The Western Pioneers Section 1.
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Transcript of The Western Pioneers Section 1.
The Western Pioneers Section 1 Americans Head West In 1800 only
387,000 white settlers lived west of Appalachian Mountains By 1820
that number was close to 2.4 million and the numbers continued to
rise Some moved for religious reasons, while others just wanted a
chance to own land John Louis OSullivan declared Manifest Destiny
Manifest Destiny- idea that God had given the continent to
Americans and wanted them to settle western land Farming the New
Lands Early settlers searched for rich river bottom soil to make
their claim while others looked to the fertile woodland soil
Squatters- name given to the pioneers because the settled on lands
they didnt own Government wanted to sell the land to real estate
owners then allow them to sell the land to the people Squatters
wanted to buy the land directly from the government Cont.
Government gave into the pioneers pressure
Congress passed the Preemption Act of 1830 Law protected squatters
by guaranteeing them the right to claim land before it was surveyed
and the right to buy up to 160 acres for the governments minimum
price of $1.25 per acre Plows and Reapers Jethro Wood patented an
iron-bladed plow in 1819
Before farmers used a wooden plow to break through the soil Cont.
In 1837 John Deere engineered a plow with sharp-edge steel blades
that cut cleanly through the sod Reduced labor needed by half to
prepare an acre for farming Cont. Cyrus McCormick patented the
mechanical reaper in 1834 to help Midwestern agriculture Before
farmers cut grain by hand with a sickle or scythe Time-consuming
and exhausting work Switching from sickle to McCormicks reaper that
was pulled by a mule or horse, cut harvest time down and farmers
could harvest far more grain with far less effort Dividing Oregon
Read this section Populating California
People passed up the Great Plains for Oregon and California because
many felt the Great Plains contained poor land for farming Once
Mexico won its independence from Spain in 1821, they controlled
California Mexico had trouble populating California due to it being
so far from Mexico City where the central government was housed The
Trails West Much of the terrain was difficult
Trailblazers and mountain men made their living off the land Kit
Carson and Jim Bridger made their living trapping beaver and
selling furs to traders Learned the terrain and by 1840s mountain
men had carved out several east-to-west passages that played a
vital role in western settlement Oregon Trail, California Trail and
Santa Fe Trail Oregon Trail Wagon Train Life Emigrants made the
journey in trains of covered wagons First wagon trains hired
mountain men as guides Once trails were worn then mountain men
werent needed anymore Overlanders found their way with the help of
guidebooks If guidebooks were wrong then it could lead to tragedy
Cont. 1846 a group of 87 overlanders were trapped by winter
snows
41 died of starvation Those still alive faced the choice of death
or cannibalism Many chose cannibalism in order to survive Known as
the Donner Party Named after 2 brothers who lead the group Cont.
Typical trip west took 5-6 months, 15 miles per day
Men drove, hunted, and bedded down animals Women watched kids,
cooked, and cleaned camp Native Americans Fear of Native American
attacks was high
362 emigrants died from attacks from 426 natives died from emigrant
attacks covering the same years Natives were often helpful Gave
food, helpful info on routes, edible plants, and water Traded fresh
horses for items such as cotton clothing and ammunition Cont. As
traffic increased, natives became concerned
Buffalo was natives food, shelter, clothing, tools, and countless
other necessities Increasing number of emigrants were dispersing
herds Treaty of Fort Laramie 8 Native American groups agreed to
specific geographic boundaries, while U.S. promised that these
territories would belong to Native Americans forever The Mormon
Migration Mormons followed a deeply rooted American tradition-the
quest for religious freedom Brigham Young Mormon Trail Mormons
stopped at Great Salt Lake in Utah Young declared the Mormons to
build a settlement They staked a claim on the land and called it
Desert