The
American Old West (often referred to as the
Old West,
Wild West or
Far West) comprises the history, geography,
peoples, lore, and cultural expression of life in the
Western United States, most often
referring to the period of the latter half of the 19th century,
between the
American Civil War
and the end of the century.
After the eighteenth century and the push
beyond the Appalachian
Mountains
, the term is generally applied to anywhere west of
the Mississippi River in earlier
periods and westward from the frontier
strip toward the latter part of the 19th century. More
broadly, the period stretches from the early
19th century to the end of the
Mexican Revolution in 1920.
Through treaties with foreign nations and native peoples, political
compromise, technological innovation, military conquest,
establishment of law and order, and the great migrations of
foreigners, the United States expanded from coast to coast
(Atlantic Ocean-to-Pacific Ocean), fulfilling its belief in
Manifest Destiny. In securing and
managing the West, the U.S. federal government greatly expanded its
powers, as the nation grew from an agrarian society to an
industrialized nation. First promoting settlement and exploitation
of the land, by the end of the 19th century the federal government
became a steward of the remaining open spaces. As the American Old
West passed into history, the myths of the West took firm hold in
the imagination of Americans and foreigners alike.

This map shows the area of the
American West
The term "Old West"
The American
frontier moved gradually
westward decades after the settlement of the first white immigrants
on the Eastern seaboard in the 1600s. The "West" was always the
area beyond that boundary. Scholars, however, sometimes refer to
the "Old West" as the region of the Ohio and Tennessee valleys
during the 18th century, when the frontier was being contested by
England, France, and the American colonies. Most often, however,
the "American Old West", the "Old West" or "the Great West" is used
to describe the area west of the
Mississippi River during the 19th
century.
Acquiring the Frontier
Advancing frontier and the Louisiana Purchase
During
European settlement of North America in the seventeenth century,
the western frontier was the crest of the Appalachian
Mountains
, the initial geographical impediment to
expansion. While the eastern seaboard was being tamed, the
area west of these mountains received little concern and
speculation. After the Revolutionary War, the conflict among
European powers over the vast American continent and its riches
gave way to the new nation of the United States. With peace came an
impetus for westward expansion, as veterans returned to areas seen
during the war, and land hungry settlers traveled to newly
available lands in New York and across the Appalachians.
At the beginning of the 19th century, the American frontier was
approximately along the Mississippi River, which bisects the
continental United States north-to-south from just west of the
Great Lakes to the delta near New Orleans.
St. Louis,
Missouri
was the largest town on the frontier, the gateway
for travel westward, and a principal trading center for Mississippi
River traffic and inland commerce.
The new nation began to exercise some power in domestic and foreign
affairs. The British had been driven out of the East after the
American Revolutionary
War but remained in Canada and threatened to expand into the
Northwest.
The French had left the Ohio Valley but still
owned the Louisiana Territory from the Mississippi River west to
the Rockies, including the strategic port of New Orleans
. Spain's dominion (
New
Spain) included Florida and the territories from present-day
Texas to California along the southern tier and up to what later
would be Utah and Colorado.
With a stroke of the pen,
Thomas
Jefferson, the third president of the United States (elected in
1801), more than doubled the size of the United States with the
Louisiana Purchase of 1803 which
acquired land France had acquired from Spain just three years
earlier.
Napoleon Bonaparte had
begun to consider it a liability, since the
slave rebellion in Haiti and tropical
disease undermined his Caribbean adventures.
Robert R. Livingston, American
ambassador to France, negotiated the sale with French foreign
minister
Talleyrand, who stated, "You
have made a noble bargain for yourselves, and I suppose you will
make the most of it".
The price was $23 million (about $0.04 per acre), including the
cost of settling all claims against France by American citizens.
The purchase was controversial.
Many of the Federalist Party, the dominant political
party in New
England
, thought that the territory was "a vast wilderness
world which will... prove worse than useless to us" and spread the
population across an ungovernable land, weakening federal power to
the detriment of New England and the Northeast. But the
Jeffersonians
thought the territory would help maintain their vision of the ideal
republican society, based on agricultural commerce, governed
lightly and promoting self-reliance and virtue.
