American West - The Knowledge Flashcards

1
Q

Where are the Great Plains located in America?

A

Western Centre of America

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2
Q

Name two mountain ranges in America that were an obstacle to cross.

A

Appalachian, Sierra Nevada or Rocky Mountains

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3
Q

Name 3 Indian tribes.

A

Sioux, Arapaho, Cheyenne

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4
Q

Name 3 uses of the buffalo.

A

Dried buffalo dung providedfuelfor fires. Buffalo skin could be used to maketipis, clothes, moccasins, bedding, saddle covers and water-bags. Dried buffalo meat, calledpemmican, provided food to eat through the winter. Buffalo sinews were used asbowstringsand thread. Buffalo tongue was used as a hairbrush.

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5
Q

Describe one way the Indians hunted the buffalo.

A

The Indians on horse back would surround or stampede the buffalo and shoot them with arrows. The arrows were marked so you knew who killed which buffalo. They wanted to know who killed the buffalo as it was a great honour for an Indian. To get close enough to kill one was very dangerous for the man and his horse and took a lot of bravery.
Another method was that the Indians used was to creep up on the buffalo when they were grazing (eating the grass) and shoot them with arrow, whilst disguised as wolves. Buffalo herds (groups) would allow wolves to get quite close to them.
Another method of hunting was to stampede (surround) a buffalo herd (group) into buffalo jumps. This meant that they either trapped the buffalo in a narrow valley where they couldn’t get out or they drove them over a cliff and killed them like shown in the picture.

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6
Q

What was the Indian attitude to the land?

A

No one owned land - it belonged to Wakan Tanka

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7
Q

What is counting coup?

A

‘Counting coup’ is a ritual.

This meant that it was seen as braver for a warrior to touch his enemy with his ‘coup’ and come away unharmed than it was to hurt or kill his enemy.

This meant that war was often bloodless. In fact, the Sioux lost fewer than 4 men a year in warfare.

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8
Q

Why did Indians practice polygamy?

A

In the Indian society there were more women than men and it meant that all the women were looked after and as many babies as possible were made.

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9
Q

What is a medicine man?

A

A ‘medicine man’ was the name given to the Indian shamen by white people. A shamen could cure illness by making contact with spirits.

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10
Q

Give 1 reason that the tipi was well suited to the Indian way of life.

A

The Tipi had a conical shape which meant it could cope with the strong winds of the Plains.
The Tipi was made mostly from Buffalo hide which meant that the Indians could still use them despite the lack of wood on the Plains.
The Tipi could be taken down in 10 minutes and turned into a Travois which would then carry their belongings which suited the Indians nomadic lifestyle. The movement was necessary so the Indians could follow the buffalo.
The Tipi could be rolled up in the summer to deal with the extreme heat on the Great Plains. It could also be banked down in the winter to deal with Extreme cold on the Great Plains.

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11
Q

Give 3 reasons why people were attracted (pulled) to moving West.

A

Free /cheap / plentiful land (Homestead Act 1862)
Gold
Stories from Mountain Men, Railroad Companies
Manifest Destiny – the West needed civilising

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12
Q

Give 3 reasons why people were pushed away from their home and needed to move West.

A

East was becoming overcrowded
Farming crisis in the East
Economic depression in the 1840s in the East
Religious and racial persecution

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13
Q

What happened to the Donner Party?

A

The Donner Party – 1846. Took a ‘shortcut’ to California, ended up getting trapped in deep snow in Sierra Nevada. Only 50/87 survived the journey, and they only did because they ate those that died.

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14
Q

What is Manifest Destiny?

A

Manifest Destiny was an idea.

It said that it was the duty of white Americans to spread their way of life across the entire continent – rather than just the 13 colonies that had originally.

They believed it was what God wanted them to do.

Those who went West were following their ‘Manifest Destiny’.

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15
Q

Why was Manifest Destiny a bad thing for the Indians?

A

Anyone who tried to stop them following their ‘Manifest Destiny’ was standing in God’s way.

They felt it was their job to change the West, including the Great Plains and the Indians, to their way of living. They wanted to civilise it.

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16
Q

What were Mountain Men the first people to do?

A

The first white people to travel West through the Rocky Mountains were the Mountain Men. This was between 1820 and 1840.

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17
Q

Name a trail that the Mountain Men established.

A

They found safe routes through the Rockies, including the start of the Santa Fe and Oregon Trails.

