westward expansion. william clark and meriwether lewis

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Westward Expansion Westward Expansion

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Page 1: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Westward ExpansionWestward Expansion

Page 2: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

William Clark and Meriwether Lewis William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Page 3: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Louisiana PurchaseLouisiana Purchase• Good Deal: Paid France $15 million• Doubled the size of the country• Gained control of the Mississippi River

Meriwether Lewis and William Clark• Explored geography• Created maps (routes to the Pacific

Ocean)• Studied how Indian tribes lived• Was helped by Sacagawea

Page 4: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Hmmmmmm..Hmmmmmm..

• Sounds interesting, but I am afraid of the journey and leaving what I know and where I feel safe.

• Would you leave your home to explore and settle on a new land?

Page 5: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Homestead Act:Homestead Act:To expand the westTo expand the west

• May 20, 1862

• Qualifications: Head of House

–21 years or older

–Citizen

–Can not bear arms against the United States

Page 6: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Land Allotment:Land Allotment:• ¼ section or less

• Approximate 160 acres

Filing Requirement:

• Swear for personal use only

• Application at land office

• Ten dollars

Page 7: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

DEATH!DEATH!

• If the head of the house dies:

– Spouse inherits the land

– If they both die – oldest child

Page 8: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

LOSS OF LAND:LOSS OF LAND:

–If you have not worked on it for five years

–Can’t lose land due to previous debt

–If no one has lived there for more than 6 months

Page 9: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Reasons for Moving West

Page 10: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

1841-1866: approximately 350,0001841-1866: approximately 350,000Americans traveled West Americans traveled West for a variety of reasons:for a variety of reasons:

• a fresh start

• fertile farmland

• religious persecution

• adventure

• prospects of riches

Page 11: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Four Jump-Off PointsFour Jump-Off Points

• St. Joseph, Missouri

•Independence, Missouri

•Council Bluffs, Iowa

•Nauvoo, Illinois

Page 12: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

The Cost of Traveling West:

•$800.00 -$1,200.00

•Most people who traveled west were fairly well off

•According to a “Guide To California” published in 1849 necessary supplies for a party of four could cost near $600.00.

Page 13: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Item Cost/1850

1 wagon $ 90.00

2 oxen $ 400.00

600 lbs. flour $ 12.00

120 lbs. biscuit $ 3.60

400 lbs. bacon $ 20.00

200 lbs. Beans $ 16.00

120 lbs.dried fruit $ 28.80

1 keg whiskey $ 5.00

1 rifle $ 30.00

2 pistols $ 30.00

5 lbs. powder $ 1.25

10 lbs. shot $ 1.00

Cost/2004

$ 2,100.00

$ 9,360.00

$ 2,800.00

$ 84.20

$ 468.00

$ 374.40

$ 674.00

$ 117.00

$ 702.00

$ 702.00

$ 29.20

$ 23.40

Page 14: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Other items the travelers brought with them included:

Candles Soap

60 lbs. Coffee Bedding

100 lbs. Sugar Tools

200 lbs. Lard Clothing

40 lbs. Salt 8 lbs. Pepper

Page 15: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

The Journey:

•six (6) months to complete

•Must start in the early Spring

•Too early, could face flooded rivers, and late snows

•Too late they faced possible of severe weather conditions while crossing the Rockies.

Page 16: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Oregon TrailOregon Trail• Fur trappers -attracted to the plentiful

animals.

• Settlers/farmers -attracted by the fertile land in certain areas.

• Used guidebooks to travel - often wrong

• Donner Party – took a cut-off and was snowed in on the Sierra Nevada Mountain. Resorted to extremes to survive.

Page 17: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Westward TransportationWestward Transportation

• Walking: most people, except for the aged and ill, walked 2,000 miles in about 6 months

• Disney World (Florida) is approximately 1,100 miles away!

Page 18: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 19: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

“Prairie Schooners” would form Wagon Trains

Page 20: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 21: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Scores of wagons traveled over the same

tracks. Usually, wagons traveled several columns

across, and several wagons deep. A view

from the sky would reveal perhaps a dozen or so tracks parallel to

these.

Page 22: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

CanalsCanals• Rivers were easy for transporting

both people and goods. (cheaper and quicker)

• River “towns” became crowded like the cities – people moved farther away

• Connecting rivers were also needed

Page 23: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

• Canals were the answer – man-made “rivers” used to move goods and for quicker travel.

• Barges moved along the canals, pulled by mules or horses which walked along the edge of the water.

• Erie Canal (363 miles) – took 8 years and $7 million.

http://www.songsforteaching.com/folk/eriecanal.htm

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Koj5yGigFNU

Page 24: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 25: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 26: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

• Canals were dug by men with shovels and horses

• Carried goods, such as furniture and clothing to the west.

• Brought back goods, such as grain and lumber to the east.

Page 27: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Challenges:

• Terrain, ranging from wide open prairie to the desert like Badlands, made travel difficult.

• Mountains could be impassable, and they always feared the lack of fresh water and food.

• Hardships along the trails were common, and varied. Weather could turn severe without notice.

Page 28: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 29: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Hardships:

• Indians, although usually helpful, could always pose a threat.

• Daily routines were exhausting. Food and water had to be obtained. Fires had to be started, meals cooked, pots cleaned, etc.

• Accidents and disease was all to common, and unfortunately deadly.

Page 30: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Accidents were commonAccidents were common

• Children fell or jumped off, crushed to death by the wheels or oxen

• Bison stampede smashed wagons

• Adults and children drowned in river crossings.

• Bitten by poisonous snakes (land and water)

Page 31: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 32: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

HomesHomes• Log Cabins

• Sod Houses:

–No tress on the Great Plains

–Used chunks of sod

–Often built into a hill

–Leaked, insects, dark, uncomfortable

Page 33: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 34: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 35: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 36: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 37: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Manifest Destiny – President James Polk believed in this doctrine

–It is the idea that it was the will of God for the U.S. to extend from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean.

Page 38: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

The Mexican War (1846)The Mexican War (1846)Causes

• Mexico was opposed to Texas becoming a U.S. territory

• The U.S. and Mexico disagreed where about the southern boundary of Texas.

Page 39: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 40: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

• President Polk used this border dispute to justify moving U.S. troops into Mexican territory.

• “Remember the Alamo”

Did I “Polk” and provoke the war with Mexico?

Maybe!

Page 41: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

• The Alamo: About 200 Americans, including Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett, versus over 6,000 Mexican troops.

• Americans held the mission for 12 days, but the Mexicans won. Most Americans eventually were killed.

• Overall: U.S. Army was too strong for the Mexicans – won easily.

Page 42: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Results

• Mexico agreed that the Rio Grande River was the southern boundary of Texas.

• Mexico gave all of present-day California, Nevada, and Utah, as well as part of New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming

• The U.S. paid Mexico $15 million for this land – called Mexican Cession.

http://www.pibmug.com/files/map_test.swf

Page 43: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 44: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis
Page 45: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

The Gadsden PurchaseThe Gadsden Purchase

• 5 years later – U.S. paid Mexico $10 million for more land in southern New Mexico and Arizona.

• U.S. Railroad companies wanted to build train routes to California on this land

Page 46: Westward Expansion. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis

Ideas Move Ideas Move EASTEAST• Ideas about equality and

democracy moved

Who was allowed to vote?

• East – Only white males over 21 who owned property

• West – ALL white males over 21

Voting rules were eventually changed in the east.