Jefferson quickly ordered
exploration and documentation of the vast
territory. He charged
Lewis and
Clark to lead an expedition, starting in 1804, to "explore the
Missouri river, and such principal stream of it, as, by its course
and communication with the waters of the Pacific ocean; whether the
Columbia, Oregon, Colorado or any other river may offer the most
direct and practicable communication across the continent for the
purposes of commerce". Jefferson also instructed the expedition to
study the region's native tribes, weather, soil, rivers, commercial
trading, and animal and plant life.
The principal commercial goal was to find an efficient route to
connect American goods and natural resources with Asian markets,
and perhaps to find a means of blocking the growth of British fur
trading companies into the
Oregon
Country. Asian merchants were already buying sea otter pelts
from Pacific coast traders for Chinese customers. An expansion of
inland fur trading was also anticipated. With news spreading of the
expedition's findings, entrepreneurs like
John Jacob Astor immediately seized the
opportunity and expanded fur trading operations into the
Pacific Northwest.
Astor's "Fort Astoria
" (later Fort George), at the mouth of the Columbia
River, became the first permanent white settlement in that
area. However, during the
War of
1812, the rival North West Company (a British-Canadian company)
bought the camp from Astor's agents as they feared the British
would destroy an American camp. For a while, Astor's fur business
suffered. But he rebounded by 1820, took over independent traders
to create a powerful monopoly, and left the business as a
multi-millionaire in 1834, reinvesting his money in Manhattan real
estate.
Fur trade
The quest for furs was the primary commercial reason for the
exploration and colonizing of North America by the Dutch, French,
and English. The
Hudson's Bay
Company, promoting British interests, often competed with
French traders who had arrived earlier and had been already trading
with indigenous tribes in the northern border region of the
colonies. This competition was one of the contributing factors to
the
French and Indian War in
1763. British victory in the war led to the expulsion of the French
from the American colonies.
French trading continued, however, based in
Montreal
.
Astor's move into the Northwest was a major American attempt to
compete with the established French and English traders.
As the frontier moved westward,
trapper and
hunters
moved ahead of settlers, searching out new supplies of
beaver and other skins for shipment to Europe. The
hunters preceded and followed Lewis and Clark to the Upper Missouri
and the Oregon territory; they formed the first working
relationships with the Native Americans in the West.
They also added
extensive knowledge of the Northwest terrain, including the
important South
Pass
through the central Rocky Mountains. Discovered about
1812, it later became a major route for settlers to Oregon and
Washington.
The
War of 1812 did little to change the
boundaries of the United States and British territories, but its
conclusion led to the nations' agreement to make the Great Lakes
neutral waters to both navies. Furthermore,
competing commercial claims by England and the U.S. led to the
Anglo-American
Convention of 1818. This resulted in their sharing the Oregon
territory until a decades later resolution. By 1820, with the fur
trade depressed, distances to supply increasing, and conflicts with
native tribes rising, the trading system was overhauled by
Donald Mackenzie of the North
West Company and by William H. Ashley. Previously, Indians caught
the animals, skinned them, and brought the furs to trading posts
such as
Fort Lisa and
Fontenelle's Post, where trappers sent the
goods down river to St. Louis. In exchange for the furs, Indians
typically received calico cloth, knives, tomahawks, awls, beads,
rifles, ammunition, animal traps, rum, whiskey, and salt
pork.
