CHAPTER FIFTEEN: CONFLICT AND CONQUEST: THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE WEST, READING AND STUDY GUIDE

Similar documents
Mining was the 1 st magnet to attract settlers to the West CA (1849) started the gold rush, but strikes in Pikes Peak, CO & Carson River Valley, NV

Native Americans of the Great Plains

Terms and People. The Cold War The Begins New South

Chapter 17: The West Exploiting an Empire

Railroad Growth, and the Federal Government s role: 4 transcontinental railroads were thus created: Union Pacific/Central Pacific Line (1869)

Essential Question: What factors led to the settlement of the West during the Gilded Age ( )?

Warm-Up Question: For each era, define what the West was & what role the West played in American life: (a) 1750, (b) 1800, (c)1850

Was Life in the Late 1800s better for Americans in the West and South? What is not Being Covered Today MODERNIZING AGRICULTURE

Gilded Age. Rise of Industry and Transformation of the West

Railroad Construction

Teacher: Whitlock. Chap 2: Settling the West and populist Test Review

The Transcontinental Railroad. Helps to move the United States to a Second Industrial Revolution!

Settling the Western Frontier

THE WILD, WILD WEST. Ch 26 Issue # 1-The Indian Issue

American History: A Survey Chapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West

REVIEWED! APUSH PERIOD 5: Irish Immigrants KEY CONCEPT 5.1

HIST 1302 Part One. 17 The West: Exploiting an Empire

expansion o the West wilderness

OUTLINE 5-2: THE LAST WEST,

SSUSH12 Evaluate how westward expansion impacted the Plains Indians and fulfilled Manifest Destiny. a. Examine the construction of the

The Building of Modern America, Part 1. The Transcontinental Railroad and the Rise of the American City

The West. Economic growth and new communities from:

WESTWARD EXPANSION. of the United States

CHANGES ON THE WESTERN FRONTIER. Chapter 5

Chapter 26: The Great West and the Agricultural Revolution, Name (Pages ) Per. Date Row

HARDY INDIVIDUALISM? OR FEDERAL GOVERNMENT POLICY AND ENCOURAGEMENT?

The Americans: Reconstruction to the 21 st Century

THE LAST WEST AND THE NEW SOUTH

Welcome to Class! Bell-Ringer #1. Frontier Vocab Word of the Day Activity

U. S. History Westward Expansion Expansion of Railroads before the Civil War, most railroads were short lines that connected neighboring cities there

Chapter 25: America Moves to the City,

Unit I Flashcards. C h a p t e r s 1 7 a n d 1 8

4/12/2016. Exodusters, Boomers, Sooners, and Such. Post-Civil War Treaties. Eventually I.T. Will Look Something Like. Took away more land from the 5CT

Name: Date: Period: VUS. 8 a&b: Westward Expansion and Industrialization. Filled In. Notes VUS. 8a&b: Westward Expansion and Industrialization 1

Ch. 6 & Ch. 7 Test Review COPY OR ADD TO YOUR ANSWERS SO YOU HAVE THE CORRECT INFORMATION TO STUDY FOR YOUR TEST.

The Great West & the Agricultural Revolution

American Anthem. Modern American History. Chapter 5. An Industrial Nation Columbus statute in Rhode Island

Closing of the Frontier. Native American land. Essential Questions : The West 1/12/2018. Federal Policies that Encouraged Movement

Causes of Urbanization

10/5/2016 (59) The Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee The American West The Gilded Age ( ) US history Khan Academy

Great West and Rise of the Debtors Goal 4

THE HOMESTEAD ACT. 2. How many years can the land be held without taxes, assessment, or interest?

Unit 4 Changing America at the Turn of the Century Study Guide Name:

#16: America s Frontier West

UNITED STATES HISTORY Unit 1. The Government, The New South and Western Settlement

A. True or False Where the statement is true, mark T. Where it is false, mark F, and correct it in the space immediately below.

Module 2: Westward Expansion

Emergence of Modern America: 1877 to 1930s

The Industrialization of the United States CONSEQUENCES s 1910 s

U.S. History Final, ch 16-18

The West, WESTWARD EXPANSION. From ABC-CLIO's American History website

Opening Activity 9/22

Manifest Destiny from in the U.S. By: Aubrey Gibson and Gabby Rodgers

Key Concept 6.2: Examples: Examples:

Unit I: Changes on the Western Frontier or The West

Chapter 5. Conflict with Native Americans 10/2/2018. Sect. 1 The American West

Themes of the Gilded Age:

Period 6: J. New cultural and intellectual movements both buttressed and challenged the social order of the Gilded Age.!

Ecclesfield School History Department. History GCSE (9-1) Revision Booklet

Chapter 14: Looking to the West ( )

Conquering a Continent

Guided Reading & Analysis: the Last West and the New South, Chapter 17- Enclosure and Redemption pp

The following annotated chapter outline will help you review the major topics covered in this chapter.

US History Mr. Martin Unit 7: The Birth of Modern America Chapters 13-16

PERIOD 6: Teachers have flexibility to use examples such as the following: John D. Rockefeller, J. P. Morgan. Key Concept 6.

