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Great
Pioneer Projects
Great
Pioneer Projects
Great
Pioneer Projects
You Can Build Yourself
Rachel Dickinson
Sam
ple
file
Nomad PressA division of Nomad Communications
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1Copyright © 2007 by Nomad Press
All rights reserved.No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer
who may quote brief passages in a review. The trademark “Nomad Press” and the Nomad Press logo are trademarks of Nomad Communications, Inc. Printed in the United States.
ISBN: 978-0-9792268-6-1Questions regarding the ordering of this book should be addressed to
Independent Publishers Group814 N. Franklin St., Chicago, IL 60610
www.ipgbook.com
Nomad Press2456 Christian St., White River Junction, VT 05001
www.nomadpress.net
Image CreditsCover photo of train by Börries Burkhardt; prospector, p.2 / wagon train, p.28: Used by permission, Utah State Historical Society, all rights reserved; Louisiana Purchase, p.5/Buffalo Bill, p.6/Lewis and Clark, p.7/Clark field notes, p.8/Lewis, p.8/Clark, p.9/Mexican War, p.18/Manifest Destiny (George A. Crofutt, artist), p.19/Laura Ingalls Wilder, p.20/Oklahoma Land Rush (McClenny Family Picture Album), p.21/Sutter’s mine, p.22/Bodie, CA, p.22/John Sutter, p.23/Deadwood, p.24/Custer, p.24/Joseph Smith, p.48: from Wikipedia; panning for gold, p.21/first sod home, p.67/log cabin, p.68/log cabin, p.68/teams plowing, p.74/school, p.84/branding cattle, p.101: from the Library of Congress; emmigrant’s guide, p.42/Fort Hall, p.46/Whitmans, p.46/log cabin, p.71: from the National Park Service; laying tracks, p.61/golden spike ceremony, p.62/turning sod, p.65: from the U.S. National Archives (USNA); Levis, p.25: courtesy of PatentMuseum.com; wagon train, p.26: http://www.sonofthesouth.net/; soddie, p.66: from National Agriculture Library; quilting bee, p.74: courtesy of Middlesex Historical Society, from Middlesex in the Making: History and Memories of a Small Vermont Town, by Sarah Seidman and Patty Wiley; pottery, p.82: courtesy of Dargate Auction Galleries LLC / www.dargate.com; girl spinning, p.83: courtesy of Alden House Historic Site; cowboy, p.102: courtesy of Horse Prairie Ranch, Dillon, Montana; turkey, p.94: Pennsylvania Game Commission, photo by Joe Kosack; longhorn, p.103: courtesy of Butler Texas Longhorn.
Sam
ple
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Introduction
How It all Began
Chapter 1 Mapping the Way
Chapter 2 the Decision to Go West
Chapter 3 Wagon trains
Chapter 4 Hardships on the trail
Chapter 5 Popular routes
Chapter 6 the transcontinental railroad
Chapter 7 Building Homes
Chapter 8 Frontier Farming and Food
Chapter 9 at Home and at school
Chapter 10 Fun and Holidays
Chapter 11 cowboys and Indians
Chapter 12 Documenting the West
Glossary
resources
Index
contents
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1803: President Thomas Jefferson purchases the Louisiana Territory from France for $15 million. This extends the United States borders from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains.
1804: Meriwether Lewis and William Clark and the Corps of Discovery head out to explore the Louisiana Territory.
1806: Lewis and Clark return after reaching the Pacific Ocean.
1810: The U.S. annexes West Florida from Spain that includes parts of modern-day Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi.
1819: The U.S. annexes East Florida, which makes up present day Florida.
1830: Congress passes the Indian Removal Act, giving President Andrew Jackson the power to remove Native Americans from the east to lands west of the Mis-sissippi River.
1834: The Indian Territory is established in what is now Oklahoma. This is to serve as home for Native Americans who are displaced by white settlers.
1836: Defeat at the Alamo. Later the same year the Republic of Texas wins indepen-dence from Mexico.
1842: John C. Fremont makes accurate maps of the West.
1843: The first wagon train settlers from the East travel west along the Oregon Trail in the Great Migration.
Timeline pioneersTimeline pioneersww
Great American Pioneer Projects
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1844: The U.S. signs a treaty with the Republic of Texas to annex an area that includes Texas and parts of what are now Colo-rado, New Mexico, and Oklahoma.
1845: The U.S. annexes Texas. John L. O’Sullivan coins the term Manifest Destiny.
1846: The Mormons begin leaving Nauvoo, Illinois, to head west to their new home near the Great Salt Lake. Beginning of the Mexican-American War.
1848: Gold is discovered at Sutter’s mill in California. The U.S. gains what is now California, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Wyoming as a result of the end of the Mexican-American War. The US also annexes the Oregon Territory con-taining what is now Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and parts of Montana and Wyoming.
1853: For $10 million, the U.S. buys what is today part of Arizona and New Mexico in the Gadsden Purchase.
1860: The Pony Express operates a speedy delivery service in the west. Young men and fast horses deliver the mail in
breakneck speed covering sometimes as much as
250 miles per day. This mail service lasts about
18 months until the telegraph puts them out of business.
1861: Telegraph line is completed between San Francisco and St. Louis, effectively making the Pony Express obsolete.
1862: Congress passes the Homestead Act, which encourages settlers to move west. Many settle on the Great Plains, on lands reserved for Native Americans.
1867: The U.S. purchases the Alaska Territory from Russia for $7.2 million.
1869: The rails of the Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroads meet at Promontory Point near Ogden, Utah, inaugurating cross-coun-try train travel.
1872: Yellowstone National Park is established as the nation’s first national park.
1874: Barbed wire is patented, a small invention that will change the look of the Great Plains.
1876: George Custer is defeated at the Battle of Little Bighorn.
1883: The buffalo on the Great Plains are almost completely exterminated—only 200 remain.
1889: A huge portion of Indian Territory is opened for white homesteaders leading to the Oklahoma Land Rush.
1890: The U.S. Census Bureau declares the West settled and the frontier “closed.”
Timeline
GOLDGOLD
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184218361804
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