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Chapter 13 Pioneer Life

Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

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Page 2: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Immigration 1836-1845

• Population tripled

• Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as

empresarios

• 2,000 families from Missouri, Illinois and Tennessee settle through W.S. Peters and Associates. (Sounds like a modern Real Estate Agency, doesn’t it?)

Page 3: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Europeans

• Henri Castro, French Immigrant Agent: over 2000 families from France, Switzerland and Germany

• Established town of Castroville

• German Emigration Company settled about 7,000 Germans.

• Many Germans settled in the hill country around Austin: New Braunfels, Fredericksburg, Gruene, Schulenberg

Page 4: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Slave Population grew

• By 1845, African Americans made up 1/3 of the population of Texas and most were slaves.

• Free African Americans required to petition Congress to stay in Texas during Republic

• Not all slaves worked on plantations or farms and some were skilled laborers such as blacksmiths and carpenters.

Page 5: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Tejanos faced prejudice

• Tejanos were viewed with suspicion by settlers and even those who fought for Texas were treated poorly.

• The new settlers assumed they had sided with Mexico.

• This is called stereotyping.

Page 6: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Farming and Ranching

• Most Texans had agricultural jobs.• Corn was most important “subsistence crop”:

for human and animal consumption• Cotton was most important “cash crop”: for

profit, and was grown in East Texas during this time period.

• Ranching was easy to start because wild cattle roamed all over South and East Texas left over from Spanish days.

Page 8: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Transportation improved

• Stagecoaches: Butterfield Overland Line crossed Texas all the way to El Paso for passengers and mail.

• Roads were dirt. Goods were transported over roads by mule and oxen driven freight wagons often using Tejano drivers. (The term “teamsters” as in Teamsters Union comes from this.)

• Railroads started coming to Texas, connected towns around Houston

• Steamboats were difficult to operate in Texas due to crooked rivers, few rivers large and deep enough.

Page 11: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Education:

• No public schools

• Towns and families hired teachers.

• 1854, legislature to set aside $2,000,000.00 as a permanent school fund and the interest was divided between counties according to the number of school-age children they had living there.

Page 18: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Know Nothing Party

• Also called the “American Party”

• Tried to keep immigrants from holding office or voting

• Only lasted a few years in Texas

• “I know nothing”

• Started the practice of electing candidates at conventions

Page 21: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Why camels didn’t last

• This was the idea of U.S. Secretary of War Jefferson Davis

• When the South seceded, Jefferson Davis became President of the Confederate States

• Once the war was over, the U.S. stopped the experiment because anything involving the South or Jefferson Davis was not popular!

Page 24: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

General Zachary Taylor

Page 25: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

How it started:

Mexico claimed the boundary between Mexico and Texas was the Nueces River.

Texas claimed the Rio Grande, as Santa Anna had agreed in the Treaty of Velasco.

A battle between Mexico and Texans occurred north of the Rio Grande at Palo Alto in Texas.

President Polk treated this as an invasion, causing American casualties and declared war.

Page 27: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

• Gen. Zachary Taylor’s U.S. forces were successful in occupying Northern Mexico

• They captured the Mexican city of Monterrey.

• A large Mexican force under Santa Anna’s command was defeated at the battle of Buena Vista.

Page 28: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

• American troops landed in Veracruz and marched to Mexico City.

• Mexico City was captured, and American forces occupied California.

• Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo settled the conflict.

Page 29: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Terms of Treaty

• Rio Grande became boundary • Mexico abandoned all claims to Texas• The U.S. paid Mexico $15 million for the lands

between Texas and the Pacific Ocean owned by Mexico.

• U.S. covered claims of U.S. citizens against Mexico due to Texas Revolution

• Mexicans living in the territories gained by the U.S. were guaranteed U.S. citizenship, right to keep land.

Page 31: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Compromise of 1850

• The disputed territory was now a part of the U.S., but Texas did not keep all of it.

• Under this compromise, Texas surrendered the part that became New Mexico in return for $10 million.

• This allowed Texas to pay off her debts!

Page 33: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Texas grows rapidly

• The population grew• 1847: 106,000• 1850: 212,000• 1860: 604,000• Under Homestead Act, settlers living on

the land and improving it owned the land• Southerners used the term “GTT”: Gone to Texas!

Page 36: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Mexicans and Europeans

• Mexicans crossed the border and settled along the Rio Grande and in the San Antonio-Goliad area.

• South Texas towns grew rapidly.

• Most Mexican Americans were farmers and ranchers.

• Prejudice continued

• Tejanos retained their cultural heritage.

Page 38: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families

Many cultures of Texans

• Polish, Irish, British, French, Czech, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Dutch, Scottish, etc. also migrated in large numbers

• Also, Chinese, Lebanese and Syrians, Jews and Japanese came during the 1800s.

Page 40: Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as empresarios 2,000 families