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Concept: Individuals – Groups - Institutions

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1 Concept: Individuals – Groups - Institutions
SS8H4 Explain significant factors that affected westward expansion in Georgia between 1789 and 1840 Concept: Individuals – Groups - Institutions

2 Concept: Individuals – Groups - Institutions
SS8H4a Explain reasons for the establishment of the University of Georgia, and for the westward movement of Georgia’s capitals. Concept: Individuals – Groups - Institutions

3 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA 1785: Georgia’s General Assembly approved the charter- first state created school of higher education in the U.S.; Abraham Baldwin wrote the plan for it 1801: Students (only all-white / all-male) attend classes in the Franklin College building

4 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA 1872: Morrill Act of 1872 – UGA was declared a “land grant institution” – land was given by the federal government to the state for the state to expand the school 1918: Women allowed to attend university

5 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA Baldwin thought that education was necessary for a free government. He believed that everyone should have a good education, not just the wealthy. Other colleges were private and too expensive for the average person. UGA was the first school open to lower-income people, aka the first public university in the U.S. Improvements in Georgia’s educational system helped the growth of the state

6 LOUISVILLE, GEORGIA Savannah was the first capital because it was the 1st permanent settlement in Georgia. Augusta became the 2nd capital but it was located too far east. So, in 1786, the Georgia legislature decided to build a new city that would serve as the 3rd capital of Georgia’s and would be centrally located for citizens to travel there. The city was named after King Louis XVI of France for his help in America’s Revolutionary War.

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9 LOUISVILLE, GEORGIA Louisville was not a capital city for very long because of the state’s westward expansion due to Indian lands becoming opened for settlers. Milledgeville became the 4th capital in 1807, followed by Atlanta in 1877, the current capital. One of the most memorable events to occur in the capital city of Louisville was the burning of all of the Yazoo Land Fraud records in front of the capitol building in 1796.

10 LOUISVILLE, GEORGIA Economically, tobacco was a big cash crop in Louisville. After the invention of the cotton gin, many people in Louisville began growing cotton. It became a popular trading area for cotton and tobacco.

11 Concepts: Movement / Migration Rule of Law Conflict and Change
SS8H4b Evaluate the impact of land policies pursued by Georgia; include the headright system, land lotteries, and the Yazoo land fraud. Concepts: Movement / Migration Rule of Law Conflict and Change

12 What impact did the headright system, land lottery, and Yazoo land fraud have on Georgia?

13 HEADRIGHT SYSTEM To attract settlers and economic development in Georgia, the government provided land to Georgians east of the Oconee River. Each white male counted as a “head” of a family and had the “right” to receive anywhere from 200 – 1,000 acres of land. Farmers and ranchers were able to start up their business By 1782, most of the land was given to Revolutionary War veterans for their service; this practice led to corruption

14 THE RESULT IS MORE WESTWARD EXPANSION OF SETTLERS
INDIAN LAND CESSIONS MEANT THAT CREEK AND CHEROKEE INDIANS IN GEORGIA GAVE UP THEIR LAND IN EXCHANGE FOR MONEY OR TRADING RIGHTS / PRIVILEGES THE RESULT IS MORE WESTWARD EXPANSION OF SETTLERS

15 What impact did the headright system, land lottery, and Yazoo land fraud have on Georgia?
Land east of Oconee River. White male “head” of a family had “right” to 200 – 1,000 acres of land. Farmers and ranchers begin businesses 1782 – most land given to Revolutionary War veterans YAZOO LAND FRAUD LAND LOTTERY

16 YAZOO LAND FRAUD Four land companies bribed the governor of Georgia and the General Assembly (legislature) to pass a bill allowing them to buy large tracts of land near the Yazoo River in Mississippi. The companies bought up to 35 million acres of land for only 1 ½ cents per acre. The companies would then sell the land at much higher prices and share the profits with the legislators; governor George Matthews signed the Yazoo Act on January 7, 1795 When Georgia citizens found out they protested and the legislators were voted out of office.

