California

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California By: Kevin Starr Rosy Caito History 141 Professor Arguello

Transcript of California

Page 1: California

CaliforniaBy: Kevin Starr

Rosy CaitoHistory 141Professor Arguello

Page 2: California

Queen Calafia's Island: Place and First People

Theme: California known to the first Spanish explorers • In 1533, Spanish explorers ,

commanded by Hernan Cortez, landed on the newly discovered Pacific, believing that the land was an island.

• Around the year 1539-40 was when the Spanish realized that California was not an island, but a peninsula with area to the north that they would not be able to conquer for a few hundred years.

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The different geographies that make California distinct

• 1,264- mile Pacific shoreline ; Coastal Plains

• 4 strategic intervals-bay of San Diego (south), Monterey and San Francisco bays (mid-region), and Humboldt bay (north).San Francisco is among the 3 finest on the planet.

• Mountain Ranges of California: Transverse Ranges, Peninsula Ranges, Klamath Mountains, Cascades ,Sierra Nevada's, Mount Whitney, Mount Shasta, and Mount Lassen

• Fault lines- the San Andreas, the Hayward, the garlock, the san Jacinto, the Nacimiento. San Francisco earthquake of April 18th,1906 shook the ;land at 8.3 on the Richter scale

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The First Californians: Presence of Native Americans

• There were hundreds of thousands of native Americans residing in California for centuries before settlers had arrived.

• In the northwest were the fishing peoples, shell gatherers of the Central Coast, the hunter-gatherers of the interior, the agriculturists of the southeast

• Native American California offered a spectrum of linguistic and cultural diversity in the region before any settlers arrived to the area in a later era.

• They did not need elaborate hierarchies because they lived a simple, balanced life of hunting and gathering .

• Their culture and heritage was all about creation myths, totems, rituals and taboos.

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Chapter 2: A Troubled Territory: Mexican California

• Theme: Mexican California’s Goal• Alta and Baja California were

classified as territory to Mexico in 1824

• The main goal of Mexican California revolved around the effort to create a civil society through secularization of the missions, foreign trade, and land grants.

• Over time, it was difficult for Mexican California to do this with a mixture of forces: international commerce, a growing population of non-Mexican residents, the collapse of local politics, presence of foreign powers from the pacific, and emergence of enlightenment ideas

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Society of Mexican California

• Family was everything and was the fundamental fact and premise of social life

• After 24 years of Mexican rule, trade and commerce promoted secularization as Mexican Californians found their values, prosperity, and lifestyle modified by contact with the wider world

• Twenty -one missions were built of adobe by Indians under supervision on Franciscans.

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American Presence in Mexican California

• A group of seventeen trappers connected to the Rocky Mountain Fur Company arrived in California on August 1826.

• They were led by Jedediah Smith, a Bible -reading explorer-entreprenuer, who constituted the first American penetration of California overland from the east.

• Smith had trouble bringing more men on an expedition into California though because his men were ambushed by Mojave Indians.

• Through out his journey, Smith linked California to the interior of the north American continent.

• Because of Smith, other trapping parties entered California in hopes of getting into the world of the Rocky Mountain fur trade .

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Chapter 8: Making it HappenLabor Through The Great Depression

• Theme: Strikes and Unions• The General Strike of 1901

led to the formation of the Union Labor Party in San Francisco, which held power through the tenure of 2 mayors elected from their ranks.

• The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), a loose federation of anarchists that wanted to seize the state and establish an industrial utopia, had a strike in San Diego in 1912.

• -5000 protested in front of a city hall and led to chaos

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The Great Depression

• More than three hundred thousand agriculturist workers flooded California. They were all white Americans from the Great Plains and the Southwest.

• Wages went down by more than 50 percent.• Riots would take place because people were devastated.• Workers began to organize unions throughout Southern

California

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The Cannery and Agricultural Workers Industrial Union ( CAWIU)

• Founded by the Trade Union Unity League, a national organization chaired by William Zebulon Foster.

• They organized a strike by 2,000 cannery workers in the Santa Clara Valley south of San Francisco.

• The CAWIU played leadership roles in 24 agricultural strikes in 1933

• They were involved in the largest single agricultural strike in the history of the nation: a cotton pickers strike in the San Joaquin Valley with 10,000 strikers.