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What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build...

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What Made it What Made it Possible? Possible? • Pacific Railway Act – Passed July 1, 1862 – Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific – Provided companies 5 alternating plots of land on each side of the road for each mile along the route – Allowed $16,000 for each mile of flat land, $32,000 for hills, and $48,000 for mountain terrain – Revised in 1864 to allow companies more land and privileges
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Page 1: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

What Made it Possible?What Made it Possible?•Pacific Railway Act

– Passed July 1, 1862– Created Union Pacific to build road from the

East and meet the Central Pacific– Provided companies 5 alternating plots of

land on each side of the road for each mile along the route

– Allowed $16,000 for each mile of flat land, $32,000 for hills, and $48,000 for mountain terrain

– Revised in 1864 to allow companies more land and privileges

Page 2: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Game PlanThe Game Plan•Central Pacific Railroad

– Begin in Sacramento, CA– Broke ground January 1863

•Union Pacific Railroad– Begin in Omaha, NE– Broke ground in late 1863 but no

tracks laid until 1865•Route along the 42nd Parallel•Meeting place: Promontory

Summit, UT

Page 3: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.
Page 4: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Significance of the RailroadSignificance of the Railroad

•Biggest and best engineering project of its time

•Made the country smaller•Helped spur interest in Homestead Act• Improved communication•The beginning of the end for Native

Americans•Led to other transcontinental railroads

and shorter branches

Page 5: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Morrill Land-Grant Act

• 1862• Gave millions of acres of

land to the states.– Land speculators

Money was to be used to create colleges and universities.

Justin S. Morrill (1810-1898)

Page 6: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Homestead Act

• Passed by Lincoln in 1862

• 160 acres – 21 years old or head of

house– House at least 12 x 14 ft– 6 months– Farm 5 years

Soddie – home made from sod

Page 7: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Discussion question:

What did the Morrill Land-Grant Act have in common with the

Homestead Act?

Page 8: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Who were the homesteaders?

• Immigrants• Freedmen

– Exodusters– Benjamin “Pap”

Singleton

Page 9: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.
Page 10: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Boomers

• Settlers who ran in land races to claim land

• Settlers who illegally claimed land by sneaking past the government officials

Sooners

Page 11: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

• In the mid 1880’s, following a series of droughts, people starting returning east again.– 18,000 in 1891 alone

Page 12: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Women’s Suffrage

• Wyoming 1869– Would not accept statehood unless Union

allowed women to vote1893 – Colorado1896 – Idaho

Why would these states have granted women the right to vote before it was nationally recognized by the 19th Amendment?

Page 13: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Dawes Act

• Divided reservation land into individual plots– Each Native American family received a 160

acre plot• Granted U.S. citizenship and subject to local laws

“You ask me to cut grass and make hay and sell it, and be rich like white men! But how dare I cut off my mother’s hair?” - Smohalla

Page 14: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Discussion question!

What was the difference between the Native Americans and settlers in their

views about land ownership?

Page 15: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Indian Removal

• Pressure increased on Native American territory

• Indian Removal Act of 1830

• Forced relocation to Oklahoma Territory

• Trail of Tears

A map showing the major tribes and the routes by which the government relocated them

Page 16: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Buffalo

• 25 million in 1840• By 1889, around

1,100.Factors:Easy to huntBuffalo fur was popular in the East.Buffalo hide was tough, and the leather was used in

machinery. Hopes it would force the Native Americans into

farming

Page 17: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Native Americans

BIA – Bureau of Indian Affairs

managed delivery of critical supplies to the reservations

Disagreements and frustrations resulted in anger, some groups sought revenge.

Page 18: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Army life

• $13/mo

• Leftover Civil War uniforms

• Rotten food

• 1/3 deserted

Page 19: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Sand Creek Massacre

• 1864• Colorado Territory• Cheyenne and Arapaho Native Americans• Colonel John Chivington took 700 men to

the camped Cheyenne and Arapaho – Chief Black Kettle tried to raise a white flag of

surrender, but the army slaughtered between 150-500 people. The camp largely held women and children.

Page 20: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

From Lt. Joseph Cramer to Maj. Edward Wynkoop, Dec. 19, 1864:

"This is the first opportunity I have had of writing you since the great Indian Massacre, and for a start, I will acknowledge I am ashamed to own I was in it...It is no use for me to tell you how the fight was managed, only I think the Officer in command should be hung...After the fight there was a sight I hope I may never see again...Bucks, woman and children, were scalped, fingers cut off to get the rings on them...little children shot, while begging for their lives...I told the Col. I thought it was murder to jump them friendly Indians. He says in reply; Damn any man or men who are in sympathy with them."