17 YAZOO LAND FRAUD 1796 Rescinding Act - The US government solved the scandal by forcing Georgia to cede (give up) the lands west of the Chattahoochee River in exchange for $1.25 million dollars and a promise to help remove Creek and Cherokee Indians from the Georgia territories. The Yazoo Land Fraud is a reason why Georgia’s western border is shaped the way it is today.

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19 BURNING OF THE YAZOO LAND FRAUD RECORDS AT THE CAPITOL BUILDING IN LOUISVILLE - 1796

20 What impact did the headright system, land lottery, and Yazoo land fraud have on Georgia?
Land east of Oconee River. White male “head” of a family had “right” to 200 – 1,000 acres of land. Farmers and ranchers begin businesses 1782 – most land given to Revolutionary War veterans for their service YAZOO LAND FRAUD Land companies bribed GA government to buy land near Yazoo River Sold land and shared profits with legislators. Citizens protested and legislators voted out of office. US government forced Georgia to cede (give up) lands west of Chattahoochee River forming Georgia’s western border. LAND LOTTERY

21 LAND LOTTERY WHAT: GEORGIANS WANTED TO SETTLE LANDS THAT WERE ONCE OCCUPIED BY CREEK AND CHEROKEE INDIANS. TICKETS PLACED IN TWO DRUMS, ONE WITH NAMES FOR EACH LOT AND OTHER WITH THE PERSON’S NAME. TICKET SELECTED FROM DRUM MATCHED TO NAME OF PERSON FROM OTHER DRUM. WHO: WHITE MALES, ORPHANS, AND WIDOWS ALLOWED TO PARTICIPATE. DEPENDING ON AGE, WAR SERVICE, MARITAL STATUS, AND YEARS OF RESIDENCY IN THE STATE YOU COULD RECEIVE MORE TICKETS, OR CHANCES. WHEN: WHERE: LANDS WEST OF THE OCONEE RIVER THAT WERE VACATED BY CREEK AND CHEROKEE INDIANS FROM LAND TREATIES AND THE OCONEE WAR AND WAR OF /4TH OF STATE LAND WAS GIVEN TO OVER 100,000 FAMILIES AND INDIVIDUALS WHY: GEORGIANS WANTED TO SETTLE IN LANDS VACATED BY CREEKS AND CHEROKEES IN ORDER TO CREATE COTTON AND TOBACCO PLANTATIONS

22 LAND LOTTERY Because of the Land Lottery, Georgia started to have a shift in power. Georgia had been ruled by wealthy planter aristocrats. But through the land lottery, almost any man could become a landowner. Power and wealth began to be distributed more evenly among white men of Georgia.

23 LAND LOTTERY

24 NOTICE THE WESTWARD EXPANSION OF SETTLERS IN GEORGIA FROM 1733-1835
NOTICE THE WESTWARD EXPANSION OF SETTLERS IN GEORGIA FROM LANDS EAST OF THE OCONEE RIVER WERE SETTLED BECAUSE OF THE HEADRIGHT SYSTEM LAND POLICY. LANDS WEST OF THE OCONEE RIVER WERE SETTLED FROM THE LAND LOTTERY. OCONEE RIVER HEADRIGHT SYSTEM LAND LOTTERY

25 What impact did the headright system, land lottery, and Yazoo land fraud have on Georgia?
Land east of Oconee River. White male “head” of a family had “right” to 200 – 1,000 acres of land. Farmers and ranchers begin businesses 1782 – most land given to Revolutionary War veterans for their service YAZOO LAND FRAUD Land companies bribed GA government to buy land near Yazoo River Sold land and shared profits with legislators. Citizens protested and legislators voted out of office. US government forced Georgia to cede (give up) lands west of Chattahoochee River forming Georgia’s western border. LAND LOTTERY land west of Oconee River Given to citizens after removal of Creeks and Cherokees. White males, orphans, and widows received land. Power and wealth for more people Agricultural economy -tobacco and cotton plantations

