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Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

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Page 1: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Changes on the Western Frontier

Cowboys and Legends Edition

Page 2: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Cattle Become Big Business

• The introduction of horses and cattle in the New World by the Spanish created the need for the 1st Cowboys in Mexico.

• The first cowboys were Native Aztec prisoners.

• Vaqueros = Spanish for cowboy• Many aspects of cowboy culture – food,

clothing, and vocabulary- are borrowed from the Spanish ranchers of Mexico

Page 3: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Spanish Vaquero- Meaning -American Cowboy

• Spurs• Chaparreras• Charqui• Caballo Bronco• Mestẽnos• Rancho• Corral• Rodeo• Lareata

• Spurs• Chaps• Jerky• Bronco or Bronc• Mustang• Ranch• Corral• Rodeo• Lariat

Metal spurs used to control horse

Leather overalls to protect legs from brush

Dried strips of meat

Rough horse

Stray or wild horse

Cattle farm

Holding pen for cattle

Competition

Rope

Page 4: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Bandana

• The cowboy kerchief or bandana was another thing one could not be a cowboy without.

The bandana had many uses, most notably as a dust mask while driving cattle kicking up dirt, as earmuffs in cold weather, as protection from sunburn on the neck, as a pot holder for hot pots or branding irons, as prevention against snow blindness in winter, a tourniquet or sling in case of injury and just in case they were planning to rob the stage, it made a nifty mask!. Red was the most common color and it could be made of silk, cotton or linen.

Much like today, the bandana was generally folded into a triangle and tied around the neck, but with the knot in the back.

http://www.thewildwest.org/cowboys-western/330/Cowboy-Facts.html

Page 5: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

The Truth About Cowboys• Myth – All cowboys were white males

– Truth – 25% were African American and 12% were Mexican or Native American

• Myth – Cowboys fought and shot villains– Truth – Cowboys more likely to die from a riding accident or

pneumonia than in an ambush by outlaws• Myth – Cowboys were hard drinkers, gamblers, and cursed a lot.

– Truth – Most employers forbid such conduct.• Myth – Cowboys led exciting, wild life-styles, full of adventure

– Truth – The average cowboy was broken down by the time they were 40 by working 10-14 hour days on the ranch and 18-20 hour days on the trail

• Myth – Cowboys participated in gun fights at high noon.– Truth – They may have carried a gun, but probably never shot

anyone. • Myth – Good guys wore white hats and bad guys wore black hats

– Truth – Cowboys wore all types and colors of hats

Page 6: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition
Page 7: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Importance of the Railroad

• Before the Civil War - poor transportation of food / livestock

• After the Civil War - immigration

• Chicago meat packing plants could process the beef if they could find a way to transport the cattle.

• By 1866, the railroad reached Midwest!

Page 8: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

The End of the Cattle Frontier• 1. Overgrazing of Land• *too many animals on the land destroyed the grass• 2. Extended Bad Weather• *1883 Drought• *1887 Worst Blizzard in Am. History

• 68 degrees below with 60 mile an hour winds• 3 days of snow at 1 inch an hour• 40% - 90% of the livestock were lost in what is known as the “Die Up”

• 3. Invention of Barbed Wire• *Joseph Glidden introduced barbed wire fencing 1874• *Ranchers started using higher quality cattle and running smaller

herds that required more care and fencing• *Significant because barbed wire was the major factor in

transforming the open plains into a series of fenced in ranches and farms. Ended the Era of the Wide-Open West.

Page 9: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Changes on the Western Frontier

http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blfarm1.htm

Page 10: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Settlers Flock Westward

• Rapid settlement of the Great Plains was possible because of two factors

• *Federal Land Policy

• *Completion of transcontinental railroad lines

http://students.ou.edu/M/Chad.A.Morris-1/photo.htm

Page 11: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Impact of the Railroads

• 1850-1871: huge federal land grants given to railroad companies to encourage building

• 1st transcontinental railroad – 1869

• Railroad sold extra land to farmers

• Railroads sent recruiters to Europe

Page 12: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Homestead Act 1862

• The government would give the head of the household 160 acres free if homesteaders would live and make improvements on the land for 5 years.

Page 13: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Problems with the Act

Cattlemen

Only 10% of land wentto Homesteaders

Miners & Woodcutters

Railroad Companies&

Speculators

Homestead Act Land

Page 14: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Exodusters

• Kansas invited African Americans from the south to settle in the state. (See poster page 231 or above)

• Settled in communities across Kansas– Nicodemus

Page 15: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Oklahoma Land Grab Race

• Sooners: Those who snuck into the territory early and claimed land sooner than they should have.

• The land run started at high noon on April 22, 1889, with an estimated 50,000 people lined up for their piece of the available two million acres (8,000 km²).

Page 16: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Settlers Meet the Challenges on the Plains

• Drought

• Floods

• Fires

• Blizzards

• Insect Infestations

• Occasional raids by Indians

or Outlaws

• Not all 160 acres were equal in quality

Page 17: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Technical and Educational Support for Farmers

• New Equipment• Steel Plow – 1837 – John

Deere• Reaper – 1834 – Cyrus

McCormick• Grain Drill – 1874• Barbed Wire – 1874• Cordbinder (Harvester)

1878• Reaper that could cut and

thresh (Fore-runner of Combine)

• Windmills

http://honoringtheinventor.blogspot.com/2008/12/cast-steel-plow.html

http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/D?ngp:2:./temp/~ammem_GTgr::

Page 18: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Educational Support

• Morrill Land Grant Act 1862 and 1890

• Hatch Act 1887

Page 19: Changes on the Western Frontier Cowboys and Legends Edition

Farmers in Debt

High Cost of Machinery

High Cost of Machinery

High Interest RatesHigh Interest Rates

High Shipping RatesHigh Shipping Rates

Low Crop PricesLow Crop Prices

Farmers in DebtFarmers in Debt