The new "brigade-rendezvous" system, however, sent company men in
"brigades" cross-country on long expeditions, bypassing Maya
tribes. It also encouraged "free trappers" to explore new regions
on their own. At the end of the gathering season, the trappers
would "rendezvous" and turn in their goods for pay at river ports
along the
Green River, the Upper
Missouri, and the Upper Mississippi. St. Louis was the largest of
the rendezvous towns. An early chronicle described the gathering as
"one continued scene of drunkenness, gambling, and brawling and
fighting, as long as the money and the credit of the trappers
last." Trappers competed in wrestling and shooting matches. When
they would gamble away all their furs, horses, and their equipment,
they would lament, "There goes hos and beaver." By 1830, however,
fashions changed in Europe and beaver hats were replaced by silk
hats, sharply reducing the need for American furs. Thus ended the
era of the "Mountain men", trappers and scouts such as
Jedediah Smith (who had traveled through more
unexplored western land than any non-Indian and was the first
American to reach California overland). The trade in beaver fur
virtually ceased by 1845.
Settling the West
Federal government and the West
While the profit motive dominated the movement westward, the
Federal government played a vital role in securing land and
maintaining law and order, which allowed the expansion to proceed.
Despite the Jeffersonian aversion and mistrust of federal power, it
bore more heavily in the West than any other region, and made
possible the fulfillment of
Manifest
Destiny. Since local governments were often absent or weak,
Westerners, though they grumbled about it, depended on the federal
government to protect them and their rights, and displayed little
of the outright antipathy of some Easterners to Federalism.
The federal government established a sequence of actions related to
control over western lands. First, it acquired western territory
from other nations or native tribes by treaty; then it sent
surveyors and explorers to map and document the land; next, ordered
federal troops to clear out and subdue the resisting natives; and
finally, had bureaucracies manage the land, such as the
Bureau of Indian Affairs, the
Land Office, the
U.S. Geological Survey, and the
Forest Service. The process was
not a smooth one. Indian resistance, sectionalism, and racism
forced some pauses in the process of westward settlement.
Nonetheless, by the end of the 19th century, in the process of
conquering and managing the West, the federal government amassed
great size, power, and influence in national affairs.
Early scientific exploration and surveys
A major role of the federal government was sending out surveyors,
naturalists, and artists into the West to discover its potential.
Following the
Lewis and Clark
expeditions,
Zebulon Pike led a party
in 1805-6, under the orders of General
James Wilkinson, commander of the western
American army.
Their mission was to find the head waters of
the Mississippi (which turned out to be Lake Itasca
, and not Leech Lake
as Pike concluded). Later, on other
journeys, Pike explored the Red and Arkansas Rivers in Spanish
territory, eventually reaching the Rio Grande
. On his return, Pike sighted the peak named
after him, was captured by the Spanish and released after a long
overland journey. Unfortunately, his documents were confiscated to
protect territorial secrets and his later recollections were
rambling and not of high quality. Major Stephen H.
Long led the
Yellowstone and Missouri expeditions of 1819-1820, but his
categorizing of the Great
Plains
as arid and useless led to the region getting a bad
reputation as the "Great American Desert", which discouraged
settlement in that area for several decades.
In 1811,
naturalists Thomas Nuttall and
John Bradbury traveled up
the Missouri
River
with the Astoria expedition, documenting and
drawing plant and animal life. Later, Nuthall
explored the Indian Territory (Oklahoma), the Oregon Trail, and even Hawaii
. His
book
A Journal of Travels into the Arkansas Territory was
an important account of frontier life. Although Nuthall was the
most traveled Western naturalist before 1840, unfortunately most of
his documentation and specimens were lost.
Artist George Catlin traveled up the Missouri as far
as present-day North
Dakota
, producing accurate paintings of Native American
culture. He was supplemented by
Karl
Bodmer, who accompanied the
Prince Maximilian
expedition, and made compelling landscapes and portraits. In 1820,
John James Audubon traveled about
the Mississippi Basin collecting specimens and making sketches for
his monumental books
Birds of
America and
The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North
America, classic works of naturalist art. By 1840, the
discoveries of explorers, naturalists, and mountain men had
produced maps showing the rough outlines of the entire West to the
Pacific Ocean.
