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Note: Until 1863, the state of Virginia comprised its present territory and the territory of present day West Virginia. 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 1830 City Population Closing of the Plains - Westward Expansion (1830-1900) Source: U.S. Census Bureau ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 1 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Note: Until 1863, the state of Virginia comprised its present territory and the territory of present day West Virginia. 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 1840 City Population Closing of the Plains - Westward Expansion (1830-1900) Source: U.S. Census Bureau ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 2 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Note: Until 1863, the state of Virginia comprised its present territory and the territory of present day West Virginia. 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 1850 City Population Closing of the Plains - Westward Expansion (1830-1900) Source: U.S. Census Bureau ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 3 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 1860 City Population Closing of the Plains - Westward Expansion (1830-1900) Source: U.S. Census Bureau ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 4 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 1870 City Population Closing of the Plains - Westward Expansion (1830-1900) Source: U.S. Census Bureau ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 5 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 1880 City Population Closing of the Plains - Westward Expansion (1830-1900) Source: U.S. Census Bureau ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 6 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 1890 City Population Closing of the Plains - Westward Expansion (1830-1900) Source: U.S. Census Bureau ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 7 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 0 100 Miles 1900 City Population Closing of the Plains - Westward Expansion (1830-1900) Source: U.S. Census Bureau ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 8 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Homestead Act (1862) The Homestead Act of 1862, was signed into law by President Abraham Lincoln on May 20, 1862. Anyone who had never taken up arms against the U.S. government (including freed slaves and women); was 21 or older, or the head of a family; could file an application to claim a federal land grant. There was also a residency requirement. The "yeoman farmer" ideal of Jeffersonian democracy was still a powerful influence in American politics during the 1840–1850s, with many politicians believing a homestead act would help increase the number of "virtuous yeomen". The Free Soil Party of 1848–52, and the new Republican Party after 1854, demanded that the new lands opening up in the west be made available to independent farmers, rather than wealthy planters who would develop it with the use of slaves forcing the yeomen farmers onto marginal lands. Southern Democrats had continually fought (and defeated) previous homestead law proposals, as they feared free land would attract European immigrants and poor Southern whites to the west. After the South seceded and their delegates left Congress in 1861, the Republicans and other supporters from the upper South passed a homestead act. The intent of the first Homestead Act, passed in 1862, was to liberalize the homesteading requirements of the Preemption Act of 1841. Its leading advocates were Andrew Johnson, George Henry Evans and Horace Greeley. The law (and those following it) required a three step procedure: file an application, improve the land, and file for deed of title. Anyone who had never taken up arms against the U.S. government (including freed slaves) and was at least 21 years old or the head of a household, could file an application to claim a federal land grant. The occupant had to reside on the land for five years, and show evidence of having made improvements. Between 1862 and 1934, the federal government granted 1.6 million homesteads and distributed 270,000,000 acres (420,000 sq mi) of federal land for private ownership. This was a total of 10% of all land in the United States http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homestead_Act_of_1862 ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 9 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Homestead Act (1862) Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That any person who is the head of a family, or who has arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and is a citizen of the United States, or who shall have filed his declaration of intention to become such, as required by the naturalization laws of the United States, and who has never borne arms against the United States Government or given aid and comfort to its enemies, shall, from and after the first January, eighteen hundred and. sixty-three, be entitled to enter one quarter section or a less quantity of unappropriated public lands, upon which said person may have filed a preemption claim, or which may, at the time the application is made, be subject to preemption at one dollar and twenty-five cents, or less, per acre; or eighty acres or less of such unappropriated lands, at two dollars and fifty cents per acre, to be located in a body, in conformity to the legal subdivisions of the public lands, and after the same shall have been surveyed: Provided, That any person owning and residing on land may, under the provisions of this act, enter other land lying contiguous to his or her said land, which shall not, with the land so already owned and occupied, exceed in the aggregate one hundred and sixty acres. ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 10 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Dawes Act (1887) Background The Dawes Act of 1887, authorized the President of the United States to survey Indian tribal land and divide it into allotments for individual Indians. Dawes Act was amended in 1891 and again in 1906 by the Burke Act. The stated objective of the Dawes Act was to stimulate assimilation of Indians into American society. Individual ownership of land was seen as an essential step. The act also provided that the government would purchase Indian land "excess" to that needed for allotment and open it up for settlement by nonIndians. The Dawes Commission, set up under an Indian Office appropriation bill in 1893, was created, not to administer the Dawes Act, but to try to persuade the Five Civilized Tribes, which were excluded under the Dawes Act, to agree to an allotment plan. This commission registered the members of the Five Civilized Tribes on what became known as the Dawes Rolls. The Curtis Act of 1908 completed the process of destroying tribal governments by abolishing tribal jurisdiction of Indian land. After decades of seeing the disarray these acts caused, the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration supported passage in 1934 of the US Indian Reorganization Act. It ended allotment and created a "New Deal" for Indians, including renewing their rights to reorganize and form their own governments. Adapted From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dawes_act ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 11 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Dawes Act (1887) Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That in all cases where any tribe or band of Indians has been, or shall hereafter be, located upon any reservation created for their use, either by treaty stipulation or by virtue of an act of Congress or executive order setting apart the same for their use, the President of the United States be, and he hereby is, authorized, whenever in his opinion any reservation or any part thereof of such Indians is advantageous for agricultural and grazing purposes, to cause said reservation, or any part thereof, to be surveyed, or resurveyed if necessary, and to allot the lands in said reservation in severalty to any Indian located thereon in quantities as follows: To each head of a family, one-quarter of a section; To each single person over eighteen years of age, one-eighth of a section; To each orphan child under eighteen years of age, one-eighth of a section; and To each other single person under eighteen years now living, or who may be born prior to the date of the order of the President directing an allotment of the lands embraced in any reservation, one-sixteenth of a section: Sec. 8. That the provisions of this act shall not extend to the territory occupied by the Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, Seminoles, and Osage, Miamies and Peorias, and Sacs and Foxes, in the Indian Territory, nor to any of the reservations of the Seneca Nation of New York Indians in the State of New York, nor to that strip of territory in the State of Nebraska adjoining the Sioux Nation on the south added by executive order. ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 12 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Settlement of the Plains The Oklahoma Land Rush of 1889 was the first land run into the Unassigned Lands and included all or part of the 2005 modern day Canadian, Cleveland, Kingfisher, Logan, Oklahoma, and Payne counties of the U.S. state of Oklahoma. The land run started at high noon on April 22, 1889, with an estimated 50,000 people lined up for their piece of the available two million acres. The Unassigned Lands were considered some of the best unoccupied public land in the United States. The Indian Appropriations Bill of 1889 was passed and signed into law with an amendment by Illinois Representative William McKendree Springer, that authorized President Benjamin Harrison to open the two million acres for settlement. Due to the Homestead Act of 1862, signed by President Abraham Lincoln, legal settlers could claim lots up to 160 acres in size. Provided a settler lived on the land and improved it, the settler could then receive the title to the land. ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 13 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Settlement of the Plains Effects were... Dawes Act Homestead Act Stated that... ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 14 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Klondike Gold Rush With cries of "Gold! Gold! in the Klondike!" there unfolded in the Yukon and Alaska a brief but fascinating adventure, which has captured the imagination of people around the world ever since. In August 1896 when Skookum Jim Mason, Dawson Charlie and George Washington Carmack found gold in a tributary of the Klondike River in Canada's Yukon Territory, they had no idea they they would set off one of the greatest gold rushes in history. Beginning in 1897, an army of hopeful goldseekers, unaware that most of the good Klondike claims were already staked, boarded ships and Seattle and other Pacific port cities and headed north toward the vision of riches to be had for the taking. All through the summer and on into the winter of 1897-98, stampeders poured into the newly created Alaskan tent and shack towns of Skagway and Dyea - the jumping off points for the 600-mile trek to the goldfields. Skagway, at the head of the White Pass Trail, was founded by a former steamboat captain named William Moore. His small homestead was inundated with some 10,000 transient residents struggling to get their required year's worth of gear and supplies over the Coast Range and down the Yukon River headwaters at lakes Lindeman and Bennett. Dyea, three miles away at the head of Taiya Inlet, experienced the same frantic