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Settling the
  West
Chapter 8



          Created by Ronna
              Williams
There’s Gold In Them There Hills
• Placer Mining was used to extract gold
  & minerals from the ground, but only
  the shallow level of ground was
  penetrated with this method.
   Equipment like picks, shovels &
   pans were used in Placer Mining.
Diggin’ Deeper
• After Placer Mining, corporations would
  move in to begin Quartz Mining.
• Quartz Mining dug deep beneath the
  surface.
          » When there were no more deposits to dig, the
            corporations that mined disappeared.
THE BIG STRIKE
  IN NEVADA
1859 BOOMTOWN

 Henry Comstock
                      News of this strike
 claimed some          caused a boom of
 Land in Six-Mile      30,000 people to
 Canyon, Nevada!       crowd into Virginia
• The blue-gray mud    City, Nevada
  there turned         almost overnight!
   out to be pure
         silver!
Virginia City, Nevada had been
     only a frontier outpost.
         Suddenly, the town had
1.   Opera house
2.   Shops with European clothes &
     furniture.
3.   Several Newspapers
4.   A 6 story hotel with the west
     first “rising room”..
What Was A Boomtown Like?
•Crime was a serious problem
All those people & no sheriff
They did have Vigilance Committees
(volunteers who enforced laws)
•They often punished innocent people
by accident or on purpose.
•Women worked at “hurdy-gurdy” houses
where they danced for a drink.
History of Virginia City
    Nevada Part 1
History of Virginia City
    Nevada Part 2
History of Virginia City
    Nevada Part 3
History of Virginia City
    Nevada Part 4
History of Virginia City
    Nevada Part 5
History of Virginia City
    Nevada Part 6
History of Virginia City
    Nevada Part 7
Ranching & Cattle Drives
While some were mining silver
and digging for gold, other people
headed out west to build
ranches on the Great Plains.
In the early 1800s, no one thought
building a cattle ranch on the Great
Plains would be successful because
the cattle from the east
couldn’t live on the tough
prairie grass.
A breed of cattle that descended from Mexico had emerged in Texas!




This breed of cow was adapted to the tough grass and
climate of the Great Plains. The government offered free
Range to all cattle. The grazing land was owned by the
American government. It was free & unrestricted by the
ownership of private farms.
Mexican cowhands taught the
American herders the art of
rounding up & driving cattle. They
helped to create America’s first
Cowboys.
Before the Civil War, there was
No reason to round up the
Texas Longhorns because beef
prices were so low!
Cattle could be driven
                                  up North to the Rail
                                  lines &
                                  Transported to the
                                  east at 10 times the
                                  price the cowboys
                                  could get in Texas for
                                  the same cows.

1.The Civil War
2.Construction of the Railroads
          During the Civil
          War, the Cattle were
          needed in the east to
          feed the soldiers.
Between 1867 & 1871 nearly
1.5 million head of cattle traveled
On the Chisholm trail.
When Abilene was full
of cowboys, it rivaled
any mining town in
rowdiness!
The
Cattle
Trails
With the prosperity of the cattlemen
   came an era of lawlessness. The famed
   gunman Wild Bill Hickok served as
   Abilene 's marshal in 1871 and is
   reputed to have killed more than 50
   alleged lawbreakers during his brief
   tenure. The appearance of
   homesteaders and fenced ranges
   discouraged the Texas cattle
   trade, much of which was diverted to
   Wichita. Winter-wheat cultivation was
   introduced in Abilene in the mid-1870s
   and remains economically important.
   Abilene is still a shipping point for
   livestock, as well as for grain and other
   agricultural products, and it has some
   light industry.

Abilene.quot; Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
1 Jan. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9003356>.
In 1876 Hickok married a widow, Mrs.
    Agnes Lake Thatcher, but he soon left her
    (in Cincinnati) to visit the goldfields of the
    Black Hills in the Dakota Territory. It was
    there, at a poker table in Nuttall & Mann's
    No. 10 saloon in Deadwood, that Hickok
    was shot dead by a drunken stranger, Jack
    McCall. The cards Hickok was holding—a
    pair of black aces and a pair of black eights
    plus an unknown fifth card—became
    known as the dead man's hand. McCall's
    motive was never learned; he was
    tried, convicted of murder, and hanged on
    March 1, 1877.