Mexican rule and Texas independence
Criollo and mestizo
settlers of New Spain declared their independence in 1810 (finally
obtaining it in 1821), crumbling American colonial empire in the
Americas (at that moment called just
America, since it was seen as just one continent), forming the new
nation of Mexico
which
included the New Mexico territory at its north. A hoped for
result of Mexico's independence was more open trade and better
relations with the United States where previously Spain had
enforced its border strictly and had arrested American traders who
ventured into the region. After Mexico's independence, large
caravans began delivering goods to Santa Fe along the
Santa Fe Trail, over the journey which took
48 days from Kansas City, Missouri (then known as Westport). Santa
Fe was also the trailhead for the "El Camino Real" (the King's
Highway), a major trade route which carried American manufactured
goods southward deep into Mexico and returned silver, furs, and
mules northward (not to be confused with another "Camino Real"
which connected the missions in California). A branch also ran
eastward near the Gulf (also called the
Old San Antonio Road). Santa Fe also
connected to California via the
Old
Spanish Trail.
The Mexican government began to attract Americans to the Texas area
with generous terms.
Stephen F.
Austin became an "empresario,"
receiving contracts from the Mexican officials to bring in
immigrants. In doing so, he also became the
de facto
political and military commander of the area. Tensions rose,
however, after an abortive attempt to establish the independent
nation of
Fredonia in 1826.
William Travis, leading the "war party,"
advocated for independence from Mexico, while the "peace party" led
by Austin attempted to get more autonomy within the current
relationship. When Mexican president
Santa
Anna shifted alliances and joined the conservative Centralist
party, he declared himself dictator and ordered soldiers into Texas
to curtail new immigration and unrest. However, immigration
continued and 30,000 Americans with 3,000 slaves arrived in 1835.
A series
of battles, including at the Alamo
, at Goliad
, and at the
San Jacinto River, led to
independence and the establishment of the Republic of Texas in 1836. The U.S.
Congress, however, refused to annex Texas, stalemated by
contentious arguments over slavery and regional power. Texas
remained an independent country, led by
Sam
Houston, until it became the 28th state in 1845. Mexico,
however, viewed the establishment of the statehood of Texas as a
hostile act, helping to precipitate the
Mexican War.
The Trail of Tears
The expansion of migration into the Southeast in the 1820s and
1830's forced the federal government to deal with the "Indian
question." By 1837 the "Indian Removal policy" began, to implement
the act of Congress signed by
Andrew
Jackson in 1830. The forced march of about twenty
Native American tribes
included the "Five Civilized Tribes" (
Creek,
Choctaw,
Cherokee,
Chickasaw, and
Seminole). They were pushed beyond the
frontier and into the "Indian Territory" (which later became
Oklahoma). Of the approximate 70,000 Indians removed, about 20%
died from disease, starvation, and exposure on the route. This
exodus has become known as
The Trail
of Tears (in Cherokee "Nunna dual Tsuny," "The Trail Where they
Cried"). The impact of the removals was severe. Sometimes the
transplanted tribes clashed with the tribes native to the area. In
addition, the
Smallpox Epidemic of 1837
decimated the tribes of the Upper Missouri, weakening them, and
allowing immigrants easier access to those lands.
The Indian removals were justified by two prevailing philosophies.
The "superior race" theory contended that "inferior" peoples (i.e.,
natives) held land in trust until a "superior race" came along
which would be a more productive steward of the land. Humanitarians
espoused a second theory stating that the removal of natives would
take them away from the contaminating influences of the frontier
and help preserve their culture. Neither theory showed any
understanding of the natives' intimate connection with their land
nor the deadly effect of social and physical uprooting. For
example, tribes were dependent on local animals and plants for
their food and their medicinal and cultural purposes, which were
often unavailable after moving.
In 1827, the Cherokee, on the basis of earlier treaties, declared
themselves a sovereign nation within the boundaries of Georgia.
When the Georgia state government ignored the declaration and
annexed the land, the Cherokee took their case to the U.S.