boomtown activity as goldseekers poured ashore and picked their way up the Chilkoot Trail into Canada. Stampeders faced their greatest hardships on the Chilkoot Trail out of Dyea and the White Pass Trail out of Skagway. There were murders and suicides, disease and malnutrition, and death from hypothermia, avalanche, and, some said heartbreak. The Chilkoot was the toughest on men because pack animals could not be used easily on the steep slopes leading to the pass. Until tramways were built late in 1897 and early 1898, the stampeders had to carry everything on their backs. The White Pass Trail was the animal-killer, as anxious prospectors overloaded and beat their pack animals and forced them over the rocky terrain until they dropped. More than 3,000 animals died on this trail; many of their bones still lie at the bottom on Dead Horse Gulch. Source: National Park Service ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 15 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Klondike Gold Rush During the first year of the rush an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 goldseekers spent an average of three months packing their outfits up the trails and over the passes to the lakes. The distance from tidewater to the lakes was only about 35 miles, but each individual trudged hundreds of miles back and forth along the trails, moving gear from cache to cache. Once the prospectors had hauled their full array of gear to the lakes, they built or bought boats to float the remaining 560 or so miles downriver to Dawson City and the Klondike mining district where an almost limitless supply of gold nuggets was said to lie. By midsummer of 1898 there were 18,000 people at Dawson, with more than 5,000 working the diggings. By August many of the stampeders had started for home, most of them broke. The next year saw a still larger exodus of miners when gold was discovered at Nome, Alaska. The great Klondike Gold Rush ended as suddenly as it had begun. Towns such as Dawson City and Skagway began to declines. Others, including Dyea, disappeared altogether, leaving only memories of what many consider to be the last grand adventure of the 19th century. Source: National Park Service ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 16 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Assimilation / Americanization http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6d/Western_Indian_Wars.jpg ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 17 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Assimilation / Americanization Portraits of Native Americans from the Cherokee, Cheyenne, Choctaw, Comanche, Iroquois, and Muscogee tribes in Euro-American attire. Photos date from 1868 to 1924. Native American group of Carlisle Indian Industrial School Male and Female Students; Brick Dormitories And Bandstand in Background 1879. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americanization_(of_Native_Americans) ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 18 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Assimilation / Americanization http://commons.wikimedia.org http://commons.wikimedia.org The photographs above are of people from different American Indian tribes. What to the photographs have to do with the concept of Americanization? ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 19 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact. Closing of the Plains - Cattle Drive Cattle drives were a major economic activity in the American west, particularly between 1866 and 1886, when 20 million cattle were herded from Texas to railheads in Kansas for shipments to stockyards in Chicago and points east. The long distances covered, the need for periodic rests by riders and animals, and the establishment of railheads led to the development of "cow towns" across the American West. http://cfbstaff.cfbisd.edu/wallm/Texas%20Main/Frontier%20and%20Industry/western_cattle_trails.htm Cattle towns flourished between 1866 and 1890 as railroads reached towns suitable for gathering and shipping cattle. The first was Abilene, Kansas. Other towns in Kansas, including Wichita and Dodge City, succeeded Abilene or shared its patronage by riders fresh off the long trail. In the 1880s Dodge City boasted of being the "cowboy capital of the world." Communities in other states, including Ogallala, Nebraska; Cheyenne, Wyoming; Miles City, Montana; and Medora, North Dakota, served the trade as well. Amarillo, Fort Worth, and Wichita Falls, all in Texas; Prescott, Arizona, Greeley, Colorado, and Las Vegas, New Mexico were regionally important. The most famous cattle towns like Abilene were railheads, where the herds were shipped to the Chicago stockyards. Many smaller towns along the way supported open range lands. Many of the cow towns were enlivened by buffalo hunters, railroad construction gangs, and freighting outfits during their heyday. Cattle owners made these towns headquarters for buying and selling. Later, however, continued overgrazing, combined with drought and the exceptionally severe winter of 1886–1887 wiped out much of the open-range cattle business in Montana and the upper Great Plains. Following these events, ranchers began to use barbed wire to enclose their ranches and protect their own grazing lands from intrusions by others' animals. In the 1890s, herds were still occasionally driven from the Panhandle of Texas to Montana. However, railroads had expanded to cover most of the nation, and meat packing plants were built closer to major ranching areas, making long cattle drives to the railheads unnecessary. Hence, the age of the open range was gone and the era of large cattle drives were over. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattle_drives_in_the_United_States ®SAISD Social Studies Department Page 20 Reproduction rights granted only if copyright information remains intact.