26 Concepts: Technological Innovation Location
SS8H4c Explain how technological developments, including the cotton gin and railroads, had an impact on Georgia’s growth. Concepts: Technological Innovation Location

27 How did the cotton gin and railroads impact Georgia’s growth?

28 TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION THE COTTON GIN

29 COTTON GIN - New Georgia Encyclodpedia
The modern cotton gin, first patented by Massachusetts native Eli Whitney while in Georgia in 1793, is a simple machine that separates cotton fibers from the seeds. The gin (short for engine) consists of wire teeth mounted on a boxed rotating cylinder that, when cranked, pulls cotton fiber through small grates to separate the seeds, while a rotating brush removes lint from the spikes to avoid jams. Its invention quickly transformed the course of agriculture in the Deep South, and in so doing deepened the reliance of southern society on slavery and the plantation system. - New Georgia Encyclodpedia

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31 COTTON GIN - New Georgia Encyclodpedia
The economic impact of Whitney's gin was vast; after its invention, the yield of raw cotton nearly doubled each decade after The gin, whose invention coincided with much of the Deep South's opening to white settlement, helped to facilitate westward expansion into these potential cotton-producing areas. By the mid-nineteenth century America was supplying three-quarters of the world's cotton. - New Georgia Encyclodpedia

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34 COTTON GIN - New Georgia Encyclodpedia
A direct result of this growth was an expansion of slavery. While the cotton gin reduced the amount of labor required to remove the seeds from the plant, it did not reduce the number of slaves needed to grow and pick the cotton. The demand for Georgia's cotton grew as new inventions such as spinning jennies and steamboats were able to weave and transport more of the crop. Although the percentage of slave population to total population remained virtually unchanged from 1790 until 1860, the number of slaves in the South increased dramatically. By the end of the antebellum era Georgia had more slaves and slaveholders than any state in the Lower South. - New Georgia Encyclodpedia

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41 How did the invention of the cotton gin affect Southern life?

42 Answer: FOCUS ON AGRICULTURE, PLANTERS DEMANDED MORE LAND TO GROW COTTON, and AN INCREASE IN SLAVERY, and RACISM.

43 ELI WHITNEY Invented the cotton gin in Unintentionally, his invention would create more of a dependency on slavery in the South.

44 How did the cotton gin and railroads impact Georgia’s growth?
Machine that separated the cotton fibers from the seeds. Increased cotton production Made economy of the south more agricultural Led to more cotton plantations - King Cotton Led to more westward expansion Led to an increase in slavery RAILROAD

45 TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION THE RAILROAD

46 GEORGIA RAILROAD The land constituting the city of Atlanta was once a Native American village called Standing Peachtree. The land that became the Atlanta area was taken from the Cherokee and Creeks by white settlers in 1822, with the first area settlement being Decatur. On December 21, 1836, the Georgia General Assembly voted to build the Western and Atlantic Railroad to provide a trade route to the Midwestern United States. Following the forced removal of the Cherokee Nation between 1838 and 1839 the newly depopulated area was opened for the construction of a railroad Wikipedia.com

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48 GEORGIA RAILROAD - New Georgia Encyclodpedia
Indian removal and the discovery of gold encouraged new settlement in the region, but it was the railroad that actually brought Atlanta into being and eventually connected it with the rest of the state and region. In 1837 engineers for the Western and Atlantic Railroad (a state-sponsored project) staked out a point on a ridge about seven miles east of the Chattahoochee River as the southern end of a rail line they planned to build south from Chattanooga, Tennessee. The town that emerged around this zero milepost was called Terminus, which literally means "end of the line." - New Georgia Encyclodpedia

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50 GEORGIA RAILROAD - New Georgia Encyclodpedia
Atlanta owes its origins to two important developments in the 1830s: the forcible removal of Native Americans (Creeks and Cherokees) from northwest Georgia and the extension of railroad lines into the state's interior. Both of these actions sparked increased settlement and development in the upper Piedmont section of the state and led to Atlanta's founding. - New Georgia Encyclodpedia

51 WHAT ROLE DID THE TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION OF THE RAILROAD PLAY IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ATLANTA?