Supreme
Court
. The court ruled Georgia's laws null and
void in the Cherokee nation, but the state ignored the ruling. The
court also ruled that the tribes were "domestic dependent nations"
and could not make treaties with other nations. Furthermore, it was
up to the federal government to protect those rights, making the
tribes, in effect, wards of the federal government. President
Jackson, having just signed the Indian Removal Act, failed to
enforce the court ruling, illegally abdicating to the states the
right to make policy regarding the tribes. In effect, Jackson
refused to honor the federal government's commitment to protect the
southern tribes and to act in its proper role in dealing with the
tribes as sovereign, though dependent, nations. Jackson justified
his actions by stating that Indians had "neither the intelligence,
the industry, the moral habits, nor the desire of
improvements."
The only way for a Native American to avoid removal was to accept
the federal offer of or more of land (depending on family size) in
exchange for leaving the tribe and becoming a U.S. citizen subject
to state law and federal law. However, many natives who took the
offer were defrauded by "ravenous speculators" who stole their
claims and sold their land to whites. In Mississippi alone,
fraudulent claims reached . Some of those who refused to move or
take the offer found sanctuary for a while in remote areas. To
motivate natives reluctant to move, the federal government also
promised rifles, blankets, tobacco, and cash.
Of the five tribes,
the Seminole offered the most resistance, hiding out in the
Florida
swamps and waging a war which cost the U.S.
Army 1,500 lives and $20 million. Through war, abandonment, and the
removal policy, the federal government acquired about of native
land in the East from 1776 to 1842.
The Antebellum West
Indian policy and attitudes
No sooner had the federal government created the "Indian Territory"
than whites began to encroach upon the boundaries, traders began to
sell prohibited liquor, and settlers took shortcuts across Indian
land on their way to Oregon and California. As the migrants moved
across the Great Plains, their livestock sometimes trampled or ate
Indian crops. Some tribes struck back by raiding livestock and by
demanding payment from settlers crossing their land. The federal
government attempted to reduce tensions and create new tribal
boundaries in the Great Plains with two new treaties in the early
1850s. The
Treaty of Fort
Laramie established tribal zones for the
Sioux,
Cheyennes,
Arapahos,
Crows, and others,
and allowed for the building of roads and posts across the tribal
lands. A second treaty secured safe passage along the
Santa Fe Trail for wagon trains. In return,
the tribes would receive, for ten years, annual compensation for
damages caused by whites.
The Kansas and Nebraska territories also became contentious areas
as the federal government sought those lands for the future
transcontinental
railroad. In the Far West settlers began to occupy land in
Oregon and California before the federal government secured title
from the native tribes, causing considerable friction. In Utah, the
Mormons also moved in before federal
ownership was obtained. During their flight West, the Mormons
established an outpost called
Winter Quarters with permission
from
Big Elk of the
Omaha tribe. This set a precedent for such
agreements; however, when the Mormons exhausted local timber
supplies they were asked to move from the land.
Their occupancy in
the area that soon became the Nebraska Territory
lasted from 1846 to 1848.
A new policy of establishing reservations came gradually into shape
after the boundaries of the "Indian Territory" began to be ignored.
In providing for Indian reservations, Congress and the
Office of Indian Affairs hoped to
detribalize native Americans and prepare them for integration with
the rest of American society, the "ultimate incorporation into the
great body of our citizen population."
This allowed for the
development of dozens of riverfront towns along the Missouri
River
in the new Nebraska Territory
, which was carved from the remainder of the
Louisiana Purchase after the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Influential pioneer
towns included Omaha
, Nebraska
City
and St.
Joseph.
White attitudes towards Indians during
this period ranged from extreme malevolence ("the only good Indian
is a dead Indian") to misdirected humanitarianism (Indians live in
"inferior" societies and by assimilation into white society they
can be redeemed) to highly idealistic (Native Americans and
settlers could co-exist in separate but equal societies, dividing
up the remaining western land). Dealing with nomadic tribes
complicated the reservation strategy and decentralized tribal power
made treaty making difficult among the Plains Indians. Conflicts
erupted in the 1850s, resulting in the
Indian Wars.