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18
Q

What was the Mountain Men’s relationship like with the Indians?

A

The Mountain Men lived a similar lifestyle to the Indians. They tended to have good relationships with the Indians, but did encounter problems with some hostile tribes.
Also Mountain Men sometimes married Indian women.

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19
Q

In what year and where was gold discovered?

A

1848 – James Marshall discovers gold in California when working at a sawmill.

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20
Q

In what year was the ‘gold rush’?

A

People in the East heard about the discovery and by 1849 tens of thousands of people had travelled West to California. These people are called the ’49ers’. 1849 is the year associated with the ‘gold rush’.

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21
Q

What was the first method for finding gold called?

A

The first people in California found gold by panning, but this surface gold ran out quickly and the only way to access underground gold was through expensive machinery that few could afford.

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22
Q

What was set up to deal with law and order in mining towns?

A

Problems with law and order – no proper government or law officials.
Claim jumping, racial attacks, violent crimes
Miners Courts set up – unofficial, no prisons so death penalties used a lot!

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23
Q

What is the full name of the Mormon religion?

A

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

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24
Q

Who founded the Mormons and in what year?

A

The Mormon faith was started by Joseph Smith, who claimed to have seen a vision of an angel called Moroni in 1823.

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25
Q

Name 3 beliefs Mormons had.

A
What the Mormons believed and practiced in the 1800s:
Polygamy
Conversion
Political power of Mormon leaders
No single ownership of property
God’s chosen people
No caffeine, alcohol, tobacco, gambling, premarital sex
Anti-slavery
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26
Q

What was the name of the Mormon secret army?

A

Danites – Mormon army who attacked non-Mormons (Gentiles)

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27
Q

What 3 places were the Mormons driven out of and why?

A

The Mormons kept being driver out of places because of their beliefs:
Kirtland, Ohio – this was the first place the Mormons settled, between 1831-1837. The Mormons were unpopular and Joseph Smith was tarred and feathered. They built a temple in 1833, and a bank. In 1837 the Mormon bank collapsed and people lost a lot of money and forced the Mormons to leave.
The Mormons then went to Missouri in 1838. There were lots of slave owners in Missouri and the Mormon’s anti slavery beliefs made them unpopular.
The next place the Mormons moved to was Nauvoo in Illinois, led by Brigham Young. In Nauvoo the Mormons were allowed their own laws, and their own army (the Danites). Joseph Smith announced that he was going to run for President, which worried non-Mormons.

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28
Q

Who took over the leadership of the Mormons when their founder died?

A

Brigham Young, who had led the Mormons to Nauvoo, took over the leadership when Joseph Smith died.

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29
Q

Give one reason why their journey to Great Salt Lake was successful?

A

Brigham Young was incredibly organised and was an inspirational leader.
In 1845, the Mormons began their preparations to leave Nauvoo to move the Great Salt Lake.
By 1846, anti-Mormon violence had increased, so Brigham Young sent a group early to set up winter quarters on the bank of the Missouri River.
The same group also planted crops along the way, so the Mormons could eat on their journey.

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30
Q

What state is Great Salt Lake in?

A

Utah

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31
Q

What had to happen for Utah to become a state?

A

Utah wasn’t allowed to become a state (where it could make its own laws) whilst it still practiced polygamy. Young died in 1877, and in 1890 the Mormons abandoned polygamy. In 1896, Utah became a state.

32
Q

What country did lots of the workers for the railway come from?

A

China

33
Q

In which state did the East and West railway lines join together?

A

Utah

34
Q

In what year did the East and West railway lines join together?

A

1869

35
Q

Give 2 reasons why the railways encouraged people to move West.

A

Now it was easy for homesteaders to get to the Plains and it was also cheap tp buy land, as the railroad companies sold off the land on etiher side of the line at low prices.

36
Q

Which state did the beef bonanza begin in?

A

Texas

37
Q

Why were there so many cattle between 1861-1865?

A

In 1861, the American Civil War broke out
Ordinary men, like cattle ranchers and cowboys were called up to fight.
Texas fought on the side of the Southern States (pro-slavery), but they lost.
When they returned from war in 1865, Texas’ economy was ruined, but the cattle had continued to breed and in 1865 there were about 5 million Longhorns in Texas.

38
Q

What 3 ethnic backgrounds did cowboys come from?

A

White, Mexican, African American.

