Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Analyze the impact of mining and railroads on the settlement of the West. Explain.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Objectives Explain how the discovery of gold and silver affected the West. Describe life in the western mining towns. Examine how railroads spread and.
Advertisements

Objectives Identify what attracted farmers to the Great Plains.
Transforming the West Chapter 11, Section 3.
There’s gold in them thar hills! Equipment like picks, shovels and pans were used in Placer Mining Panning for Gold Placer Mining was used to extract.
The Mining Booms Ch Gold, Silver, Boomtowns  1858  More gold discovered in the west (Pike’s Peak)  1859  50,000 prospectors headed to Colorado.
Modern US History Ch. 18, Section 1 Miners, Ranchers, and Railroads
Chapter 18 – The Frontier West ( )
Chapter 17 Section 1 Vocabulary Immigrate- to move to a foreign region or country manual- involving work done by hand vigilante- self-appointing law enforcer.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. This unit will discuss how the society, culture, and economy of the South.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Westward Expansion After 1865.
Bellwork: p. 240 “Witness History” Chief Satanta 1. what is the topic? 2. How does Santanta describe his emotions? 3.Why?
Cowboys and Railroads. The Cattle Industry Becomes Big Business As the herds of buffalo disappeared, horses and cattle flourished on the plains. Before.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Chapter 15 Section 3 Transforming the West.
08/25 Bellringer Between , more than 600,000 Americans move from the Eastern states to the Great Plains. They moved west for many different reasons.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Analyze the impact of mining and railroads on the settlement of the West. Explain.
Settling the West US History. What is the West? Why is it important? Frederick Jackson Turner, 1893: In the US the West gave rise to inventiveness independence.
Essential Question: What factors led to the settlement of the West during the Gilded Age ( )?
Pull Factors: things (usually good) attracting settlers 1. Get rich fast 1. Gold 2. Silver (Comstocke Lode) 2. Private property 1. Gov’t was practically.
The Western Frontier Mrs. Williamson. By the mid-1850s, the gold rush boom had ended in California, and miners were off to prospect in other areas of.
Transforming the West.
I. The growth of the cattle industry A. The cattle industry becomes big business –Spanish explorers introduce horses and cattle into the SW in the 1700s.
The Great West. Why Go West? Pull Factors: things (usually good) attracting settlers Get rich fast Gold silver Private property Gov’t was practically.
Living in the West. The Mining Boom  Often the first group of people to arrive in the west  Majority male- in 1860 the ratio was 9:1 in Colorado and.
Westward Expansion After the Civil War Mrs. Maimone Mrs. Maimone.
Miners and Ranchers. Westward Movement The growing industrial economy in the east needed the deposits of gold, silver, and copper found in the west. Many.
T RANSFORMING THE W EST O BJECTIVES Analyze the impact of mining and railroads on the settlement of the West. Explain how ranching affected western.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Westward Expansion After 1865.
-Chapter 15: How we acquired the west. -The reason they all traveled west: A second chance. -Chapter 24: Part I. How they affected the Native Americans.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 1 The New South Explain how the southern economy changed in the late 1800s. Analyze how southern farmers.
Westward Movement. Why did Americans moved West 1.Mining: California Gold Rush 1849, other areas experienced rushes like Silver in Nevada. Mining was.
Lecture Notes. 1. Miners Discovery of ______ and ________ causes more white settlers to move ________. Miners hoped to get _______ quickly. Law and Order.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 1 The New South Explain how the southern economy changed in the late 1800s. Analyze how southern farmers.
Changes on the Western Frontier Chapter 5. Before 1877… American Civil War from The North wanted to preserve the Union The South wanted independence.
The South and the West. How did the southern economy and society change after the Civil War?
Objectives Explain how the discovery of gold and silver affected the West. Describe life in the western mining towns. Examine how railroads spread and.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Westward Expansion After 1865.
Objectives Explain how the southern economy changed in the late 1800s.
TOPIC 3: Challenges in the Late 1800s ( )
Objectives Explain how the discovery of gold and silver affected the West. Describe life in the western mining towns. Examine how railroads spread and.
Railroad Expansion.
ENTRY#7 Reconstruction Wrap-up Question #1
Transforming the West Chapter 6/Section 3.
The Great West: Economic Opportunity and Westward Migration
Transcontinental Railroad
Objectives Identify what attracted farmers to the Great Plains.
Transforming the West.
Miners and Ranchers - Chapter 8, Section 1 By Mr. Bruce Diehl
08/29 Bellringer Respond with 4-5 sentences.
The growing west Following the Civil War, more settlers moved West - between the Mississippi River and the Pacific Ocean. With new technologies and mineral.
After the Civil War, the area west of the Mississippi River was settled by miners, ranchers, and farmers Land use in 1860 Land use in 1880.
Westward Expansion After 1865
Westward Expansion After 1865
Westward Expansion Identify examples of conflict and cooperation between occupational and ethnic groups in the west, including, miners, ranchers,
1st Block( 7mins) Look over your notes with a partner. Ask each other questions about The West.
Western Frontier Chapter 18.
Monday- Do now GET OUT YOUR STUDY GUIDE
Topic 3 Challenges in the Late 1800s
The West Transformed By: Ria and May
Why Go West? Push Factors: things that make (usually bad) settlers want to leave their homes Political instability Economic hard times Racial discrimination.
Transforming the West.
Westward Expansion After 1865
Settling the West Warm-up: In a few sentences, describe how the discovery of a scarce resource can result in economic boom.
Settling the West Chapter 13 Sections 1 & 2.
Transforming the West.
Chapter 15 Section 3: Transforming the West
Objectives Analyze the impact of mining and railroads on the settlement of the West. Explain how ranching affected western development. Discuss the ways.
Westward Expansion After 1865
Objectives Analyze the impact of mining and railroads on the settlement of the West. Explain how ranching affected western development. Discuss the ways.
Farming in the West After 1865
Westward Expansion After 1865
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Analyze the impact of mining and railroads on the settlement of the West. Explain how ranching affected western development. Discuss the ways various peoples lived in the West and their impact on the environment. Objectives