Hickok, Wild Bill.quot; Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.

1 Jan. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9040358 >.
*Thousands of Cattle were rounded up & gathered from the open ranges.
*The brands on the cattle was the only thing that distinguished one from the
other.
*The ranchers branded their cattle before moving them.
*Stray calves with no brand were divided up between the different owners
and branded.

  Most of the cowboys on the cattle
  drives were former Confederate
  soldiers who after the war were
  trying to rebuild their lives.

     Many were Mexican & some were African
     Americans who had been freed after the Civil
     War.
Link about the first cowboys (Mexico)
news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/08/0814_030815_cowboys.html - 27k
The open range would end when ranch owners began to build fences to
prevent sheep herders from grazing the land meant for cattle.
The price of beef fell due to oversupply & many went bankrupt.
Then, in the winter of 1886, blizzards covered the ground so deep that
Cattle could not graze any grass.
Temperatures fell to 40 degrees below zero.

              The fences were usually made of barbed wire
              not wood fences.
Barbed Wire
          Joseph Glidden
The Range Wars

 Sheep              Cattle
Herders            Ranchers
The Cattle Industry
survived, but it was changed
forever.
The days of the open range had
ended.
Herds were fenced in on
ranches and the cowboy
became a ranch
hand who worked on the
farm of the wealthy owner.
Explain:
Placer Mining      Copy and Answer the Questions About Section 1
Quartz Mining

Based on the Video we watched, give a description of Henry
Comstock & how the place came to be known as Comstock
Lode.

What was the boom town of Virginia City, Virginia like at its
peak?

Based on the Video, explain some of the dangers the miners
faced in these early years.
Explain how bees made the mines more
Stable.

Where was the man who invented this technique from
and did
He get rich off of his invention?

In the early 1800s, why was building ranches on the
Great Plains considered a bad idea?

What is a stray calf called?

What are 2 developments that made
cattle drives worth while?
Who taught the skills of being a cowboy to the Americans?

Which breed of cow could survive well on the tough grass
of the Great Plains?

What stopped the open range grazing of cattle?

What happened in 1886 & affected cattle on the Great
Plains?

How did the Cattle Industry change
forever?
What is the dead man’s hand &
who was
holding the cards those cards at
death?


What town did the Chisholm
Trail lead to & fill with cowboys?
Settling the
  West
Chapter 8



          Created by Ronna
              Williams
•Extends all the way to the Rocky Mountains to about
 the center of Abilene ,Texas.
•Rainfall is about 20 inches each year on the
Great Plains & trees grow only along the banks of
Rivers & Streams.
•Many people considered the Great Plains to be a
Desert unfit for farming or grazing.
The Transcontinental Railroad
encouraged the establishment of towns
along the railroad.
The Government encouraged people to
settle the Great Plains by passing the
Homestead Act.
•People could claim up to 160 acres of public land & get the title to the land
if they lived there for 5 years.

               The people who decided to
               take the offer faced many
               challenges!
No trees to build a home
                            People were forced to build homes from
 No water to drink
                            sod cut from the ground.
                            They had to dig wells 300 feet deep to tap
                            drinking water.
Summer temperatures soared to over 100 degrees!
Prairie fires were a constant threat.
Grasshopper swarms swept over farms & destroyed
entire crops.
Winter brought blizzards and bitter cold!
The Realty--A Pioneer’s Sod House, SD
• New Farming Methods
• Dry farming required planting seeds deep
Into the ground where there was enough
  moisture to help them grow.
New Equipment made dry farming easier:
 seed drills, steel plows, reapers
And threshing machines helped
to farm wheat.
New Agricultural
                    Technology

