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Clashing Cultures on the Great Plains

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Presentation on theme: "Clashing Cultures on the Great Plains"— Presentation transcript:

1 Clashing Cultures on the Great Plains
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2 BIG IDEAS MAIN IDEA: Settlers on the Great Plains transformed the land despite great hardships. WHY IT MATTERS NOW: The Great Plain region remains the breadbasket of the United States.

3 Culture on the Plains Great Plains Family Life
Land west of the Mississippi is comprised of grasslands Horse and Buffalo were key for survival Small extended family groups Young men focused on hunting and war Women helped butcher, prepared camp life Communal way of life

4 Plains Tribes Women could occasionally choose their own husbands
Elected Councils ran the tribes Children were educated through stories, myths, games, and positive examples Land belonged to everyone

5 Settlers Push Westward
Looking to own land Believed the west was “unsettled” Discovery of gold in Colorado (1859) Boomtowns develop; government restricts Native Americans

6 Railroads in the West million acres of land granted to rail roads 400 million acres of land settles by U.S. citizens Central Pacific and Union Pacific Rail Companies employ Civil War Veterans Rail Companies sell their land for $2-$10 an acre

7 Cattle Become Big Business
Longhorns replace the buffalo on the open plains of TX and were raised, roped, and branded by American cowboys Traditions carried over from the Spanish and learned in Mexico Post Civil War and the growth of railroads increased the demand for beef in the country Chisholm Trial is the economic center for cattle trade for the country

8 Life of a Cowboy 10-14 hr days 25% African American; 12%Mexican
Age 15-40 Round up: herding, sorting, and branding Long Drive: over land transport of cattle

9 Government Support for Settlement
Homestead act: 160 acres of land to any free or indentured citizen who is the head of a household 600,000 families move west Exodusters: African Americans who move from the post reconstruction South

10 Challenges on the Plains
Western frontier is plagued with droughts, floods, fires, blizzards, and attacks Soddys, homes made by stacking blocks of prairie turf, were most common Women worked along side men as well as playing the role of doctor, school, educator, and church Morrill Act: government funded agricultural education

11 Farmers and Debt Farming equipment was expensive
Rail companies charging high prices to ship from the west Bonanza farms growing singular crops only exemplify the debt situation


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