52 GEORGIA RAILROAD The area around the eastern terminus to the line began to develop first, and so the settlement was named "Terminus" in It was nicknamed Thrasherville after John Thrasher, who built homes and a general store there. The Chief Engineer of the Georgia Railroad, J. Edgar Thomson, suggested that the area be renamed "Atlantica-Pacifica", which was quickly shortened to "Atlanta". The residents approved, and the town was incorporated as Atlanta on December 29, Wikipedia.com

53 UNITED STATES RAILWAY SYSTEM IN 1870

54 WHAT CONCLUSIONS CAN YOU DRAW?
COMPARE THE GEORGIA RAILROAD MAP ON THE LEFT TO THE GEORGIA COTTON PRODUCTION MAP ON THE RIGHT. WHAT CONCLUSIONS CAN YOU DRAW?

55 How did the cotton gin and railroads impact Georgia’s growth?
Machine that separated the cotton fibers from the seeds. Increased cotton production Made economy of the south more agricultural Led to more cotton plantations - King Cotton Led to more westward expansion Led to an increase in slavery RAILROAD 1837 the city of Terminus is built (later named Atlanta) Atlanta becomes a transportation hub in the southeast Railroad transports Georgia agricultural products to the Midwest and Atlantic coast

56 Individuals – Groups – Institutions
SS8H4d Describe the role of William McIntosh in the removal of the Creek from Georgia. Concepts: Individuals – Groups – Institutions Rule of Law Movement / Migration

57 WILLIAM McINTOSH William McIntosh Jr., also known as Tustunnuggee Hutkee ("White Warrior"), was born around 1778 in the Lower Creek town of Coweta to Captain William McIntosh, a Scotsman of Savannah, and Senoya, a Creek woman of the Wind Clan. He was raised among the Creeks, but he spent enough time in Savannah to become fluent in English and to be able to move comfortably within both Indian and white societies. - NEW GEORGIA ENCYCLOPEDIA

58 WILLIAM McINTOSH William McIntosh was a controversial chief of the Lower Creeks in early-nineteenth-century Georgia. His general support of the United States and its efforts to obtain cessions of Creek territory alienated him from many Creeks who opposed white encroachment on Indian land. - NEW GEORGIA ENCYCLOPEDIA

59 WILLIAM McINTOSH McIntosh's participation in the 1825 Treaty of Indian Springs (signed away all Creek lands) cost him his life. According to a Creek law that McIntosh himself had supported, a sentence of execution awaited any Creek leader who ceded land to the United States without the full assent of the entire Creek Nation. Just before dawn on April 30, 1825, Upper Creek chief Menawa, accompanied by 200 Creek warriors, attacked McIntosh to carry out the sentence. They set fire to his home, and shot and stabbed to death McIntosh. - NEW GEORGIA ENCYCLOPEDIA

60 In 1825 cousins William McIntosh, a Creek leader, and George Troup, the governor of Georgia, signed the Treaty of Indian Springs, which authorized the sale of Creek lands in the state to the federal government. McIntosh was murdered shortly thereafter by angry members of the Creek Nation.

61 Individuals – Groups – Institutions
SS8H4e Analyze how key people (John Ross, John Marshall, and Andrew Jackson) and events (Dahlonega Gold Rush and Worcester v. Georgia) led to the removal of the Cherokees from Georgia known as the Trail of Tears Concepts: Individuals – Groups – Institutions Rule of Law Movement / Migration

62 CHEROKEE NATION The syllabary was used to print some articles in the Cherokee Phoenix newspaper, published in New Echota, Georgia (then the capital of the eastern Cherokees), from 1828 to The appearance of the newspaper, as well as the organized government of the Cherokee Nation, including tribal council and supreme court, infuriated the state of Georgia, which had an agreement with the U.S. government (the Compact of 1802) to remove the Native Americans New Georgia Encyclopedia