                 Steel Plow [“Sod Buster”]




“Prairie Fan”
Water Pump
Farmers weren’t familiar with the
prairie soil & when they used dry
farming to plant seeds during the
dry season, all the soil just blew
away with the wind.
These farmers were called sodbusters!
Most lost their homesteads through because
of drought, wind erosion, and overuse of the
land.
They had the same problem with the
  wind, but they were able to
 make quick profits by using
 mechanical reapers to speed harvests.
                    Many farmers moved to
Wheat became to     The Great Plains Region to
                    Farm wheat producing the
 the Great Plains   Wheat Belt.

 like cotton was
 to the south!
New machines allowed a single family to bring in a
huge harvest!
Some of these wheat farms were 50,000 acres.
They were called Bonanza Farms because they
made so much profit!
The United States became the
world’s largest exporter of wheat
in the 1880s.
 Other Nations trying to compete
 Caused an oversupply of wheat &
 Prices crashed!
A terrible drought in
the late 1880s also
strained the farms.
Most farmers had to borrow money
On their lands. When they couldn’t
pay, the bank took their ranches.
Some were given the chance to stay
And work on the farms they once
owned, as tenant workers.

By 1900, 1/3 of the
farms were tenant
farms in the Wheat
Belt.
Much of the land in the west was still unoccupied by
1890, but the Government reported that it was nearly full
when it took a census of People living in the west.
It was upsetting to some people who always had the hope
of being able to go west and make a new start.



Even though news spread that the frontier
was closing, many more people traveled
west in the 1900s making their new
starts, but unlike the stories of “getting
rich quick”, the work was hard in their
new environment.
Water from the deep wells watered their gardens.
The Railroad brought lumber to build houses & coal to
use for fuel.
The real story of the people who went west wasn’t about
Heroes who rode off into the sunset.
It was about “regular ole’ people” who built places to
live, formed Communities and worked hard to do what
had to be done.
They didn’t get rich, but most were
 proud of the lives they had made
on the frontier.
Write the question & answer completely for a grade.
Explain the Homestead Act.

Name 5 problems people who took advantage of
the Homestead Act faced.

What is dry farming?

List 2 new advances in agricultural technology
that helped the farmers.

What were the huge farms called?
What were 2 things that led to difficult
times for the farmers causing the
Price of wheat to fall & crops to fail?
What news upset Americans who had always
had the assurance they could start over if
they needed to ?
Settling the
  West
Chapter 8



          Created by Ronna
              Williams
Native Americans lived in North America long before
 Europeans even knew the continent existed.

 The Great Plains people were nomads who followed the
 buffalo.

Suddenly people arrived calling themselves
“Americans”, claiming land for themselves and killing
buffalo almost to the point of extinction.


Americans broke treaties that promised
Native Americans rights to lands &
Forced them to relocate.
Native Americans resisted by attacking wagons, trains,
stage coaches and ranches.
The first major clash happened in 1862 when the Sioux
People in Minnesota launched an uprising.

 The Dekota Sioux had been moved to a reservation in
 Minnesota with the promise of the United States
 Government paying them each year for the land they left
 Behind.
  The money was called annuities because it came once each year.
American traders in the area made up fake debts owed to them by the
Sioux & took the annuities meant for the Sioux.
The United States government was late making the annuities payments in
 the year of 1862. As the Sioux waited for the money, many of their people
 Were starving.

  Chief Little Crow asked the American traders to allow his people to get
  Food on credit until the annuities arrived.
  The trader who answered Little Crow was Andrew Myrick,
  “If they are hungry let them eat grass or their own dung.”


 Two weeks later, Myrick was found shot to death with grass stuffed in his
 Mouth.
 Little Crow & the Sioux killed hundreds of soldiers & civilians before the
 Uprising was put down.


307 Dakota Sioux were sentenced to death, but
President Lincoln reviewed the evidence & reduced
the number of people to be executed to 38.
Colonel John Chivington
                                    Kill and scalp all, big and
                                               little!