Chapter 16 Conquering a Continent

Guided Reading & Analysis: the Last West and the New South, Chapter 17- Enclosure and Redemption pp

Curriculum Area: Year 10 History 2017/2018

Modern America Assessment Settling the West and Industrialization

California Standards CHAPTER CHAPTER 17

Webquest Collection Westward Expansion and the Old West

The United States Lesson 2: History of the United States

Expanding Into the Great Plains

America, History of Our Nation Civil War to the Present 2014

The Industrialization of the United States s 1910 s

Period 6: Key Concept 6.1: Technological advances, large-scale production methods, and the opening of new markets encouraged the rise of

SSUSH12. The student will analyze important consequences of American industrial growth

WS/FCS Unit Planning Organizer

MANIFEST DESTINY WESTWARD EXPANSION

America in the Gilded Age

AP U.S. History Ch. 16 The Conquest of the West

Broken Arrow Public Schools History of Native Americans Objectives Revised September 2010

APUSH Concept Outline Period 6: 1865 to 1898

5 SUGGESTED CLASSROOM INSTRUCTIONAL TIME

Chapter 16, The Conquest of the Far West The Societies of the Far West

SSUSH12: American Industrial Growth. The student will analyze important consequences of American industrial growth.

GACE Study Guide Laura Brittain March 6, 2011

SETTLING THE WEST:

Alamo. Daniel Boone. Davy Crockett. (noun) (noun) (noun)

The US Government Policy towards the Plains Indians

STANDARD VUS.8a. Essential Questions What factors influenced American growth and expansion in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century?

America in the Gilded Age

THE RECONSTRUCTION ERA

APUSH Reading Quizzes

WS/FCS Unit Planning Organizer

America in the Gilded Age

Chapter 12. Boomer Sooner

A) Following the Civil War, government subsidies for transportation and communication systems helped open new markets in North America.

Countries Of The World: The United States

US History Mr. Martin Unit 7: The Birth of Modern America Chapters 13-16

Transcription:

CHAPTER FIFTEEN: CONFLICT AND CONQUEST: THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE WEST, 1860 1900 READING AND STUDY GUIDE I. Natives and Newcomers A. Congress Promotes Westward Settlement B. The Diversity of the Native American West C. Native American Tribes of the Great Plains D. The Great Westward Migration II. The Economic Transformation of the West A. The Railroad Fuels Western Development B. Hard Times for Farmers C. The Cattle Kingdom D. Fortunes Beneath the Ground: The Mining Booms E. The Environmental Legacy III. Native Americans Under Siege A. Mounting Problems for Native Americans B. Wars on the Plains C. War and Conflict in the Far West D. In Pursuit of a Solution IV. Resistance and Romanticism A. Persecution and Persistence B. Creating Mythical Heroes and Images C. The West in Art and Literature D. Historians Reinterpret the American West Before 1840, most Americans viewed the lands west of the Mississippi as a great, untamed and dangerous wilderness of rugged terrain, extreme temperatures, wild animals, and hostile Native Americans. But beginning in the 1840s, an ever-growing number of farmers, miners, ranchers, entrepreneurs, and adventurers moved west, aided after 1869 by the completion of the transcontinental railroad and soaring demand for western products and resources. Gast s celebratory scene reveals, doubtless unintentionally, the bitter conflict that accompanied the transformation of the West. On the painting s left border, a cluster of Native Americans flee before the advancing whites. Above them a herd of buffalo likewise make their escape. Gast s matter-of-fact portrayal of the seizure of Indian land and the near extinction of the buffalo reflected the nation s enthusiasm for progress and the inability or unwillingness to confront the human and environmental costs associated with it. By 1900, the West had been radically transformed. Great networks of railroads and telegraph lines crisscrossed the landscape, as did untold miles of fencing that marked the boundaries of millions of farms and ranches. The western landscape also featured cities like San Francisco and Denver that rivaled their eastern

counterparts. Perhaps even more remarkable than the appearance of these new aspects of western life was the disappearance of others. By 1900, the American government had confined hundreds of independent Native American tribes that had once lived in virtually every corner of the West to a series of reservations. Gone, too, were the millions of buffalo from the plains and, in areas of intensive mining, large mountain sections of once pristine landscape. The conquest of the West between 1865 and 1900 included many stories of success, achievement, and undeniable progress, but it was far more complex, violent, and tragic than Gast s dreamy vision suggests. Learning Objectives After a careful examination of Chapter 15, students should be able to do the following: 1. Explain the extent of diversity and the degree of complexity found in Native American societies of the West during the late nineteenth century. 2. Offer examples of the American use of warfare and violence against Native Americans in an effort to seize their land. 3. Describe early Sioux successes in delaying the advance of white Americans into the far west, focusing on the Second Treaty of Fort Laramie and the Battle of Little Bighorn. 4. Comment on the involvement of Christian denominations in the effort to Americanize Native Americans. 5. Describe the effects of gender imbalance on the lifestyle and character of western mining camps. 6. Describe the impact of racial and ethnic diversity on the emergence of collective violence in western mining camps. 7. Describe the transformation of western mining from an individualistic pursuit into a corporate-controlled industry that was fully integrated into the national economy. 8. Explain the impact of corporate control of the mining industry on the western environment and on mining labor. 9. Compare and contrast attempts to unionize and management s attempts to prevent unionization in the industrialized East and in western mines. 10. Describe the characteristics and functions of the western cow town that emerged in the late nineteenth century. 11. Describe the transformation of open range ranching from an individualistic pursuit typified by independent ranchers to a corporate-controlled industry.