39
Q

Where was beef really popular?

A

In the East

40
Q

What was the name of the journey the cowboys took the cattle on from Texas to the Railways?

A

The Long Drive

41
Q

Name a famous cowtown.

A

Abilene

42
Q

What was the name of the man who founded Abilene?

A

Joseph McCoy

43
Q

What was the open range?

A

Ranches on the Great Plains were ‘open range’ – which meant there were no fences and cattle were free to graze where they liked.

44
Q

Give 3 reasons why the cattle boom ended?

A

By the 1880s, the cattle boom was ending, and there was less need for an ‘open range’.
This was because;
The East demanded higher quality beef, so John Iliff crossbred the Longhorns with Herefordshire cattle, and they couldn’t survive on the Plains
Some states, such as Kansas, started to ban cattle between March and November
Herds over grazed which meant cattle were starving
Winter of 1886-7 – 30% of cattle died, as did many cowboys
Ranchers, like homesteaders, now used barbed wire (invented by Joseph Glidden in 1874) to make enclosures.
Cowboys went from those who had to drive the cattle, to ranch hands who looked after cattle and mended broken fences.

45
Q

What is a homesteader?

A

A homesteader is a farmer.

46
Q

What year was the Homestead Act?

A

1862

47
Q

What did the Homestead Act offer settlers?

A

Kansas, Nebraska and Dakota
Plots of 160 acres available for FREE
Homesteaders HAD to build a house and live there for a minimum of 5 years
After 5 years, they would receive the deeds to the land meaning they owned it properly
160 acres actually wasn’t a lot of area to develop a successful farm – however the government thought it would be enough to manage considering the difficult conditions.

48
Q

Name 3 problems with homesteading on the Plains?

A

lack of water. Crops could not grow, animals couldn’t drink, and the land was tough.
Shortage of building materials – no wood (other than your wagon!), so they had to live in sod houses. Horrible conditions… but they were free.
Extremes of weather – winds all year round, heat in summer, snow in winter, periods of drought
Prairie fires and plagues – fires destroyed crops quickly because of the fierce winds. Plagues of grasshoppers (1871, 1874, 1875) destroying all crops.
Protecting crops – no money or materials to make fences. Cattle and buffalo often trampled crops
Hostile Indians – often the homesteaders were breaking treaties Indians had made with the US government

49
Q

Name 3 ways they overcame problems on the Plains?

A

New crops – Turkey Red Wheat, sturdy and well suited to the Plains, especially during the hot months. Russian Winter Wheat could grow in colder conditions
Better machinery – John Deere sod buster could actually plough the tough ground, whereas traditional ploughs would just break.
Barbed wire – Joseph Glidden 1874. Cheap and effective way of stopping stray animals or cattle crossing onto land (though caused arguments between homesteaders and cowboys!)
Windmill water pump – Daniel Halliday 1874. Didn’t need to be near a river/lake to access water, could come from underground
Dry Farming – farmers ploughed their land after heavy rain or snow to ensure moisture in soil preserved. A thin layer of dust put on the surface to stop evaporating
Cow chips – for fuel on fires instead of wood

50
Q

Who invented barbed wire?

A

Joseph Glidden 1874

51
Q

Who invented the windmill water pump? (1)

A

Daniel Halliday 1874

52
Q

What year was barbed wire invented?

A

Joseph Glidden 1874

53
Q

What year was the windmill water pump invented?

A

Daniel Halliday 1874

54
Q

Name the war between homesteaders/small cattle ranchers and cattle barons that happened in 1892?

A

Johnson County War

55
Q

When was the Johnson Country war?

A

1892

56
Q

How many people did a territory need to become a state?

A

When a territory gets 60,000+ people it can become a state. They had their own elected governor, they made their own laws, had their own courts and jails.

57
Q

Why was the West difficult to control?

A

In the earlier part of our time period, when the West was developing, the majority of places were territories, and therefore it was down to the national government to deal with law and order.
Why they were ineffective:
Area too large – US Marshall’s couldn’t control such a big area, 3 judges wasn’t enough meaning people went a long time without trial. Before the railroad and telegraphs it was incredibly difficult to hear of a crime let alone get there to deal with it.

58
Q

Name 3 law and order officials.