                                          Sandy Creek, CO
                                       Sand Creek Massacre

                                        November 29, 1864
                                    The Cheyenne were waiting at a fort
                                    To negotiate a peace treaty with the
The Cheyenne were flying a          Americans. Because they had been
White flag & an America flag, but   Attacking women & children, Chivington
Chivington ignored the symbols      Killed them.
Of peace.
The United States Senate investigated Chivington’s attack & brought
No charges against him. This outraged many Americans who saw what
He did to the Cheyenne as unjustifiable.
Capt. William J. Fetterman
                           80 soldiers massacred
Fetterman’s Massacre
Lakota Sioux                December 21, 1866
leader, Crazy Horse led
Fetterman into a trap.
Crazy Horse tricked
Fetterman into following
a small band of
Lakota, & lured him into
an ambush where
hundreds of Lakota
Indians waited to
massacre him & his
men.
Mt. Rushmore: Black Hills, SD
GOLD had been discovered in Black Hills, South Dakota. So many
Americans had rushed to the area killing buffalo so rapidly they were
disappearing.
Professional hunters hunted the buffalo to sell the hides. Many
hunters killed buffalo by the hundreds just for sport leaving their
bodies to rot. The Railroad companies hired sharp shooters to kill
large numbers of buffalo who were blocking the railways’ traffic.
         The Lakota Sioux & Cheyenne Indians were not supposed to leave
         the reservation, but left to hunt for food near the Bighorn
         Mountains in Montana.
   Lt. Colonel George A. Custer underestimated the 2,500
   Native Americans & attacked them in daylight as they camped by the
   Little Bighorn River.

  The Lakota Sioux & Cheyenne Indians killed all of Custer’s men. Newspapers
  Reported Custer as the victim. Lakota Sioux Chief, Sitting Bull tried to
  Flee with his people to Canada, but the Americans forced him & his people
  Back onto the reservation in the Black Hills.
The Battle of Little Big Horn
              1876




                            Gen. George
                             Armstrong
                              Custer




Chief Sitting Bull
Crazy Horse Monument:
    Black Hills, SD




             Lakota Chief
Nez Percé    Chief Joseph!
            When Americans tried to
            force Chief Joseph’s tribe
            onto a smaller
            Reservation in Idaho, he
            fled running for than 1300
            miles before being
            captured.



            “Our Chiefs are killed…The little
            Children are freezing to death. My
            People…have no blankets, no food
            Hear me, my chiefs; I am tired; my
            Heart is sick and sad. From where
            The sun now stands I will fight no
            More forever.”
“Ghost Dance”, 1890
                                      A terrible battle took place at
                                      Wounded Knee Creek as the
                                      Participants of the Ghost dance
                                      Were attacked.Sitting
                                                Chief
                                                Bull Was Blamed




The Native Americans were not
Supposed to practice this type of ritual
Which would cause the settlers to disappear
& bring back the buffalo.
Tragedy at Wounded Knee
• The government sent police to arrest Chief
Sitting Bull for leading the Ghost Dance.
Sitting Bull’s people tried to stop the
  arrest, and an exchange of gunfire killed
  many
Including Chief Sitting Bull.
• After Chief Sitting Bull was killed, the
People who were part of the Ghost Dance
Ran from the reservation.
• On Dec. 29, 1890, American troops caught
Up with the Ghost Dancers at Wounded
  Knee Creek & tried to force a surrender.
• A terrible battle took place by Wounded
Knee Creek.
Chief Big Foot’s Lifeless Body
 Wounded Knee, SD, 1890


                    25 U.S. Soldiers killed
                    200 Lakota men,
                    Women and Children
                    Killed.
Helen Hunt Jackson
  She described all
The broken promises
   The American
    government
  Had given to the
       Native
Americans including
   Facts from the
      Massacre
   At Sand Creek.




            A Century of Dishonor (1881)
Assimilation was
The process of
                   Dawes Act (1887):
Forcing Native
Americans          Assimilation Policy
To abandon
Their culture &
Become American.