Page 21: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Battle of Little Bighorn

• 1876

• Also known as “Custer’s Last Stand”

• Sioux from Dakota, Wyoming and Montana Territories

Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse

2,000 Native American warriors to Custer’s little more than 200

soldiers in an hour.

Page 22: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.
Page 23: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

“I am the last Indian.” Chief Sitting Bull

Chief Crazy Horse

Page 24: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Lt Colonel George Armstrong Custer 1839-1876

Page 25: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Ghost Dance

Purification ceremony in which people joined hands and whirled

in a circle

Page 26: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Sioux Indians hunting buffalo 1835

Sioux war council

Art by George Catlin

Page 27: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Massacre of Wounded Knee• 1890 - Sioux

• Ghost Dance

• Chief Sitting Bull– When he hesitated being arrested, he was

shot by the army officers. His followers, 120 men and 230 women & children surrendered and were rounded up. As they were being disarmed, someone fired a shot. More than 200 Sioux were killed.

Page 28: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

        Soldiers pose with three of the four Hotchkiss Guns used against the Lakota at Wounded Knee. The caption on the photograph reads:Famous Battery "K" of the 1st ArtilleryThese brave men and the Hotchkiss guns thatBig Foot's Indians thought were toys,Together with the fighting 7th what'sLeft of Gen. Custer's boys,Sent 200 Indians to thatHeaven which the ghost dancer enjoys.This checked the Indian noise,And Gen. Miles with staffReturned to Illinois.Photo by Grabill, Deadwood, South Dakota.

Page 29: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.
Page 30: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Assimilation

• Process by which the people of one culture merge into and become part of another culture.

Page 31: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Cowboys and the Gold rush

Page 32: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

GOLD!

• Not just in California

• Colorado, Nevada – Placer mining

• Shallow, anybody could do it

Huge corporations moved in after to get the larger, underground ore deposits

Page 33: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.
Page 34: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.
Page 35: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Barricks Ruby Hill Mine outside Eureka, NV

Page 36: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Major mining strikes

Page 37: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Discussion

• What creates the mining boom that started with the California Gold Rush?

Page 38: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

• Bonanza farms– Farms controlled by

large businesses that are managed by professionals and produce massive amounts of cash crops

• Dry farming – Planting crops that

don’t require very much water

Page 39: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Technology in Farming1860-1900

• Mechanized reaper• Barbed wire• Dry farming• Steel plow• Harrow• Steel windmill• Hybridization• Improved communication• Grain drill

Page 40: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Cattle boom

• Cattle barons were wealthy ranchers, owning more than 100,000 cattle.

Why would cattle be developing as such a huge industry?

Page 41: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Buffalo

• 25 million in 1840• By 1889, around

1,100.Factors:Easy to huntBuffalo fur was popular in the East.Buffalo hide was tough, and the leather was used in

machinery. Hopes it would force the Native Americans into

farming

Page 42: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Chisolm Trail The Long Drive

Page 43: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Factors that ended the cattle boom

• Over-expansion

• Prices dropped

• Cold winters

• Droughts

• Diseases – cattle fever

Page 44: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Frederick Jackson Turner

Turner Thesis

Emphasized individual effort, but down played federal involvement, Native American life, and contributions of women and other ethnic groups.

Page 45: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Wild West is romanticized

• Stereotypes of western heroes– Wyatt Earp– Calamity Jane– Wild Bill Hickok

William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody

wild west shows became incredibly popular and helped shape the image of the West.

Page 46: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.
Page 47: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Rise and Fall of the Populist Party

1867-1896

Page 48: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Farmers’ Problems:

• Lower prices for crops

• Farmers had no cash . . .went further into debt. . . foreclosed on mortgages

• Railroads charged outrageous prices to ship crops (no regulation!)

Page 49: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Lending practices

• Inflation– The money you pay

back is less than what you originally borrowed

• Deflation– The money you pay

back is more than what you borrowed

Example: If you borrowed $100 in 1880, you could buy 80 acres of land. What can you buy today for $100? This is inflation. Your money today is “worth less” than it was then.

Page 50: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Money Supply

• Money supply is the amount of money in the national economy.– If the government

increases the money supply, the value of the dollar drops

• Called Inflation

• After the Civil War, the money supply shrank– Deflation

Page 51: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Originally the US is on a bimetallic standard of using gold or silver coins

• Gold bugs– Conservative, big lenders

• Gold standard– Money put in

circulation was backed by gold. Less money out

• Silverites– Western miners and

farmers, called for unlimited silver dollars, hoping for better prices for selling goods.