12. Explain the evolution of cowhands from seasonal employees with significant independence to wage laborers for corporate ranches. 13. Discuss the limitations of the Homestead Act of 1862 as a means of helping Americans establish their own farms in the West. 14. Explain the role of the railroad in promoting the migration of western settlers. 15. Describe the racial and ethnic diversity of the settlers who migrated westward during the late nineteenth century. 16. Describe the impact of American settlement in the West on individual land ownership by Hispanics in village communities. 17. Comment on the adversities faced by western settlers as they established homes. Discuss the unique challenges faced by women settlers in the West. 18. Describe the political, economic, and natural challenges faced by farmers in the West, and describe how they used invention, technology, and innovation to meet these challenges. 19. Discuss the impact of failed crops and declining crop prices on the livelihoods of western farmers. Key Terms & Definitions: trans-mississippi West The region of the United States west of the Mississippi River. (440) Homestead Act Passed in 1862, it provided 160 acres of free land to any settler willing to live on it and improve it for five years; promoted massive westward migration. (440) transcontinental railroad A line spanning the continental United States. Congress helped the Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroads build it by providing land grants, cash incentives, and loans. (441) Great Plains Vast open territory stretching east to west from present-day Missouri to the Rocky Mountains, and north to south from North Dakota to Texas (443) Exodusters More than twenty thousand ex-slaves who in 1879 left violence and poverty in the South to take up farming in Kansas. (444) Mormons A religious sect founded in upstate New York in 1830. Driven by persecution they headed west in 1846 and settled in a valley in Utah near the Great Salt Lake. (445) Grange Originally founded in the fall of 1867 by Oliver H. Kelley as a social and educational society for farmers, it became a major political force in the Midwest in the mid-1870s. (449)

Long Drive The annual cattle drives of more than 1,000 miles from Texas to the Great Plains that started in 1866 and established the ranching industry in the West. (449) Sand Creek Massacre A massacre of some two hundred Cheyenne Indians on November 29, 1864, in Colorado by a military outfit known as the Colorado Volunteers under Colonel John M. Chivington. (454) Battle of Little Bighorn Lt. Col. George A. Custer and the Seventh Cavalry are wiped out by a force of Cheyenne, Sioux, and Arapaho warriors on June 25, 1876; hardens white attitudes toward Native Americans. (456) Dawes Severalty Act 1887 law that started the breakup of reservations by offering Native Americans allotments of 160 acres of reservation land to encourage them to become independent farmers. (458) Wounded Knee Massacre U.S. soldiers open fire on a group of Sioux Indians on December 29, 1890, killing between two hundred and three hundred. (461) Buffalo Bill s Wild West A circuslike production begun in 1883 that helped create a romantic and mythological view of the West in the American imagination. (462) Frontier Thesis Historian Frederick Jackson Turner s 1893 theory that extolled the positive role the frontier had played in shaping the American character and consequently American institutions. (464) Study Questions: How did the notion of progress shape Americans vision of western settlement? (438) What factors led to the uneven results of the Homestead Act? (440) Why was the federal government so eager to assist the companies that built the transcontinental railroad? (441) What was the impact of European contact with Indians in the trans-mississippi West before 1850? (442) What is significant about the diversity of Native American life in the trans-mississippi West? (443) How did the introduction of horses change the lifestyle of some Plains Indians? (444) What motivated the many groups that participated in the great migration into the West? (445) Why did railroads promote the migration of immigrants to the West? (446)

How did the railroad shape western economic development? (447) What challenges did western farmers face? (448) What aspects of the railroads did western farmers resent? (449) How did the reality of cowboy life differ from that presented in popular culture? (450) How was the environment of the West altered by human settlement and economic development? (451) Why did few people heed the warnings of writers like Marsh? (452) What did the government hope to accomplish by signing treaties with Native American tribes? (453) How did negative stereotypes of Native Americans influence government policy? (454) How did the dependence of the Plains Indians on the buffalo weaken their ability to resist the loss of their lands? (455) How did the victory over Custer and his men ultimately prove very costly to the Plains Indians? (456) Why were Native Americans so resistant to the government s demand that they settle on reservations? (457) What led reformers like Dawes to believe the break up of reservations would be beneficial to Native Americans? (458) What assumptions about Native American culture influenced the boarding school program? (459) How did the Dawes Act play a key role in the loss of Native American land? (460) What made Wovoka s message so appealing to Indians and so frightening to military officials? (461) Why did the West become such a popular topic in entertainment literature? (462) What traits did Annie Oakley portray to present an ideal woman of the West? (463) How have new Western historians changed the way many Americans understand the history of the West? (464)

Why are Native Americans so committed to reshaping the interpretation of historic sites like Little Bighorn? (465)