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Changes in the West
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Chapter 5Changes in the West
1865-1890
Native Americans
• Land was communal – no one person or tribe could own land
• Buffalo was central to life
All parts of Buffalo were used
• The buffalo were destroyed by settlers and tourists who shot them for sport
1800: 65 million buffalo roamed the plains
By 1890, less than 1000 buffalo remained
Settlers Push Westward• Viewed Native American land as unsettled
• Advanced to claim land
• Gold was discovered in Colorado – intensified the rush for land
Natives and Settlers Clash
• 1834 – all of Great Plains set aside as “Indian Lands”
• 1850s – Policy shift – native get smaller amounts of land
Culture Clash
• Sand Creek Massacre – U.S. army attacks
• 150 native women and children killed
Custer’s Last Stand
• Colonel Custer and infantry reach Little Big Horn
• Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull lead tribe
• Outflank and crush Custer’s troops
Battle of Wounded Knee
• December 1890- 7th Cavalry (Custer’s old regiment) rounded up 350 Sioux and took them to Wounded Knee, SD
• 7th Cavalry slaughtered 350 unarmed Natives
• The corpses were left to freeze
Assimilation
Dawe’s Act 1887
• Attempted to assimilate natives
• Would break up reservations and introduce natives into American life – farming, etc
• By 1932 2/3rds of the land committed to Natives had been taken
Growing Demand for beef
• After the Civil war the demand for beef rose sharply
• Urbanization and the rise of the railroad contributed to this
• Chicago Union Stock Yards
Chisholm Trail
• Thousands of cattle driven from Texas to Kansas
• Abilene, KS – place where trail met the railroads
The End of the Open Range
• Overgrazing, bad weather, and the invention of barbed wire led to the end of the cattle drive
Settling on the Great Plains
• Homestead Act – federal land policy– Gave 160 free acres to any “head of
household”– Had to live on and farm land for 5 years
Exodusters
• African Americans – moved from South to Kansas
• Took advantage of land deals
Oklahoma Sooners
• In a less than a day 2 millions acres of government land being given away was claimed by settlers
• Some took possession of the land before the government officially declared it open – thus Oklahoma became known as the “Sooner State”
Hardships
• Droughts, floods, fires, blizzards, locust plagues, bandits
• No neighbors nearby
Soddies
• Homes were built from the land itself– Dug out of the sides of ravines or hills– If land was flat made homes out of dirt
• Despite these hardships, the number of people living west of the Mississippi grew from 1% of the nations population to 30% by 1900
Increased Technology Helped Farmers
• 1837- John Deere steel plow – slice through heavy soil
• 1847 – reaper – invented by Cyrus McCormick
Age of the Railroads
• More people moved west and the railroads were born
• Government gave land grants to the railroads to help it grow
Transcontinental Railroad
• Completed in 1890 with help from Chinese workers
FARMER EDUCATION SUPPORTED
• The federal government financed agricultural education
• The Morrill Acts of 1862 and 1890 gave federal land to states to help finance agricultural colleges
FARMERS AND THE POPULIST MOVEMENT
• In the late 1800s, many farmers were struggling
• Crop prices were falling, debt increased
• Mortgages were being foreclosed by banks
ECONOMIC DISTRESS HITS FARMERS
• Between 1867 and 1887 the price of a bushel of wheat fell from $2.00 to 68 cents
• Railroads conspired to keep transport costs artificially high
• Farmers got caught in a cycle of debt
FARMERS ORGANIZE FOR CHANGE
• 1867 – Oliver Hudson Kelley started the Grange
• By 1870, the Grange spent most of their time fighting the railroads
• Soon the Grange and other Farmer Alliances numbered over 4 million members
POPULIST PARTY IS BORN
• Leaders of the farmers organization realized they needed to build a base of political power
• Populism – the movement of the people – was born in 1892 with the founding of the Populist, or People’s Party
THIS POLITICAL CARTOON SHOWS A POPULIST
CLUBBING A RAILROAD CAR
POPULIST REFORMS• economic reforms-
increase of money supply (gold and silver standard), a rise in crop prices, lower taxes, a federal loan program
• political reforms- direct election of senators, single terms for presidents
• Populists also called for an 8-hour workday and reduced immigration
POPULISTS MAKE GAINS
• In the 1892 Presidential election, the Populist candidate won almost 10% of the vote
• In the West, the party elected 5 senators, 3 governors and 1,500 state legislators
FRED AND PHIL VOTED FOR THE PEOPLE’S PARTY
SILVER OR GOLD?• The central issue of
the 1896 Presidential campaign was which metal would be the basis of the nation’s monetary system
• Bimetallism (those who favored using both) vs. those that favored the Gold Standards alone
BRYAN AND THE“CROSS OF GOLD”
• Republicans favored the Gold standard and nominated William McKinley
• Democrats favored Bimetallism and nominated William Jennings Bryan
• Despite Bryan’s stirring words, “You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold,” McKinley won the 1896 election
BRYAN’S CROSS OF GOLD SPEECH
THE END OF POPULISM• With McKinley’s election
victory, Populism collapsed, burying the hopes of the farmer
• Populism left two important legacies: 1) A message that the downtrodden can organize and be heard and 2) An agenda of reforms, many of which would be enacted in the 20th century
THE PEOPLE’S PARTY WAS SHORT-LIVED BUT LEFT AN
IMPORTANT LEGACY