– Free silver - unlimited silver coining

Page 52: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The bimetallism ratio16:1

• 16 oz. of silver is equal to 1 oz of gold

• This has fluctuated over the years, but the standard remains between 14:1 and16:1

Page 53: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Farmers’ Demands:

• Regulate the railroad companies! (stop them from charging such high rates)

• Make cash more available (back the dollar with silver, not gold, so dollar will be worth less)

• Political demands: single term for President and Vice-President; secret ballot; popular election of Senators

• To get industrial workers to support them: 8-hour workday; restrict immigration

Page 54: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Different Groups Representing Farmers’ Interests

• 1867: The Patrons of Husbandry (The Grange)

• 1880s: Farmers’ Alliance and Colored Farmers’ National Alliance

• 1892: Birth of the Populist, or People’s Party

Page 55: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

• 1878• Bland-Allison Act

– Favored silverites, increased money supply

– Vetoed by Pres. Hayes, but Congress overrode the veto and passed it.

• Limited results. Treasury department refused to buy anymore silver to be able to circulate more.

• 1890• Sherman Silver

Purchase Act– Increased the

amount of silver the govt was required to purchase

• People turned in their notes for gold, depleting gold reserves.

Repealed by Pres. Cleveland in 1893

Page 56: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Mary Elizabeth Lease 1850-1933

Popular speaker for women’s suffrage, prohibition, and Populists, she told Kansas farmers to “raise a little less corn, and more hell.”

Page 57: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

James B. Weaver (1833 – 1912)

Populist Party candidate, election of 1892

Page 58: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Populist Platform

• Free silver

• Graduated income tax

• Public ownership of railroads, telegraphs and telephones

• Restricted immigration

• 8 hour workday

• Women suffrage

• Secret ballot

• Direct election of senators

Page 59: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Mary Elizabeth Lease (1850 – 1933)“Queen Mary” or “Mary Yellin”

Populist political activist

Page 60: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

In Reality• Populists were not folk heroes

• The were coming up with new ideas to return America to its agrarian past (negative reform)

• Populism represented a class movement that was based on racism, anti-Semitism and sectionalism, but not nationalism

• They turned to the city only for labor support

Page 61: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

1892 Presidential Election: Populist Candidate won over a million votes!

Page 62: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

1896 Election

• Populists decide to improve their chances by supporting a Democratic candidate: William Jennings Bryan, who agreed to support the Silver-backed dollar. Democrats-1890s Republicans-1890s

Southerners Wealthy farmers

Low tariff (want other

countries to buy their crops)

Northerners Wealthy business

men (connected to the railroad)

Southern African

Americans (poor farmers)

High tariff (donÕt want

to compete with other countriesÕ products)

Page 63: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.
Page 64: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

1896 Presidential Election: Bryan loses but carries most of the South and West

Page 65: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

L. Frank Baum (1856 – 1919)author of

The Wizard of OZ

Page 66: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Wizard of Ozas

Political Allegory

Page 67: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The characters and who they represent

Page 68: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Dorothy represents the American people

Page 69: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Scarecrow represents the western farmers(Populists)

Page 70: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Tin Woodsman represents the eastern workers, victims of mechanization

Page 71: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Cowardly Lion represents William Jennings Bryan (1860 – 1925):Bryan, a Democrat, ran for the presidency in 1896 and lost to William McKinley; thus Bryan had a load roar, but no power.

Page 72: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Wicked Witch of the East

Represents the eastern banking interests

Page 73: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

=

Page 74: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Wizard of Oz

William McKinley (1843 – 1901)25th President of the United States(1897 – 1901)

Marcus A. Hanna (1837 – 1904)

or

Page 75: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

Oz

The abbreviation for an ounce of gold or silver

Page 76: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Yellow Brick Roadand

Silver (not ruby!)Slippers

Page 77: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

The Panic Ends• Congress passed a high protective tariff and the Gold

Standard Act in 1897

• Recovery began before passage of either act

• External factors:

• Increase in European demand on wheat: European wheat crop was reduced by 1/3 for 1897. . . U.S. exported more wheat; farmers were assuaged

• European money flowing into U.S. stopped the drain on gold, and new discoveries of gold in ’96 helped ease the gold problem

Page 78: What Made it Possible? Pacific Railway Act –Passed July 1, 1862 –Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific –Provided.

• Europe recovered from the depression before the U.S.

• European industries could not keep up with product demand

• U.S. began to export goods – this meant more work for U.S. industries and workers

• By 1900 prosperity was back


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