The Early Settlers Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the the Rendezvous and how they had a long term impact on the west.

A
  • trappers gathered once a year to trade catch
  • as many as 600 trappers
  • mountain men told merchants about rich fertile lands to west of Rockies, news got back to the east
  • caused people to travel west and population increased
  • Indians also present at rendezvous
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2
Q

What natural dangers did the mountain men face and how did they interact with Indians?

A
  • harsh climate, freezing, icy streams
  • Rockies full of grizzly bears
  • mountain men introduced Indians to firearms and alcohol (partly beginning of destruction of Indians way of life)
  • had to adapt to wilderness to survive
  • many turned savage due to lack of food and resources
  • no accommodation so half married Indian women for family ties
  • lack of washing, bad hygiene, spread of disease and infection
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3
Q

What was a prairie schooner and what did it include?

A
  • wagons families travelled in to west
  • four or six oxen to pull
  • canvas cover
  • wooden wheels with iron tyres
  • spare parts carried
  • tar buckets to fill gaps between wood with
  • grease bucket to waterproof
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4
Q

What were the push and pull factors that caused the emigrants to head west?

A

Push: pushing them away from what they currently don’t like in the east

  • economic depression 1837, lost savings, wages cut, unemployment
  • farmers ruined as price of wheat and corn dropped
  • land too expensive in East
  • neighbours ‘too close’ for farming (nearest was 19km away)

Pull: things luring them to the west

  • more opportunities to make money
  • why not go west? Couldn’t be any worse
  • offered land in enormous quantities and 1842 gov preemption bill
  • 1840’s reports about ‘wonderful west’, rumours and stories spread
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5
Q

What were some of the problems faced on the journey to the west?

A
  • risk of disease
  • hard to raise young children
  • falling off the wagon and breaking limbs
  • hard to build fires for warmth and food
  • harsh weather
  • poor diet
  • hard to control oxen, needed rest
  • water crossings
  • Indian attacks
  • cannibalism, had to label people so no one else ate them when left behind
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6
Q

What new factor led to further emigration in 1849 and which area was most affected as a result?

A
  • accidental discovery of gold in river in sierras
  • California most affected
  • people on East Coast moved west to find gold after this in 1849
  • known as the ‘forty-niners’
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7
Q

Described the problems faced by miners once they arrived in the West.

A
  • all good mining sites had been taken
  • didn’t earn more that $3 a day
  • lived in shacks made from blankets and wooden frames
  • laboured all day
  • diarrhoea and malaria were common
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8
Q

Explain how gold mining contributed to the development of the west.

A
  • big business moved in
  • miners brought families and permanent towns developed
  • doctors, lawyers, farmers and businessmen all came
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9
Q

How did mining affect the Indian nations such as the Sioux?

A
  • Indians angry at white for destroying sacred land such as black hills
  • gold discovered at black hills which lead to prospectors warming all over sioux’s most hallowed ground.
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10
Q

How was law and order dealt with in mining towns?

A
  • no U.S. government / law offices to protect them
  • people made own arrangements
  • each town held mass meetings with chairman and officers chosen and drew up ‘mining code’
  • mine claims recorded with district recorder
  • sheriff appointed to arrest lawbreakers
  • court of miners decided on punishments
  • trials weren’t long
  • common punishments: flogging, banishment + hanging
  • Mexicans, Chinese + Indians banned from mining
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11
Q

What was mob justice?

A

Many people angry so came together and protested for justice.
- common.

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12
Q

What do Mormons believe and why did tipis make them unpopular with other Christians?

A
  • people form Israel moved to US long before Jesus born (believe Jesus was American)
  • man called Mormon was a survivor fighting between Israelites in USA.
  • Mormon wrote plates detailing these events and the Israelites’ journey
  • burried plates so finder could restore church of Christ and continue Mormon faith
  • mormons are different type of Christianity, still believe in Jesus Christ.
  • considered to be blasphemous (going against God) or heretis (not main faith in the country).
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13
Q

Why were Mormons disliked in Kirtland, Missouri and Nauvoo?

A
  • started to outnumber non Mormons / Gentiles in Kirtland.
  • blamed for economic crisis as it was their banks that collapsed, 1837, holding some Gentiles money, chased out of Kirtland
  • fled to Missouri, houses burnt by organised gentile mobs
  • did not join in with Gentiles actions and ways, different cultural beliefs, so attacked in 1838
  • exterminating order issued, lifter in winter 1838
  • went to Nauvoo, tried to create ideal city with 35,000 Mormons and more on their way
  • did not integrate with Gentiles
  • Joseph smith (Mormon leader) said God allowed some Mormons to practice polygamy
  • Mormons now thought smith was false prophet, criticised him, smith destroyed criticising, turned into dictator, smith arrested, shot by angry mob.
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14
Q

How did the Mormons solve some of the problems they faced on their journey west?

A
  • crossing mountain range with no clear tracks: wagon trains allowed travelling in large numbers for safety, laboured tracks with picks and shovels.
  • couldn’t all travel together: expeditionary group went ahead and formed camp of Israel with cabins, farms, shops etc.
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15
Q

How did the Mormons make a success or settling Salt Lake and Utah?

A
  • Brigham Young (new leader) had total control over community
  • no private ownership of land or water, church would assign
  • each family given plot of land depending on size
  • main irrigation ditch built through farming land
  • Mormons self sufficiency by farming success in 1850 - 1860
  • missionaries sent to Europe to get converts
  • perpetual emigrating fund set up to pay their passage to Salt Lake
  • 4225 converts reached utah in 1855 alone.
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16
Q

Why were Mormons so strongly disliked again by 1858?

A
  • had their own army (Daenites), intimidating
  • treated Indians as equals and converted some
  • accused of charging extortionate prices to Gentiles crossing through Utah.
17
Q

Why and when did mountain men first travel west?

A
  • to trap beavers
  • to hunt animals for fur
    1820s - 1830s.