                   Carlisle Indian School, PA
William “Buffalo Bill”
Cody’s Wild West Show
“Buffalo Bill” Cody & Sitting Bull
Geronimo, Apache
 Chief: Hopeless
     Cause
Indian Reservations Today
Backdrops:
                           - These are full sized
www.animationfactory.com   backdrops, just scale them up!
                           - Can be Copy-Pasted out of
                           Templates for use anywhere!

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Settling The West Chapter 8

  • 1. Settling the West Chapter 8 Created by Ronna Williams
  • 2. There’s Gold In Them There Hills • Placer Mining was used to extract gold & minerals from the ground, but only the shallow level of ground was penetrated with this method. Equipment like picks, shovels & pans were used in Placer Mining.
  • 3. Diggin’ Deeper • After Placer Mining, corporations would move in to begin Quartz Mining. • Quartz Mining dug deep beneath the surface. » When there were no more deposits to dig, the corporations that mined disappeared.
  • 4.
  • 5. THE BIG STRIKE IN NEVADA
  • 6. 1859 BOOMTOWN Henry Comstock News of this strike claimed some caused a boom of Land in Six-Mile 30,000 people to Canyon, Nevada! crowd into Virginia • The blue-gray mud City, Nevada there turned almost overnight! out to be pure silver!
  • 7. Virginia City, Nevada had been only a frontier outpost. Suddenly, the town had 1. Opera house 2. Shops with European clothes & furniture. 3. Several Newspapers 4. A 6 story hotel with the west first “rising room”..
  • 8. What Was A Boomtown Like? •Crime was a serious problem All those people & no sheriff They did have Vigilance Committees (volunteers who enforced laws) •They often punished innocent people by accident or on purpose. •Women worked at “hurdy-gurdy” houses where they danced for a drink.
  • 9. History of Virginia City Nevada Part 1
  • 10. History of Virginia City Nevada Part 2
  • 11. History of Virginia City Nevada Part 3
  • 12. History of Virginia City Nevada Part 4
  • 13. History of Virginia City Nevada Part 5
  • 14. History of Virginia City Nevada Part 6
  • 15. History of Virginia City Nevada Part 7
  • 17. While some were mining silver and digging for gold, other people headed out west to build ranches on the Great Plains. In the early 1800s, no one thought building a cattle ranch on the Great Plains would be successful because the cattle from the east couldn’t live on the tough prairie grass.
  • 18. A breed of cattle that descended from Mexico had emerged in Texas! This breed of cow was adapted to the tough grass and climate of the Great Plains. The government offered free Range to all cattle. The grazing land was owned by the American government. It was free & unrestricted by the ownership of private farms. Mexican cowhands taught the American herders the art of rounding up & driving cattle. They helped to create America’s first Cowboys.
  • 19.
  • 20. Before the Civil War, there was No reason to round up the Texas Longhorns because beef prices were so low!
  • 21. Cattle could be driven up North to the Rail lines & Transported to the east at 10 times the price the cowboys could get in Texas for the same cows. 1.The Civil War 2.Construction of the Railroads During the Civil War, the Cattle were needed in the east to feed the soldiers.
  • 22. Between 1867 & 1871 nearly 1.5 million head of cattle traveled On the Chisholm trail. When Abilene was full of cowboys, it rivaled any mining town in rowdiness!
  • 24. With the prosperity of the cattlemen came an era of lawlessness. The famed gunman Wild Bill Hickok served as Abilene 's marshal in 1871 and is reputed to have killed more than 50 alleged lawbreakers during his brief tenure. The appearance of homesteaders and fenced ranges discouraged the Texas cattle trade, much of which was diverted to Wichita. Winter-wheat cultivation was introduced in Abilene in the mid-1870s and remains economically important. Abilene is still a shipping point for livestock, as well as for grain and other agricultural products, and it has some light industry. Abilene.quot; Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 1 Jan. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9003356>.