63 JOHN ROSS John Ross became chief of the Cherokee Nation in 1827, following the establishment of a government modeled on that of the United States. He presided over the nation during the apex of its development in the Southeast, the tragic Trail of Tears, and the subsequent rebuilding of the nation in Indian Territory, in present-day Oklahoma. - New Georgia Encyclopedia

64 JOHN ROSS His family moved to the base of Lookout Mountain, an area that became Rossville, Georgia. At his father's store Ross learned the customs of traditional Cherokees, although at home his mixed-blood family practiced European traditions and spoke English. - New Georgia Encyclopedia

65 JOHN ROSS As Ross took the reins of the Cherokee government in 1827, white Georgians increased their lobbying efforts to remove the Cherokees from the Southeast. The discovery of gold on Cherokee land fueled their desire to possess the area, which was dotted with lucrative businesses and prosperous plantations like Ross's. The Indian Removal Bill passed by Congress in 1830 provided legal authority to begin the removal process. Ross's fight against the 1832 Georgia lottery, designed to give away Cherokee lands, was the first of many political battles. - New Georgia Encyclopedia

66 JOHN ROSS Accompanying his people on the "trail where they cried," commonly known as the Trail of Tears, Ross experienced personal tragedy. His wife died of exposure after giving her only blanket to a sick child. Once in Indian Territory, Ross led the effort to establish farms, businesses, schools, and even colleges New Georgia Encyclopedia

67 ANDREW JACKSON RECOGNIZE THIS GUY?

68 JOHN MARSHALL Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. He ruled in favor of Sam Worcester in the court case titled Worcester v. Georgia. “The Supreme Court ruled that the Cherokee nation was a "distinct community" with self-government "in which the laws of Georgia can have no force," establishing the doctrine that the national government of the United States, and not individual states, had authority in Indian affairs.” –wikipedia

69 United States Supreme Court Decision:
WORCESTER V. GEORGIA United States Supreme Court Decision: Student Translation: Samuel Worcester (a white missionary) was given permission by Cherokees to live in the Cherokee Nation. However, he and others were arrested by the state of Georgia for not having a state license to live on Cherokee land. There were jailed and sentenced to serve four years of hard labor. Their appeal made it to the US Supreme Court, and Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that the state of Georgia did not have the right to arrest these people because they were living in a sovereign (free) Cherokee nation. In other words, the laws of Georgia did not apply to the lands of the Cherokee Nation in north Georgia.

70 ANDREW JACKSON The removal of the Native Americans to the west of the Mississippi River had been a major part of Andrew Jackson’s political agenda. After his election he signed the Indian Removal Act into law in The Act authorized the President to negotiate treaties to buy tribal lands in the east in exchange for lands further west, outside of existing U.S. state borders. He signed the Treaty of New Echota in 1835 that would remove all Cherokees from Georgia in exchange for lands in Oklahoma wikipedia

71 ANDREW JACKSON While frequently frowned upon in the North, the Removal Act was popular in the South, where population growth, slavery, and the discovery of gold on Cherokee land had increased pressure on tribal lands. The state of Georgia became involved in a dispute with the Cherokees, culminating in the 1832 U.S. Supreme Court decision (Worcester v. Georgia) which ruled that Georgia could not impose its laws upon Cherokee tribal lands wikipedia

72 ANDREW JACKSON Jackson is often quoted as having possibly said,
"John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it!" WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?

