The South and West Transformed 1865
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Transcript The South and West Transformed 1865
Chapter 6
The
South Remained largely agricultural
and poor after the Civil War
Farming became more diversified; grain,
tobacco, and fruit crops (small farms
replaced large plantations)
To
combat economic isolation,
southerners lobbied the federal
government for more rail building
Sustained
economic development
requires resources, labor, and capital
investment. (industry is a three legged
stool.
Public education was limited in the South,
there were few technical and
engineering schools
Cash
Crop – products grown not for
there use but sold for cash
Cotton remained a staple crop after the
Civil War and during the war many
European textile factories found other
sources (depressed prices)
Farmers’ Alliance
– farmers in Texas in
the 1870 began to organize as a group for
lower prices for supplies (lobbied for
lower transport cost and loan rates)
Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and
Fifteenth
amendments gave many gains that were
stifled by the courts.
Voting, Education, businesses,
purchasing power, farmer groups
(Federal Laws)
Ku
Klux Klan used terror and violence
Civil Rights Act of 1875 – congress
guaranteed black patrons the right to
ride trains and use public facilities
Supreme Court ruled that these were
local issues
The
federal government forced Native
Americans west past the Mississippi to
lands they were to have FOREVER
during the 1840’s.
Westward
expansion would soon
dissolved this promise “Great American
Desert”
Native Americans had many diverse
cultures influenced by geography
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Pacific North west – fish and forests
South hunter-gatherers
South West – arid lands Pueblo people
Plains – buffalo
(Natives saw themselves as part of nature)
President
Jackson moved the Cherokees
off their land in Georgia and onto the
Great Plains (Whites were discouraged
form contact with the Native Americans)
Gold and Silver
Reservations – specific
areas set aside by the
government for Indians’
use
Sand
Creek Massacre – 1884 incident in
which Colorado militia killed a camp of
Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians (video)
Expansion west by whites time again
broke promises made by the federal
government, the United States Peace
Commission concluded that lasting
peace would only come when the Indians
settled on farms and “became whites.”
Red
River War – U.S. failed to fulfill the
“Treaty of Medicine Lodge,” and keep
white buffalo hunters off Indian land
Sitting
Bull – famed fighter, trained holy
man, first ever chief of the seven bands
Battle of the Little Big Horn – led by
Crazy Horse, Custer and all of his men
were killed
Chief
Joseph – led a group of refugees to
Canada 1,300 miles
Wounded
Knee – sealed the Indians
demise after being weakened more than
100 men women and children were killed
Assimilated
– to be absorbed into the
main culture of a society
Dawes General Allotment Act – replaced
the reservation system with an allotment
system. Each family was given 160-acre
farmstead