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Chapter 18 - Conquest and Survival: The Trans-Mississippi West 1860-1900

18.1: Indian Peoples Under Siege

  • Indians west of the Mississippi river felt strongly the pressures that the West would gradually be integrated into the United States.

  • Hundreds of tribes, perhaps one million members of it, had occupied West Countries for over 20,000 years before European colonists reached the New World.

  • English, Spanish and other European invasions brought new patterns of business, diseases, religious conversion, and

  • They mutilated the bodies and returned to Denver to present themselves as trophies.

    • The bands of Cheyennes, Sioux, and Arapahoes were still ransacking, burning civilian outposts and killing whole families at times a few months after the Sand Creek massacre.

  • The Nez Perces considered themselves over generations to be good friends of white traders and colonists.

  • However, 1860 when gold was found on Nez Perce Land, its relations with Weiss were worse and their tribal identity also challenged

18.2: The Internal Empire

  • In 1848, gold was discovered in California and sought fortune from the United States, Europe and so far from Chile.

  • In 1882, the Congress adopted the Edmunds Act which enforced penalties and jail on those who believed in or practiced polygamy.

    • More devastating, five years later, Edmunds– Tucker Act disintegrated the Church of the Last Saints, seized assets of more than $50,000 and established a federal commission for all territorial elections.

  • With the Guadalupe Hidalgo Treaty, ending in the 1848 Mexican-American War, Hispanics to the north of Rio Grande chose to migrate to Mexico or to live in the United States today.

18.3: The Open Range

  • The large bovine traffic depended on the cowboy, a seasonal worker or a migrant.

    • Following the Civil War, cowboys rounded up Texas cattle and drove them to ranches or stores, as far as 1,500 miles north to shipping to the eastern markets by rail

  • Regular features were in animal towns and mining camps, lounges, playgrounds and dance halls.

  • Prostitution, gambling and drinking combined discouraged stable community formation.

    • Personal violence was well known in the streets and bars of the livestock towns and mining camps, most of which were young men.

18.4: Farming Communities

  • The 1862 Homestead Act offered prospective farmers the first significant incentive.

    • This law granted to any householder, who had lived there on the ground for at least five years and improved it or who could purchase land for $1.25 per acre at the end of six months, a quarter of the public domain gratuitously.

  • The majority of farms survived and were able to prosper, often from dawn to dark, through hard labor.

    • Men's activity in the fields was usually seasonal, with heavy labor while seeding and harvesting.

  • By the 1862 Morrill Act, land-grant schools acquired campus space in return for promising agricultural programmes.

  • The productivity of agriculture depended both on new technology and on the hard work of the farmers.

    • John Deere created his famous "singing plow" in 1837, easily turning prairie grasses into compact soils.

18.5: The Western Landscape

  • Artists, writers, and scientists soon built on what they saw and envisioned.

    • Many authors have described astonishing natural sites such as the Grand Tetons and High Sierra.

  • The West has been found in popular entertainment as the land of promise and opportunity and, above all, excitement and adventure.

  • New graphic reproduction technologies have encouraged the circulation of images of Indian peoples by painters and photographers.

https://s3.amazonaws.com/knowt-user-attachments/images%2F1632792844030-1632792844030.png

18.6: The Transformation of Indian Societies

  • Many of these measures were incorporated by the Dawes Severalty Act adopted by Congress in 1887 and federal Indian policy was established in decades to come.

  • Following the passing of the Dawes Severalty Act, Sioux has had yet another cycle of rebellion.

    • In 1889, during a total sunset, the North Paiute Wovoka had a vision.

  • The toughest tribalities were white settlers' occupying land or those far from their new communities.

18.1: Indian Peoples Under Siege

  • Indians west of the Mississippi river felt strongly the pressures that the West would gradually be integrated into the United States.

  • Hundreds of tribes, perhaps one million members of it, had occupied West Countries for over 20,000 years before European colonists reached the New World.

  • English, Spanish and other European invasions brought new patterns of business, diseases, religious conversion, and

  • They mutilated the bodies and returned to Denver to present themselves as trophies.

    • The bands of Cheyennes, Sioux, and Arapahoes were still ransacking, burning civilian outposts and killing whole families at times a few months after the Sand Creek massacre.

  • The Nez Perces considered themselves over generations to be good friends of white traders and colonists.

  • However, 1860 when gold was found on Nez Perce Land, its relations with Weiss were worse and their tribal identity also challenged

18.2: The Internal Empire

  • In 1848, gold was discovered in California and sought fortune from the United States, Europe and so far from Chile.

  • In 1882, the Congress adopted the Edmunds Act which enforced penalties and jail on those who believed in or practiced polygamy.

    • More devastating, five years later, Edmunds– Tucker Act disintegrated the Church of the Last Saints, seized assets of more than $50,000 and established a federal commission for all territorial elections.

  • With the Guadalupe Hidalgo Treaty, ending in the 1848 Mexican-American War, Hispanics to the north of Rio Grande chose to migrate to Mexico or to live in the United States today.

18.3: The Open Range

  • The large bovine traffic depended on the cowboy, a seasonal worker or a migrant.

    • Following the Civil War, cowboys rounded up Texas cattle and drove them to ranches or stores, as far as 1,500 miles north to shipping to the eastern markets by rail

  • Regular features were in animal towns and mining camps, lounges, playgrounds and dance halls.

  • Prostitution, gambling and drinking combined discouraged stable community formation.

    • Personal violence was well known in the streets and bars of the livestock towns and mining camps, most of which were young men.

18.4: Farming Communities

  • The 1862 Homestead Act offered prospective farmers the first significant incentive.

    • This law granted to any householder, who had lived there on the ground for at least five years and improved it or who could purchase land for $1.25 per acre at the end of six months, a quarter of the public domain gratuitously.

  • The majority of farms survived and were able to prosper, often from dawn to dark, through hard labor.

    • Men's activity in the fields was usually seasonal, with heavy labor while seeding and harvesting.

  • By the 1862 Morrill Act, land-grant schools acquired campus space in return for promising agricultural programmes.

  • The productivity of agriculture depended both on new technology and on the hard work of the farmers.

    • John Deere created his famous "singing plow" in 1837, easily turning prairie grasses into compact soils.

18.5: The Western Landscape

  • Artists, writers, and scientists soon built on what they saw and envisioned.

    • Many authors have described astonishing natural sites such as the Grand Tetons and High Sierra.

  • The West has been found in popular entertainment as the land of promise and opportunity and, above all, excitement and adventure.

  • New graphic reproduction technologies have encouraged the circulation of images of Indian peoples by painters and photographers.

https://s3.amazonaws.com/knowt-user-attachments/images%2F1632792844030-1632792844030.png

18.6: The Transformation of Indian Societies

  • Many of these measures were incorporated by the Dawes Severalty Act adopted by Congress in 1887 and federal Indian policy was established in decades to come.

  • Following the passing of the Dawes Severalty Act, Sioux has had yet another cycle of rebellion.

    • In 1889, during a total sunset, the North Paiute Wovoka had a vision.

  • The toughest tribalities were white settlers' occupying land or those far from their new communities.