Frémont's expeditions
John Charles Frémont,
son-in-law of powerful Missouri senator and expansionist
Thomas Hart Benton, led a
series of expeditions in the mid 1840's which answered many of the
outstanding geographic questions about the West.
He crossed through
the Rocky Mountains by five different routes, reached deep into the
Oregon territory, traveled the length of California, and into
Mexico below Tucson
. With
the help of legendary scouts
Christopher
"Kit" Carson and
Thomas
"Broken Hand" Fitzpatrick, and German cartographer
Charles Preuss, Frémont produced detailed
maps, filled in gaps of knowledge, and provided route information
that fostered the "Great Migrations" to Oregon, California, and the
Great Basin.
He also disproved the
existence of the mythical Rio San Buenaventura, featured on old
maps, which was a large river believed to drain all of the West and
which exited at San
Francisco
into the
Pacific.
Manifest Destiny and the early migrations
Manifest Destiny was the belief
that the United States was pre-ordained by God to expand from the
Atlantic coast to the Pacific coast. The concept was expressed
during Colonial times, but the term was coined by newspaperman
John O'Sullivan, and became a
rallying cry for expansionists in the 1840s. It was a
moral/religious as well as political/economic justification for
growth, regardless of the social and legal consequences for Native
Americans. Implicit is the position that the American claim
supersedes―by God's favor―that of foreign nations or the native
peoples. O'Sullivan wrote, "Away, away with all these cobweb
tissues of rights of discovery, exploration, settlement,
continuity, etc.... The American claim is by the right of our
manifest destiny to overspread and to possess the whole continent
which Providence has given us for the development of the great
experiment of liberty and federative self-government entrusted to
us".
The Polk and Tyler administrations successfully promoted this
nationalistic doctrine over sectionalists and others who objected
for moral reasons or over concerns about the spread of slavery.
Starting with the annexation of Texas, the expansionists got the
upper hand. To gain the acceptance of Northerners, Texas was even
promoted by expansionists as a place where slavery could be
concentrated, and from where blacks and slavery would eventually
leave the U.S. entirely, solving the problem forever.
Henry Clay and
Daniel Webster, among others, did not vote
for conquest and expansion, and preferred co-existence with
friendly foreign powers sharing the continent.
John Quincy Adams believed the Texas
annexation to be "the heaviest calamity that ever befell myself and
my country". However, Manifest Destiny's popularity in the Midwest
states and the addition of federal encouragement overcame the
opposition and created a climate which helped start the "Great
Migrations" to Oregon, California, and the
Great Basin.
Also spurring settlers westward were the emigrant "guide books" of
the 1840s featuring route information supplied by the fur traders
and the Frémont expeditions, and promising fertile farm land beyond
the Rockies.
Independence, Missouri
became the starting point for caravans of "Chicago"
and "Prairie Schooner" wagons which traveled the Oregon and California trails. The trip was slow
and arduous, but unlike the depiction in films, generally absent of
Indian attacks. One Oregon pioneer wrote, "Our journey is ended.
Our toils are over. But... no tongue can tell, nor pen describe the
heart rending scenes through which we passed". On the journey,
settlers had to overcome extreme climate, lack of food and clean
water, disease, broken down wagons, and exhausted draft animals.
The Oregon territory, filling up with Americans, was ceded to the
U.S. in 1846 by Great Britain, which was anxious to fix the
northern boundary at the 49th parallel. Oregon gained statehood in
1859.
Brigham Young, also influenced by Frémont's
discoveries and seeking to escape persecution, led his followers of
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (the "Mormons") to the valley of the Great Salt
Lake
, bypassed by other immigrants headed to Oregon,
because of its aridity. Eventually, nearly one hundred
Mormon settlements sprang up in what Young called "Deseret", which
later become Utah, California, Nevada, Arizona, and Nebraska. The
Salt Lake City settlement served as the hub of their network, and
was proclaimed "Zion, the seat of God's kingdom on earth". The
communalism and advanced farming practices of the Mormons enabled
them to succeed in a region other settlers rejected as too harsh
but which Frémont believed to have great potential. During the gold
rushes of the 1850s, Salt Lake City became an important supply
point, adding to its economic strength.