A

US Marshal – appointed by the President and in charge of the whole territory. Because it was a big area, he could appoint deputies
Judges – each territory was allocated 3 judges by the government.
Sheriffs – were in charge of law and order in the counties. They were elected by the local people and had the job for two years.
Town Marshalls – these worked in towns and tried to make people follow laws

59
Q

What are vigilantes?

A

Vigilantes – groups of ordinary people who took on law and order. They were especially common in the mining and cow towns.
Vigilantes would not wait for a trail, they would find people who they believed to have committed a crime and punish them. The punishment usually involved lynching.
Vigilantes were a force of good in a way as the lawmen were unable to deal with crime effectively, however there were big problems as sometimes the vigilantes would base their harassment on race rather than a crime. There are stories about the accused not speaking English and not being allowed an interpreter to plead their innocence.

60
Q

Name a bad lawman.

A

Wyatt Earp
former horse thief.
Lawman in Wichita but sacked for fighting
Deputy Marshall of Dodge City.
1881 Gunfight at the O.K. Corral – shot 3 men in cold blood
1882 murdered the men he ‘thought’ killed his brother
Wild Bill Hickok
Marshal of Abilene.
Sacked for shooting his deputy.
Henry Plummer
Sheriff of Bannack in Montana in 1864
Leader of gang of robbers, ‘The Innocents’
Did stage coach robbery and other violent crimes.
Eventually caught and killed by vigilantes

61
Q

Give 3 reasons problems with law and order were overcome.

A

Telegraphs
Better communication such as telephone & telegram meant that law enforcers knew about problems quicker. It also meant that other states could find out about problems elsewhere.
Railroad
In 1869 the railway was completed. This meant it was easier for the law officials to travel so that they could enforce law quickly.
Families
Women didn’t want children brought up in lawless areas.
People has also gone West to make their fortune and weren’t going to let people take it.
Abilene
This cow town banned cowboys from coming in in 1872 as more families were living there and they didn’t like the trouble the cowboys brought.
More States
More and more places in Western America were becoming states This meant that they could form their own laws rather than having to rely on the main government to make decisions hundreds of miles away.
Improved Towns
Shanty towns (quickly appearing, wooden buildings, not well planned) started to disappear, being replaced by properly planned towns with nice buildings, roads, sanitation and water supplies.
Because the towns looked nice, the people who lived there started to behave better too.
Manifest Destiny
It was the idea that white people should follow their destiny Westwards that meant that lots of these changes were being made. By 1890 there was hardly any part of the West that wasn’t occupied by white people.

62
Q

Give 3 causes of disorder

A

There are many reasons why law and order (crime) was such a big problem in the West:
Geographical Factors
Huge area, transport slow, meaning it was difficult to enforce law and order
Political Factors
Shortage of reliable law enforcement officers, politicians didn’t think it was worth spending money on
Social Factors
Different ethnic groups; blacks, Chines, Europeans, Indians, Mexicans. Ex-soldiers found it hard to adjust to ‘normal’ life, and couldn’t forgive what had happened during the Civil War.
Values and Attitudes
‘Code of Honour’ – sort things out yourself, usually with a gun! If you shot a man carrying a gun, you could please self defence. Everyone carried a gun. People were quick and willing to use violence.
Economic Factors
Homesteaders v Cattle Ranchers, Miners v Hunters, Cattle Barons v Small Ranchers.

63
Q

Give 3 types of Crime

A

Bank Robbery – James Younger Gang, Minnesota 1866-1882

Racial Attacks – 1885 Rock Springs, Wyoming, 51 Chinese coal miners killed. White juries tended to find white murderers not guilt.

Shootings – unsure of how common. Some historians say 600 per year, some say a lot less. Famous gunfighters – Billy the Kid, John Wesley Hardin, Wild Bill Hickock

Robbery (road agents) – stage coaches held up. Armed guards hired ‘riding shotgun’.

Train robbery – 1870-1880 regular train robberies, e.g Butch Cassidy and the Wild Bunch. Railroad companies tried to deal with but by 1890s train robbery was even more common. Main problem is that the robberies could take places miles and miles from the nearest town and therefore law officials.

64
Q

What was the Permanent Indian Frontier?

A

1832 Indian Removal Act – establishes the Permanent Indian Frontier. Indian tribes not welcome in the East but the Plains is theirs – the white people don’t want it (yet!).

65
Q

Which president introduced the Indian Removal Act and in what year?

A

Andrew Jackson introduced the Indian Removal Act in 1832

66
Q

What did the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851 agree?