  • 25. In 1876 Hickok married a widow, Mrs. Agnes Lake Thatcher, but he soon left her (in Cincinnati) to visit the goldfields of the Black Hills in the Dakota Territory. It was there, at a poker table in Nuttall & Mann's No. 10 saloon in Deadwood, that Hickok was shot dead by a drunken stranger, Jack McCall. The cards Hickok was holding—a pair of black aces and a pair of black eights plus an unknown fifth card—became known as the dead man's hand. McCall's motive was never learned; he was tried, convicted of murder, and hanged on March 1, 1877. Hickok, Wild Bill.quot; Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 1 Jan. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9040358 >.
  • 26. *Thousands of Cattle were rounded up & gathered from the open ranges. *The brands on the cattle was the only thing that distinguished one from the other. *The ranchers branded their cattle before moving them. *Stray calves with no brand were divided up between the different owners and branded. Most of the cowboys on the cattle drives were former Confederate soldiers who after the war were trying to rebuild their lives. Many were Mexican & some were African Americans who had been freed after the Civil War.
  • 27. Link about the first cowboys (Mexico) news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/08/0814_030815_cowboys.html - 27k
  • 28. The open range would end when ranch owners began to build fences to prevent sheep herders from grazing the land meant for cattle. The price of beef fell due to oversupply & many went bankrupt. Then, in the winter of 1886, blizzards covered the ground so deep that Cattle could not graze any grass. Temperatures fell to 40 degrees below zero. The fences were usually made of barbed wire not wood fences.
  • 29. Barbed Wire Joseph Glidden
  • 30. The Range Wars Sheep Cattle Herders Ranchers
  • 31. The Cattle Industry survived, but it was changed forever. The days of the open range had ended. Herds were fenced in on ranches and the cowboy became a ranch hand who worked on the farm of the wealthy owner.
  • 32. Explain: Placer Mining Copy and Answer the Questions About Section 1 Quartz Mining Based on the Video we watched, give a description of Henry Comstock & how the place came to be known as Comstock Lode. What was the boom town of Virginia City, Virginia like at its peak? Based on the Video, explain some of the dangers the miners faced in these early years.
  • 33. Explain how bees made the mines more Stable. Where was the man who invented this technique from and did He get rich off of his invention? In the early 1800s, why was building ranches on the Great Plains considered a bad idea? What is a stray calf called? What are 2 developments that made cattle drives worth while?
  • 34. Who taught the skills of being a cowboy to the Americans? Which breed of cow could survive well on the tough grass of the Great Plains? What stopped the open range grazing of cattle? What happened in 1886 & affected cattle on the Great Plains? How did the Cattle Industry change forever?
  • 35. What is the dead man’s hand & who was holding the cards those cards at death? What town did the Chisholm Trail lead to & fill with cowboys?
  • 36. Settling the West Chapter 8 Created by Ronna Williams
  • 37. •Extends all the way to the Rocky Mountains to about the center of Abilene ,Texas. •Rainfall is about 20 inches each year on the Great Plains & trees grow only along the banks of Rivers & Streams. •Many people considered the Great Plains to be a Desert unfit for farming or grazing.
  • 38. The Transcontinental Railroad encouraged the establishment of towns along the railroad. The Government encouraged people to settle the Great Plains by passing the Homestead Act. •People could claim up to 160 acres of public land & get the title to the land if they lived there for 5 years. The people who decided to take the offer faced many challenges!
  • 39. No trees to build a home People were forced to build homes from No water to drink sod cut from the ground. They had to dig wells 300 feet deep to tap drinking water. Summer temperatures soared to over 100 degrees! Prairie fires were a constant threat. Grasshopper swarms swept over farms & destroyed entire crops. Winter brought blizzards and bitter cold!
  • 40. The Realty--A Pioneer’s Sod House, SD
