The Great West & the Agricultural Revolu=on Presented by: Mr. Anderson, M.Ed., J.D. 1 Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Indian Territory, or Oklahoma Areas in which seulers turned out in record numbers A clash of cultures on the plains Na=ve Americans numbered about 360,000 in 1860 As Whites expand westward Na=ve Americans are forced to scauer Numbers severely decline Buffalo hunted to near ex=nc=on through wholesale butchery by whites 2 Na=ve Americans are forced onto reserva=ons Small pockets of humanitarians advocated for the kind treatment of the Indians although they had no more respect for tradi=onal Indian culture than those who sought to exterminate them United States military is sent in to move or exterminate Na=ve Americans Buffalo Soldiers were African American soldiers who served in the United States Calvary 3 1

Na=ve Americans strike back FeUerman Massacre Sioux war party auemp=ng to block construc=on of the Bozeman Trail Massacred and mu=lated 81 soldiers and civilians General Custer leads an expedi=on into the Black Hills of South Dakota in search for gold The aggrieved Sioux took to the warpath, inspired by the influen=al and wily Si`ng Bull Custer is completely wiped out by Si`ng Bull s war party One of very few Indian victories in the Great Plains wars United States Military hunts down and destroys all Na=ve Americans involved 4 Apache tribes led by Geronimo were the most difficult to subdue (AZ and NM) Apache women were exiled to Florida ul=mately causing the Apache to give in The seuled in OK and became successful farmers The Dawes Act 1887 Dissolved many tribes as legal en==es Tried to make rugged individualists of the Indians Wiped out tribal ownership of land Promised Indians US ci=zenship in 25 years American culture and religion forced upon the Na=ve Americans 5 US government outlaws the Indian Sun (Ghost) dance Leads to the BaUle of Wounded Knee The Gold Rush and caule drives led to the importance of Cowboys Homestead Act The new law allowed a seuler to acquire as much as 160 acres of land (a quarter- sec=on) by living on it for five years, improving it, and paying a nominal fee of about $30 A dras=c departure from previous government public land policy designed to raise revenue Sooners were well armed individuals who cheated the system by going out to claim land early 6 2

Aoer exploring much of the West, geologist John Wesley Powell warned in 1874 that land west of the 100 th meridian could not be farmed without extensive irriga=on In 1890, when the superintendent of the census announced that a stable fron=er line was no longer discernible, Americans were disturbed because the idea of an endlessly open West had been an element of America s history from the beginning Western ci=es like Denver and San Francisco served as safety valves by providing home for economically struggling farmers, miners and easterners Most Western ci=es become safety valves 7 The Farm becomes a factory In the last decades of the 19 th century the volume of agricultural goods increased and the price of these goods decreased Farmers were slow to organize and promote their interest because they were, by nature, highly independent and individualis=c Farmers had to specialize in one crop which presented many problems Farmers become extremely unhappy The Na=onal Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry beuer known as the Grange was organized in 1867 Original purpose was to s=mulate self- improvement through educa=onal and social ac=vi=es 8 The Farmers Alliance Originally formed to break the economic grip of the railroads through farmers coopera=ves Unfortunately, the Alliance weakened itself by ignoring the plight of landless tenant farmers, share- croppers, and farm workers Even more debilita=ng was the Alliance s exclusion of blacks, who counted for nearly half the agricultural popula=on of the South Out of the Farmers Alliance is born a new poli=cal party known as the Populists The severe economic depression of the 1890 s strengthened the Populists argument that wage earners and farmers alike were vic=ms of an oppressive economic system 9 3

Coxey s Army and the Pullman Strike Jacob Coxey marches on Washington DC to fight for the rights of the unemployed The Pullman Palace Car Company was hit hard by depression The workers finally struck in some places overturning Pullman cars and paralyzed railway traffic Grover Cleveland sends in federal troops to break up the strike on the grounds that it was preven=ng the transit of US mail Richard Olney US auorney general who brought in federal troops to crush the strike Eugene V. Debs Head of the American Railway Union that organized the strike George Pullman Owner of the palace railroad car company and the company town where the strike began John P. Altgeld Governor of Illinois who sympathized with the striking workers 10 Elec=on of 1896 Republican William McKinley defeats Democrat William Jennings Bryan Major issue of the Elec=on of 1896 was the free and unlimited coinage of silver Populists supported Bryan which essen=ally had them abandoning their iden=ty Populists who stayed true to their colors supported Mark Hanna because they feared the radicalism of William Jennings Bryan and his free silver cause The outcome was a resounding victory for big business, the big ci=es, middle- class values, and financial conserva=sm The 1896 elec=on marked the last =me a serious effort to win the White House would be made with mostly agrarian votes Bryan goes on to lose three presiden=al elec=ons 11 Ch. 26 Quiz Period 3 What animal was hunted to near ex=nc=on during this =me? What were Buffalo Soldiers? What tribe did Geronimo lead? What Na=ve American chief lead the charge to defeat General Custer? What was the Dawes Act? 12 4

Ch. 26 Quiz Period 5 What animal was hunted to near ex=nc=on during this =me? What were Buffalo Soldiers? What tribe did Geronimo lead? What Na=ve American chief lead the charge to defeat General Custer? What was the Dawes Act? 13 5