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Terms and People vigilante – self-appointed law enforcer transcontinental railroad – rail link between the eastern and western United States land grant – land given by the federal government for building railroads open-range system – system in which ranchers did not fence in their property, allowing cattle to roam and graze freely

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Terms and People (continued) Homestead Act – 1862 law in which the government offered farm plots of 160 acres to anyone willing to live on the land for five years, dig a well, and build a road Exodusters –African Americans who migrated from the South to the West after the Civil War

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 What economic and social factors changed the West after the Civil War? In the late 1800s, miners, rail workers, ranchers, and farmers moved to the frontier in hopes of building better lives. The industrial and agricultural booms they created helped transform the West.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 The discovery of gold and silver created the first great boom in the West—mining. With each new find, prospectors rushed to the site, hoping to strike it rich. Others followed, bringing food and supplies. Mining camps quickly sprang up. Many camps grew into thriving communities.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 In the early days, vigilantes took the law into their own hands. As towns grew, they hired marshals and sheriffs. Because they had no judges or jails, miners often set their own rules for administering justice. Some towns, however, disappeared as quickly as they appeared. Boomtowns turned to ghost towns when the gold and silver ran out.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Could afford the heavy equipment needed to bring mineral ores out from deep underground Were supported by the government with cheap land Large companies soon took over the mining business from individual prospectors.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 The railroads soon began work to fulfill a longtime goal—to build a transcontinental railroad linking the East and the West. As industries grew in the West, so did the need for railroads to transport goods and people. The government supported this goal through: loans land grants

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 In 1863, the Central Pacific headed eastward from Sacramento. The Union Pacific headed westward from Omaha. They finally met at Promontory, Utah, in 1869.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Tied the nation together Moved products and people Spurred industrial development Stimulated the growth of towns and cities Encouraged settlers to continue to move west Work on the railroad had been difficult and dangerous. But it brought tremendous changes to the country.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 The railroad boom encouraged another western boom—the cattle boom. For years, ranchers had used an open- range system for raising livestock. Property not fenced in Cattle were branded, then grazed freely Cowboys rounded up the cattle each spring

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Cowboys then drove cattle north to the rail lines, so they could be transported to market. The long, hard cattle drives could last for months. They ended at railroad towns, called cow towns.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Reasons the open- range system ended The invention of barbed wire made fencing cheap. The supply of beef exceeded demand and prices dropped. Extreme weather led to the death of herds. By the mid-1880s, however, the cattle boom was coming to an end.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Like miners and ranchers, farmers also moved west, looking for a better life. Railroad companies encouraged pioneer settlement. So did the government. Under the 1862 Homestead Act, the government gave land to farmers willing to tend it. Easterners, Exodusters, and immigrants soon poured onto the Great Plains.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Life on the Plains was difficult and lonely. With little wood available, homesteaders made houses from sod. Storms, droughts, and locusts ruined crops.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 New inventions and farming methods, however, made life easier. Barbed wire Stronger plow Grain drill Windmill Dry-farming techniques

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 For many Americans, the West was a place to build new lives. But it also was a place of conflict. Cattle destroyed crops Sheep ruined grasses Mining runoff polluted water Control of resources disputed Economic rivalries Social conflicts Prejudice Discrimination Ethnic tensions

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 The last land rush took place in 1889, when the government opened the Oklahoma Territory to homesteaders. “boomers” lined up to stake claims “sooners” sneaked in early to take the best ones The next year, the government declared there was no land left for homesteading. The frontier closed.

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsTransforming the West Section 3 Section Review Know It, Show It Quiz QuickTake Quiz