  • 41. • New Farming Methods • Dry farming required planting seeds deep Into the ground where there was enough moisture to help them grow. New Equipment made dry farming easier: seed drills, steel plows, reapers And threshing machines helped to farm wheat.
  • 42. New Agricultural Technology Steel Plow [“Sod Buster”] “Prairie Fan” Water Pump
  • 43. Farmers weren’t familiar with the prairie soil & when they used dry farming to plant seeds during the dry season, all the soil just blew away with the wind. These farmers were called sodbusters! Most lost their homesteads through because of drought, wind erosion, and overuse of the land.
  • 44. They had the same problem with the wind, but they were able to make quick profits by using mechanical reapers to speed harvests. Many farmers moved to Wheat became to The Great Plains Region to Farm wheat producing the the Great Plains Wheat Belt. like cotton was to the south!
  • 45. New machines allowed a single family to bring in a huge harvest! Some of these wheat farms were 50,000 acres. They were called Bonanza Farms because they made so much profit!
  • 46. The United States became the world’s largest exporter of wheat in the 1880s. Other Nations trying to compete Caused an oversupply of wheat & Prices crashed! A terrible drought in the late 1880s also strained the farms.
  • 47. Most farmers had to borrow money On their lands. When they couldn’t pay, the bank took their ranches. Some were given the chance to stay And work on the farms they once owned, as tenant workers. By 1900, 1/3 of the farms were tenant farms in the Wheat Belt.
  • 48. Much of the land in the west was still unoccupied by 1890, but the Government reported that it was nearly full when it took a census of People living in the west. It was upsetting to some people who always had the hope of being able to go west and make a new start. Even though news spread that the frontier was closing, many more people traveled west in the 1900s making their new starts, but unlike the stories of “getting rich quick”, the work was hard in their new environment.
  • 49. Water from the deep wells watered their gardens. The Railroad brought lumber to build houses & coal to use for fuel. The real story of the people who went west wasn’t about Heroes who rode off into the sunset. It was about “regular ole’ people” who built places to live, formed Communities and worked hard to do what had to be done. They didn’t get rich, but most were proud of the lives they had made on the frontier.
  • 50. Write the question & answer completely for a grade. Explain the Homestead Act. Name 5 problems people who took advantage of the Homestead Act faced. What is dry farming? List 2 new advances in agricultural technology that helped the farmers. What were the huge farms called?
  • 51. What were 2 things that led to difficult times for the farmers causing the Price of wheat to fall & crops to fail? What news upset Americans who had always had the assurance they could start over if they needed to ?
  • 52. Settling the West Chapter 8 Created by Ronna Williams
  • 53. Native Americans lived in North America long before Europeans even knew the continent existed. The Great Plains people were nomads who followed the buffalo. Suddenly people arrived calling themselves “Americans”, claiming land for themselves and killing buffalo almost to the point of extinction. Americans broke treaties that promised Native Americans rights to lands & Forced them to relocate.
  • 54. Native Americans resisted by attacking wagons, trains, stage coaches and ranches. The first major clash happened in 1862 when the Sioux People in Minnesota launched an uprising. The Dekota Sioux had been moved to a reservation in Minnesota with the promise of the United States Government paying them each year for the land they left Behind. The money was called annuities because it came once each year. American traders in the area made up fake debts owed to them by the Sioux & took the annuities meant for the Sioux.
  • 55. The United States government was late making the annuities payments in the year of 1862. As the Sioux waited for the money, many of their people Were starving. Chief Little Crow asked the American traders to allow his people to get Food on credit until the annuities arrived. The trader who answered Little Crow was Andrew Myrick, “If they are hungry let them eat grass or their own dung.” Two weeks later, Myrick was found shot to death with grass stuffed in his Mouth. Little Crow & the Sioux killed hundreds of soldiers & civilians before the Uprising was put down. 307 Dakota Sioux were sentenced to death, but President Lincoln reviewed the evidence & reduced the number of people to be executed to 38.
