Chapter 1 1835 - 1862

Cards (37)

  • 2 push factor of staying in the east

    economic crisis 1837
    • banks collapsed
    • wages cut by 40%
    • unemployment reached 25%
    Farming crisis 1837
    • Corn price fell
    • Farmers lost money
    • Farmlands over crowded
  • Pull factors for migrating west
    Gold rush 1849
    • 100,000 people travelled west
    • Tried to find gold in the west (money)
    The Oregon trail
    • made the route easier (rocky mountains)
    • 1836
    Farmland in Oregon
    • Free and good quality
    • Fresh start in the west after farmland crisis in east
  • consequences of gold has 1849
    1848 gold was discovered
    300,000 moved to california
    made an offical state in 1850
    helped the us economy recover after economic crisis
  • Name of people who came looking for gold
    Prospectors
  • what was manifest destiny
    the belief that it was settlers God given right to populate America. believed its what god wanted to happen
    encouraged people to settle in the west
  • consequences of manifest destiny
    encouraged settlers to move west
    Could only happen if natives gave up their land
  • how long was the Oregon trail
    3200km
  • Donner party
    started in may 1846 (too late)
    300 migrants
    reached the Rocky Mountains and spilt to a “short cut” that had never been tested before, was described as having plenty of grass and water.
    problems
    • hard to follow
    • land was rugged and rocky
    • stretches of desert with little water and grass
    • mid October - snow storms trapped the party
    • only half survived (by eating those who had died)
  • Great Plains
    hard to farm
    Called “the great American desert“
    natives had developed ways to survive the tough conditions
  • why did they live a nomadic lifestyle
    As buffalo herd were always on the move
  • uses of the buffalo
    tail - whips
    bones - knives
    stomach - buckets, cups and dishes
  • Social structure
    Natives lived in groups called tribes
    Larges ones were called nations
    Most famous ones - Sioux, which was divided into dakota, nakota, lakota
  • chiefs and councils
    chiefs - leaders
    tribes could have serval - didn’t necessarily follow the same chief
    chosen for skill and wisdom
    council - declared war and signed treatys
  • beliefs about war
    Survival on plains was rough - many used to raid each other for food, horses , weapons, and people ( only go if likely to survive)
    To minimise death - counting coup - type of “fighting“ where warriors would try touch the enemy during battle rather than kill them - showed skill and bravery
  • Beliefs about land
    Land was sacred - for example Black Hills in South Dakota for the Sioux
    Didn’t believe in owning land - was a gift from spirits
    Survived by hunting , fishing and gathering plants
    Believed farming and mining were disrespectful to the land
  • nature and animals
    believed in Waka Tanka - great spirit - who created the world and all life
    treated animals and plants with respect as believed everything in nature had a spi
  • What did the americans think of the natives
    uncivilised savages who didnt make use of their land
    Believed it was their duty to civilse them
  • indian removal act - 1830
    Forced natives who still lived in the east to move west of the mississippi river
    president andrew jackson promised the land would be theirs forever
  • indian trade and intercourse act 1834
    The west was officially indigenous territory
    Created a boarder called the permanent indian frontier to seperate it from the eastern states
    Guarded by us army forts
  • Indian appropriation act 1851
    proviced the government funding to move natives into reseravtions - small areas of land for each tribe to live on
    • prevented their nomadic lifestyle
    • meant they were out of the way of settlers
  • what changed in the 1840s ?
    america gained new land to the west of the natives territory meaning they were now surrounded by us territory
    settlers would break the treaty and pass through natives land
    president ignored promises if the land being only for natives
  • Economic crisis in the east

    Banks collapsed
    1837-1840
    people lost their jobs
    many people looked for a new life in the west
  • Oregon trail
    Draw to oregon - excellent farming land
    Trail ran from east Missouri to west Oregon
    Route published by jeddah smith in 1825
    Important because people realised travelling through wilderness was possible
    Eventually used by 400000 people
  • Challenges travelling west
    Time
    • Serval months
    • If left before april - wouldnt be enough grass for animals to feed on
    • If left too late ( didnt reach oregon before winter) might freeze to death
    • Oxen pulled wagon - strong but slow
    Geography
    • travel through desert or mountains
    • dangerous
    • at least 20000 to have died along the trail
    disease
    • most frequent disease - cholera
    • because rivers along the way were used for drinking water and toilets
  • Donner party
    In 1846 - 300 migrants
    Set off may 1846
    Reached Rocky Mountains in july
    Where around 80 wanted to spilt off into a shortcut - published by lansford hastings
    Hastings had never tried the short cut - he just assumed it would
    In reality the track was rocky and steep
    november - group was caught in a snowstorm in sierra nevada
    Animals died , food ran out and began to starve
    Recused in February
    Only half survived by eating the dead body of other migrants
  • Mormon party - background
    Christian stemmed religious gorup by joesph smith in the 1830s
    Views were very unpopular. For example polygamy
    Forced to move from state to state by angry locals who disagreed with their views
    In 1844, mormons fled Illinois after angry mod killed joesph smith
    New leader - Brigham young - decided to move mormons west so they wouldnt be disturbed
  • Mormon party - migration

    april 1847 - Brigham young led an advanced party of about 150 mormons
    July 1847 - arrived at salt lake valley - although desert land required a lot of work for it to be suitable for settlers
    Youngs declared “ this is the place
  • Why was the mormon party successful
    journey well planned
    Young researched the route and spoke to explorers and trail guides
  • Over population
    80,000 to 300,000 within 9 years
    Gold prospectors gathered camps where gold was found. Called mining towns
  • tensions between settlers and natives
    natives way of life was threatened by sttlers
    settlers used valuable resources like grass
    claimed land - contradicting natives beliefs
    scaring/ killings buffalo only for food - less buffalo for natives
  • law and order
    gambling, alcohol and fights over women
    racism against chinese
    road agents - waited outside mining towns to rob people
    sheriffs not legally trained
    lynching suspects - hanging without trial
  • fort laramie treaty 1851
    natives agreed to stop fighting each other, stick to their fixed areas - contradicting their nomadic lifestyle
    let settlers travel safely through and ifnot they have to pay commison if broken
    Government promised the land was theirs and promised to pay 50,000 yearly for years. Could be inform of resourses or food
  • Indian trade and intercourse act 1834
    The west was natives territry and boarder was called permeant indian frontier, guarded by us army
  • problem settling on the plains - tough soil
    bc land was dry- soil was dry - hard to grow crops as soil was tough
  • low rainfall. - problems settling on the plains
    hard to grow crops
  • lack of trees
    no wood for housing, fencing, cooking and heating
    early settlers lived in mud houses
  • extreme climate
    grass hard to plough - thick roots
    very hot summers very cold winters - fry land - hard to farm