A

Defined specific areas the Indians could live, rather than giving them free reign of the Plains
Promised the Indians white people wouldn’t enter
Gave Indians food, clothing and cattle for 10 years (reduced to 5 years, the reduced further).

67
Q

What is a reservation?

A

The Native Americans were forced into reservations.
A reservation is an area of land that is allocated to the Indians by a treaty. The land tended to be poor quality, they weren’t necessarily able to hunt buffalo from there and the treaties were regularly broken by white people entering these lands. Indian chiefs lacked power, and Indian agents put in charge were often corrupt.

68
Q

Where did a massacre take place in 1864?

A

Sand Creek Reservations

69
Q

Name 1 way the white people destroyed the buffalo?

A
  1. The buffalo were hunted as a sport, for fun.
    Special trains ran so that people could go out and shoot buffalo for sport.
  2. Railways: Buffalo hunters were employed by the railroad companies to keep the workers supplied with fresh meat.
  3. Hides: In 1871 an Eastern Tannery (where they make leather) discovered that high quality leather could be made using buffalo hides (skin). This meant that the price of buffalo hides rocketed.
  4. Hunting:The hunters had powerful rifles that could shoot accurately from a long range. This meant that a buffalo could be killed with a single shot, not alarming the other buffalo. Because they weren’t alarmed, the didn’t run away so the buffalo hunter could sit in one spot for hours just killing buffalo after buffalo. This was known as a ‘stand’ and was very effective.
  5. Bone pickers: Homesteaders started bone picking and some people became professional, full time bone pickers.
    The bones were sent by railway back East.
    32 million lbs worth of bones were sent East in 3 years.
    In the East the bones were used as fertiliser, buttons, combs and knife handles.
    The hooves were used for glue.
70
Q

Give 1 way the US government tried to destroy Indian culture.

A
  1. Indians were encouraged to be farmers and become self-sufficient, so they didn’t have to rely on the chiefs to help them.
  2. the Sioux were split up into smaller groups and forced into reservations far away from each other.
  3. In 1885 the government took control of all legal matters – Indian chiefs had lost any power to judge and punish members of their bands.
  4. the 1887 Dawes Act split up land on reservations so that each family had their own plot – rather than a band/tribe having shared land controlled by chiefs. This was intended to destroy the power of the chiefs.
  5. the Sioux were banned from leaving the reservation to make war with enemies or hunt so they couldn’t support themselves.
  6. feasts, dances and ceremonies such as the Sundance were banned.
  7. Indians were targeted by Christian missionaries, who tried to convert them.
  8. Indian children were sent away to boarding school, separated from their parents. The boarding schools were designed to make Indian children more like white Americans.
  9. Indian children were not allowed to speak their own language and were punished if they did. They were taught not to respect their traditional Indian lifestyle.
  10. Parents could not stop their children being sent to boarding school, as their food supply was stopped until they handed over the children.
  11. The Sioux had money by being able to use the buffalo for food and resources and stealing horses, but being unable to leave their reservation meant that they had no money anymore.
  12. Indian chiefs used to be given the food rations for their tribe, but this role was taken off them to reduce their political power.
71
Q

What year was the Battle of Little Bighorn?

A

1876

72
Q

Name 3 things Custer did wrong at the Battle of Little Bighorn.

A

Things Custer did wrong

  1. Refusing the extra men from Terry.
  2. Refusing the guns from Terry.
  3. Ignoring the plan/route suggested by Terry.
  4. Making his men walk too long/far.
  5. Wanting all the glory himself and not to share it with Terry.
  6. Lighting fires, giving them away.
  7. Not having good information on how many Indians there were.
  8. Split the regiment up into 3 smaller groups.
73
Q

Who was the leader of the Sioux at the Battle of Little Bighorn?

A

Crazy Horse

74
Q

What was the Ghost Dance?

A

Wovoka, an Indian in Nevada began telling people that is they performed the Ghost Dance their ancestors would return and save them, and Plains life would return to normal.
The Ghost Dance made the Indians restless and aggressive and the US were concerned that another war was about to break out.

75
Q

What battle did the Ghost Dance lead to?

A

The trouble reached a peak at the Battle of Wounded Knee in 1890.
We think that soldiers tried to disarm a band of Sioux, led by Big Foot, ended up opening fire on the Indians, killing 153 men, women and children.