  • 56. Colonel John Chivington Kill and scalp all, big and little! Sandy Creek, CO Sand Creek Massacre November 29, 1864 The Cheyenne were waiting at a fort To negotiate a peace treaty with the The Cheyenne were flying a Americans. Because they had been White flag & an America flag, but Attacking women & children, Chivington Chivington ignored the symbols Killed them. Of peace.
  • 57. The United States Senate investigated Chivington’s attack & brought No charges against him. This outraged many Americans who saw what He did to the Cheyenne as unjustifiable.
  • 58. Capt. William J. Fetterman 80 soldiers massacred Fetterman’s Massacre Lakota Sioux December 21, 1866 leader, Crazy Horse led Fetterman into a trap. Crazy Horse tricked Fetterman into following a small band of Lakota, & lured him into an ambush where hundreds of Lakota Indians waited to massacre him & his men.
  • 59. Mt. Rushmore: Black Hills, SD
  • 60. GOLD had been discovered in Black Hills, South Dakota. So many Americans had rushed to the area killing buffalo so rapidly they were disappearing. Professional hunters hunted the buffalo to sell the hides. Many hunters killed buffalo by the hundreds just for sport leaving their bodies to rot. The Railroad companies hired sharp shooters to kill large numbers of buffalo who were blocking the railways’ traffic. The Lakota Sioux & Cheyenne Indians were not supposed to leave the reservation, but left to hunt for food near the Bighorn Mountains in Montana. Lt. Colonel George A. Custer underestimated the 2,500 Native Americans & attacked them in daylight as they camped by the Little Bighorn River. The Lakota Sioux & Cheyenne Indians killed all of Custer’s men. Newspapers Reported Custer as the victim. Lakota Sioux Chief, Sitting Bull tried to Flee with his people to Canada, but the Americans forced him & his people Back onto the reservation in the Black Hills.
  • 61. The Battle of Little Big Horn 1876 Gen. George Armstrong Custer Chief Sitting Bull
  • 62. Crazy Horse Monument: Black Hills, SD Lakota Chief
  • 63. Nez Percé Chief Joseph! When Americans tried to force Chief Joseph’s tribe onto a smaller Reservation in Idaho, he fled running for than 1300 miles before being captured. “Our Chiefs are killed…The little Children are freezing to death. My People…have no blankets, no food Hear me, my chiefs; I am tired; my Heart is sick and sad. From where The sun now stands I will fight no More forever.”
  • 64. “Ghost Dance”, 1890 A terrible battle took place at Wounded Knee Creek as the Participants of the Ghost dance Were attacked.Sitting Chief Bull Was Blamed The Native Americans were not Supposed to practice this type of ritual Which would cause the settlers to disappear & bring back the buffalo.
  • 65. Tragedy at Wounded Knee • The government sent police to arrest Chief Sitting Bull for leading the Ghost Dance. Sitting Bull’s people tried to stop the arrest, and an exchange of gunfire killed many Including Chief Sitting Bull.
  • 66. • After Chief Sitting Bull was killed, the People who were part of the Ghost Dance Ran from the reservation. • On Dec. 29, 1890, American troops caught Up with the Ghost Dancers at Wounded Knee Creek & tried to force a surrender. • A terrible battle took place by Wounded Knee Creek.
  • 67. Chief Big Foot’s Lifeless Body Wounded Knee, SD, 1890 25 U.S. Soldiers killed 200 Lakota men, Women and Children Killed.
  • 68. Helen Hunt Jackson She described all The broken promises The American government Had given to the Native Americans including Facts from the Massacre At Sand Creek. A Century of Dishonor (1881)
  • 69. Assimilation was The process of Dawes Act (1887): Forcing Native Americans Assimilation Policy To abandon Their culture & Become American. Carlisle Indian School, PA
  • 71. “Buffalo Bill” Cody & Sitting Bull
  • 72. Geronimo, Apache Chief: Hopeless Cause
  • 74.
  • 75. Backdrops: - These are full sized www.animationfactory.com backdrops, just scale them up! - Can be Copy-Pasted out of Templates for use anywhere!