The Costs of Manifest Destiny. What is Manifest Destiny? - California Goldrush - Mexican Cession - Texas * Examples * Expansion of US power from the Atlantic.

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Presentation transcript:

The Costs of Manifest Destiny

What is Manifest Destiny? - California Goldrush - Mexican Cession - Texas * Examples * Expansion of US power from the Atlantic to the Pacific: Isn’t that ………. (You know what to say ) * A belief that the United States had the right to rule the entire continent

Lincoln’s Manifest Destiny - Incentive to settle the Great Plains area -If you agree to work the land for 5 years, you get to own the land- no cost -Attracted Immigrants to the USA acres of land for free! * Homestead Act of 1862

“Go West Young Man, Go West!” Horace Greeley 1867

Trans-Continental Railroad Completed at Promontory Point, Utah in 1869 Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads Trans- Continental- * Definition- the first coast to coast railroad network * Cut down travel time from San Francisco to New York City from 4 months to 10 days US Government helped finance through land grants- Example- Pacific Railway Act of 1862 Last stake made of GOLD

Positive Aspects of Expansion * Helped the nation become larger in size, power and world prestige * Improved economic opportunities for average Americans * Increased wealth of United States *Allowed for technological advancements to occur

Negative Impact of Expansion A Closer Look at the “Dark Side”

Treaties * By 1800’s, the US had created a legacy of broken treaties with the Iroquois, Cherokee, Nez Perces and many other nations. * Book- Century of Dishonor by Helen Hunt Jackson *Story of Red Cloud and the Treaty of Fort Laramie Red Cloud

The Treaty of Fort Laramie Red Cloud was Chief of the Oglala Sioux in the 1860s. Red Cloud was known for his feats of courage, especially militarily, and he attracted followers from other tribes in addition to his own. He led the fight against the U.S. government's plan to open the Bozeman Trail. The proposed trail and its forts cut right through a vital Sioux hunting ground just east of the Bighorn Mountains in South Dakota. For two years, Red Cloud mounted attacks against the project, among them the Fetterman Massacre of 1866, one of the most severe. He and his followers were successful, and the U.S. government abandoned the trail after signing the Treaty of Fort Laramie in 1868.

Wars Through a series of Indian Wars in the 1870’s and ending at Wounded Knee in 1890, the West was won. But what was lost? The Apache Last of the major Indian resistance Geronimo’s surrender in Arizona The Sioux Black Hills, South Dakota General Custer Little Big Horn Legend of Crazy Horse

Reservations * Root of Native American Poverty- unfertile land, lack of job opportunity, land repossession by US Government * The Dawes Act Creates Reservation System The Americanization of the American Indian A promise of ownership and citizenship after 25 years A promise un-kept until the 1930s

The Buffalo * Native Americans used all parts of the buffalo- jewelry, hides, hoofs, rattles * The buffalo were essential to the Indians of the Great Plains

Slaughter of Buffalo Buffalo slaughtered by the thousands Some buffalos shot from train- reductions given to ticket price 15 million buffalo in 1865….34 in 1903! 9 million buffalo slaughtered between 1872 and 1874

Points of Discussion How did the Government encourage Manifest Destiny? How did Westward expansion change American Society? Describe the impact Manifest Destiny had on the American Indian. What is the legacy of the American Indian in the United States? How did American Indians resist Manifest Destiny?