73 Chief Justice John Marshall
HERE IS AN EXAMPLE OF HOW THE SYSTEM OF CHECKS AND BALANCES WERE NOT USED PROPERLY IN AMERICAN HISTORY EXECUTIVE PRESIDENT Andrew Jackson JUDICIAL SUPREME COURT Chief Justice John Marshall WORCESTER V. GEORGIA Ruled that it is unconstitutional for states to create laws inside Indian territories. Did not enforce the Supreme court decision LEGISLATIVE GEORGIA ASSEMBLY Legislators Created a state law making people have to carry a state license to live on Cherokee territory

74 What role did the Dahlonega gold rush play in the removal of Cherokees in Georgia?

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77 DAHLONEGA GOLD RUSH The Great Intrusion
By late 1829 north Georgia, known at the time as the Cherokee Nation, was flooded by thousands of prospectors lusting for gold. Niles' Register reported in the spring of 1830 that there were four thousand miners working along Yahoola Creek alone. - New Georgia Encyclopedia

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79 DAHLONEGA GOLD RUSH While in his nineties, Benjamin Parks recalled the scene in the Atlanta Constitution (July 15, 1894): “The news got abroad, and such excitement you never saw. It seemed within a few days as if the whole world must have heard of it, for men came from every state I had ever heard of. They came afoot, on horseback and in wagons, acting more like crazy men than anything else. All the way from where Dahlonega now stands to Nuckollsville [Auraria] there were men panning out of the branches and making holes in the hillsides.”

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81 DAHLONEGA GOLD RUSH The sudden influx of miners into the Cherokee Nation was known even at the time as the Great Intrusion. One writer said in the Cherokee Phoenix, "Our neighbors who regard no law and pay no respects to the laws of humanity are now reaping a plentiful harvest We are an abused people." But there was little the Cherokees could do; it seemed the louder they protested, the more eagerly the miners came. - New Georgia Encyclopedia

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83 DAHLONEGA GOLD RUSH Gold rush towns sprang up quickly in north Georgia, particularly near the center of the gold region in present-day Lumpkin County. Auraria became an instant boomtown, growing to a population of 1,000 by The county seat, called Licklog at the time, in 1833 became known as Dahlonega, for the Cherokee word tahlonega, meaning golden. Within a few months after its establishment nearly 1,000 people were crowded into the settlement, with about 5,000 people in the surrounding county. - New Georgia Encyclopedia

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85 Branch Mint at Dahlonega
Congress soon authorized the establishment of a federal Branch Mint at Dahlonega, and in 1838 the new mint went into operation. It coined more than $100,000 worth of gold in its first year, and by the time it closed in 1861, it had produced almost 1.5 million gold coins with a face value of more than $6 million. - New Georgia Encyclopedia

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87 EFFECTS OF THE DAHLONEGA GOLD RUSH
Between 1805 and 1832 the state of Georgia held lotteries to distribute land seized from the Cherokees and Creeks. Nearly three quarters of the land in Georgia was allocated by the lottery system. Finally, the U.S. Army drove the Cherokees northwestward to Indian Territory in present-day Oklahoma during the bitterly cold winter of Deprived of proper food and clothing, at least 4,000—one-fifth of the entire Cherokee population—died on the journey. The forced migration became known as the Trail of Tears. - New Georgia Encyclopedia

88 1828 Gold attracted white settlers to north Georgia
What role did the Dahlonega gold rush play in the removal of Cherokees in Georgia? DAHLONEGA GOLD RUSH 1828 Gold attracted white settlers to north Georgia Land belonged to Cherokee Nation US Mint built in Dahlonega 1830 Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act 1838 Trail of Tears

89 CHEROKEE TRAIL OF TEARS
After the signing of the Treaty of New Echota, the Trail of Tears was the relocation and movement of Native Americans, including many members of the Cherokee, Creek, Seminole, and Choctaw nations among others in the United States, from their homelands to Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma) in the Western United States. Many Native Americans suffered from exposure, disease, and starvation while en route to their destinations, and many died, including 4,000 of the 15,000 relocated Cherokee wikipedia

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93 WHAT DO YOU THINK THE COLOR PURPLE REPRESENTS ON THE MAP?
IF YOU SAID THE LOCATION OF INDIAN RESERVATIONS THEN YOU ARE CORRECT.

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