Settling the West: Homestead Act

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 10 Section 3 New Political Parties.
Advertisements

The Cotton Kingdom The Southern ___________________ o Largely Conservative  saw little need for manufacturing or ______________________  Led to growth.
Looking to the West ( ) ◊Moving West. The West ◊Push Factors Crowding back East Displaced farmers Former slaves Eastern farmland expensive Ethnic.
Missouri in the Civil War
1)Describe this photograph. 2) When and where do you think this picture was taken? Why do you think this? 3) What were 3 things you think people living.
Radical Reconstruction Overview and Review. 2 Focus Activity.
MY DEFINITION FOR THE WORD : MY DEFINITION FOR THE WORD : USE THE VOCABULARY WORD IN A SENTENCE. The 13 th Amendment was added to Constitution to free.
Push factor, what causes or forces people to leave Pull factor, what leads or attracts people to a specific place?
 Essential Question: Identify the different points of view of political parties on annexation.
Settling of the Great Plains
Ch. 6-5:Impact of the War on the Home Front ► During all wars peoples civil liberties are decreased ► Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus (statement.
Was Free Land A Good Deal?. Economic Mystery In 1862, the U.S. Congress passed the Homestead Act. It provided 160 acres of surveyed land free to a homesteader.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Chapter Introduction The South and West Transformed (1865–1900) This chapter will discuss how the society, culture,
Availability of Land Homestead Act (1862) Provided 160 acres of land, free of charge, if the claimholder cultivated the land for a period of 5 years. Cultivation.
Bell Ringer – 3/6/08 1.Who was General George Custer? 2.How did Americans try to encourage American Indians to “assimilate”? 3.What was the Ghost Dance.
The Homestead Act of 1862 Emily, Sebastian, Lilan, Abraham.
 Essential Questions: How do governments change? Why do people form governments?
Texas State Government
Bell Ringer 9/22 After the 1850s, what was the American government’s policy towards Native Americans? Describe the impact on Native American culture.
Life of An Exoduster: Journey Through Time And the Great Migration
Bohemian Immigrants Mid 1800’s.
Sod home of John and Marget Bakken, Milton, N.D., circa 1895.
Settling The Great Plains
Reconstruction: The End of Slavery
Chapters 20 and 21 Review Video
Settling the West and Industrial America
Welcome to American History 1!
Early European Settlement in North America
Reconstruction The period ( ) during which the states that had seceded to the Confederacy were controlled by the federal government before being.
Presidents chart # 17 Andrew Johnson # 18 Ulysses Grant
Describe what you see in the painting
How settlement of the west develop between 1879 and 1893?
Radical Reconstruction
The South and the slave controversy
Immigration and Migration & South Carolina
Describe what you see in the painting
Texas State Government
Warm Up # 10 What is “Manifest Destiny?” What inspired it?
Describe what you see in the painting
Chapter 14 “Looking to the West”
Development of the West
Populists in National Elections
The South and the slave controversy
Settling the West: Homestead Act
Radical Reconstruction
Radical Reconstruction
The South.
Do Now: Read  Would you accept the offer? Why or why not?
Settling on the Great Plains
USHC Standard 3: The student will demonstrate an understanding of how regional and ideological differences led to the Civil War and an understanding of.
Radical Reconstruction
The Western Frontier.
Settling the West: Homestead Act
Changes on the Western Frontier
Focus Activity Describe this photograph.
Aim: How did America close the western frontier?
Why was the Homestead Act so important for the development of the West? In this lesson, we will: Describe the key features of the 1861 Homestead Act.
Focus Activity Describe this photograph.
Radical Reconstruction
Chapter 19 Section 4 Farming and Populism.
What impact did the American Civil War have on settlement in the west?
Today’s Warm-Up 9/20/11 Pretend you are an immigrant factory worker during the late 1800’s or early 1900’s. Write a brief letter to your cousin back on.
Great Plains Flat and covered with grasses Few trees
Reconstruction and Daily Life
Radical Reconstruction
Ch. 6 Welcome to Kansas.
Ch. 6 Welcome to Kansas.
Focus Activity Describe this photograph.
Focus Activity Describe this photograph.
Presentation transcript:

Settling the West: Homestead Act

Warm Up http://kcmo.gov/neighborhoods/dollar-home-sale/ As we read/watch, consider whether you would want to buy one of these homes.

Homestead Act The Homestead Act of 1862 parceled out millions of acres of land to settlers. All US citizens, including women, African Americans, freed slaves, and immigrants, were eligible to apply to the federal government for a “homestead,” or 160-acre plot of land.

Southern Frustrations Homesteading was a contentious issue, because Northerners and Republicans wanted to open the land to settlement by individual farmers, while Southern Democrats sought to make the land available only to slaveholders. Southerners who fought for the Confederacy were later denied the opportunity to gain land through the Homestead Act.

Impact Settling of the West—more US citizens will displace Native Americans. Freed Slaves could leave the south, and get free land (exodusters)

Free, but… Although the land was free, not all citizens chose to take it. Instead, many bought land. Today we will explore why that was the case.