western frontier. ranching and farming cattle ranching –always existed but on the local level no...

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Page 1: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

WesternWestern

FrontierFrontier

Page 2: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and FarmingRanching and Farming• Cattle Ranching

– Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities.

• What would change?

– Railroads• Could bring cattle from Texas to Eastern cities.

– As long as the cattle were driven from Texas to Kansas they could be shipped to Chicago and from there other cities.

Page 3: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and FarmingRanching and Farming• Railroads

– Cattle industry boomed – very inexpensive to maintain – sold cows for up to 10x their original value.

• Only real cost was Cowhands – people who drove the cattle

– The Long Drive• Referred to the cattle drive to cow towns along the

railways.

Page 4: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and FarmingRanching and Farming• Railroads

– Over time cattle drives followed specific paths.• Chisolm Trail

– Stretched from San Antonio Texas to Abilene, Kansas– From 1867 – 1884 over 4 million cattle would be driven on

this trail.

• Cowhands– Vaqueros – First cowhands from Mexico

• Taught the Spanish, Mexican, and Americans how to ranch in the Southwest

– About 1/3 of cowhands were either Mexican or African American

Page 5: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and FarmingRanching and Farming• The Wild West ?

– Cow towns had no local governments at first.• No law enforcement

– Fights – Con-Men

• Crime became a way of life– Jesse James– Billy the Kid

– Citizens took law into their own hands• Vigilante Groups

– People who take the law into their own hands.• Often hung suspected criminals from the nearest tree

w/o trial.

Page 6: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and FarmingRanching and Farming– Citizens took law into their own hands

• Eventually as towns became more civilized they elected sheriffs or asked for a marshal.

• End of the Drive– The drive ended as railroads pushed deeper

and deeper into the West.

• End of the Cattle Boom– Price of cattle dropped– Barbed wire was used to fence in land– Winter of 1886-1887 was harsh killing

thousands of cattle.

Page 7: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and Farming• Farming

– Homestead Act• Offered 160 acres of land for free to

anyone who agreed to live on and improve the land for 5 years.

– Exodusters• African Americans who escaped the

Reconstruction era in the south.– Many Europeans

Page 8: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and Farming• Farming

– Challenges• No trees to build homes

– Sod – Top layer of soil matted with grass roots• Sodbusters – Nickname given to these new

western farmers.

• No Fuel– Burned corn cobs or manure

• Unpredictable Weather

Page 9: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and Farming• Farming

– Improvements• John Deere invented the steel plow• Windmills were developed to pump well

water to the surface• Barbed wire was used to fence in property• Reapers made harvesting easier• Threshers helped separate grain or seed

from straw

Page 10: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?
Page 11: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and Farming• Farming

– Farms face price drops• Why do you think this occurs?

– Farms also face a rise in operation costs– Needed a solution

• Grange (Patrons of Husbandry)– Goal: meet the social needs of farm families who lived

great distances from one another.

• Cooperatives – Organizations owned and run by their owners

– Bought grain elevators and sold crops directly to merchants

Page 12: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?
Page 13: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and Farming

• Farming– Began demanding government action

• Regulate shipping and storage rates– Government backed farmers

• Have the right to regulate the railroads because they are businesses that served the public interest.

Page 14: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and FarmingRanching and Farming• Farming

– Political Action – Formed their own political party• Populist (People’s) Party

– Platform – Freely print silver money to create inflation which would drive up prices – Free Silver Policy.

– Opponents – Gold Standard• Each dollar is backed with a certain amount of

gold• Less money is produced keeping its value and

reducing chance of inflation

Page 15: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and FarmingRanching and Farming• Farming

– Political Action• Election of 1892

– Won by Grover Cleveland– Populist party received over a million votes.

• Election of 1896– William McKinley – Republican– William Jennings Bryan – Democrat/Populist– McKinley won by 500,000 votes based on his

eastern industrialist support.– Populist begin to decline in popularity

Page 16: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Ranching and FarmingRanching and Farming

• Farming – Closing the Frontier

• 1889 - Oklahoma Territory was all that was left

• 1890 – Census Bureau declared that the country no longer had a continuous frontier line.

Page 17: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

MiningMining• 1859 – Gold and silver strikes attracted

people to Colorado and Nevada– Pike Peak, Colorado– Western Nevada

• Comstock Lode– Lode – A deposit of a valuable mineral buried in layers of

rock– Produced $300 million is 21 years

Page 18: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

MiningMining• Boomtowns

– Towns that have a sudden burst in economic or population growth

• Virginia City, Nevada– Population jumped by over 17,000 people in 10 years.

• Very few prospectors ever got rich

• Began to move underground– Stripped hillsides of vegetation and left rivers

polluted.

Page 19: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

MiningMining

• Became dangerous and eventually died out.– Many boomtowns were left as ghost

towns

– As a result of the mining boom Nevada, Colorado, and South Dakota gained statehood

Page 20: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Struggles with Native AmericansStruggles with Native Americans

• Plains Indians– Relied heavily on the buffalo.

• Used it for food, shelter, clothing, blankets, fuel, weapons, utensils.

– As a result the tribes were nomadic to keep up with the buffalo.

Page 21: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Struggles with Native AmericansStruggles with Native Americans• Clashes With Whites

– The government pushed Indians west promising the West would be theirs as long as grass grew and water ran.• Treaties were usually broken

– Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851)• Bought back Native American land and set

boundaries for tribal lands– Most agreed

Page 22: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Struggles with Native AmericansStruggles with Native Americans• Clashes with Whites

– Treaty of Fort Laramie• Reactions

– Cheyenne and Sioux resisted• Government sent troops under Col. John

Chivington• Opened fire on a Cheyenne village killing

150+• Sand Creek Massacre (Colorado)

– Indians fire back ambushing many militias

Page 23: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?
Page 24: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Struggles with Native AmericansStruggles with Native Americans• Clashes with Whites

– Battle of Little Big Horn (Montana)• Sioux were united by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse

and began to leave the reservation– Seventh Calvary was sent out – Col. George Custer

• 211 men were wiped out by the Indians in 2 hours• Last major Native American victory.

– Chief Joseph (Nez Perce)• Tried to lead his tribe to Canada

– Was caught 40 miles from the border and surrendered to U.S Troops

Page 25: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?
Page 26: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?
Page 27: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

Struggles with Native AmericansStruggles with Native Americans

• Clashes with Whites– Geronimo (Apaches)

• Led raids on settlers’ homes.• Captured many times but always escaped.• 1886 surrendered and was thrown in prison

Page 28: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?
Page 29: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

End of Plains LifeEnd of Plains Life• In ten years hunters killed 1,000,000+

buffalo– Food– Sport– Leather

• Ghost Dance– Done to bring about a prophesied age in

which the whites would be removed and Native Americans would once again be free.

Page 30: Western Frontier. Ranching and Farming Cattle Ranching –Always existed but on the local level no way to get the cows to Eastern cities. What would change?

End of Plains LifeEnd of Plains Life–Many of these ghost dancers prepared

for war and gathered in South Dakota• Tracked down by the army at wounded

knee.

• Shots were fired and around 300 Indians were killed.

–Wounded Knee Massacre.• Ended armed Indian resistance in the

West