In California, the twenty-one mission settlements established by
the Catholic Church had failed to attract sufficient Mexican
settlers who had viewed the region as too remote. The Spanish
aristocracy (the "californios") controlled the territory through
vast land grants on which large cattle ranches spread. Manned
mostly by Christianized Indians supervised by the friars, the
ranches supplied English and American merchant ships with hides and
tallow.
The few Americans in the area were mostly
traders, merchants, and sailors, many from "Yerba Buena" (renamed
San
Francisco
in
1846). Although Presidents Jackson and Tyler's efforts to
buy California from Mexico had failed, American settlers started to
enter the territory by 1841.
The Bartleson-Bidwell Party brought the
first overland family migrations to Sacramento,
California
, followed by several more caravans which
established the California Trail. Thousands of settlers and
miners made the trip in the following decade after the discovery of
gold.
When Frémont's third expedition brought him
to California in 1845, he joined the Bear Flag Revolt
, and allied with other American forces, captured
and controlled considerable California territory. In 1847, a
counter-revolt by "rancheros" failed. At the same time that the
Mexican War was underway in the central
Southwest, Mexico decided to formally cede California to the U.S.
in the
Treaty of Cahuenga.
The Mexican War
A crisis with Mexico had been brewing from the time Texas won its
independence in 1836. The annexation of Texas by the United States
brought feelings on both sides to a boil.
Additionally, the two
nations disputed the border, the U.S. insisting on the Rio Grande
and Mexico claiming the Nueces River, north.
Also, an international commission decided that American settlers
were owed damages in the millions of dollars for past wrongs by the
Mexican government, which it refused to pay. President Polk
attempted to use the debts as leverage in offering to buy the
Mexican territories of New Mexico and California, while he made a
show of force along the border area. Negotiations got nowhere, and
as Polk prepared to ask Congress to declare war, the Mexican
cavalry began an attack on American outposts. After the declaration
of war,
Whigs accused the
President of imperialism and claimed that the administration had
employed "an artful perversion of truth—a disingenuous statement of
facts to make people believe a lie". Northerners also feared the
extension of slavery into the new territories, though the linchpin
of slavery—the plantation—seemed improbable in the dusty plains of
Texas.
General (and later president)
Zachary
Taylor was ordered to the scene and his troops forced the
Mexicans back to the Rio Grande. Then he advanced into Mexico where
several battles ensued.
Also General Winfield Scott undertook a naval assault on
Veracruz
, then marched his 12,000 man force west to Mexico
City, winning the final battle at Chapultepec. Some
advocated for the complete take over of Mexico by the U.S., but
practical arguments as well as racism prevented the attempt. The
"Cincinnati Herald" voiced the racist sentiment asking what would
the U.S. do with millions of Mexicans "with their idol worship,
heathen superstition, and degraded mongrel races?"
The surrender by Mexico took place on September 17, 1847. The
Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo, signed in 1848, ceded the territories of California
and New Mexico (which included the states-to-be of Utah, Arizona,
Nevada, New Mexico, and parts of Colorado and Wyoming) to the
United States for $18.5 million (which included the assumption of
claims against Mexico by settlers). The
Gadsden Purchase in 1853, covering southern
Arizona and New Mexico, pushed the border southward and acquired
land for an anticipated railroad route, and had the unintended
effect of heightening conflicts with southern Apaches now
habitating U.S. territory. The Mexican War was the smallest but
deadliest of American wars—one in six American soldiers died from
bullets or disease—but the spoils of that war were substantial. The
completed Mexican cession covered over half a million square miles
and increased the size of the U.S. by nearly 20%. Managing the new
territories and dealing with the slavery issue were challenges
which lay ahead. The
Compromise of
1850 kept California a free state and allowed Utah and New
Mexico to make their own decisions regarding slavery. It also
imposed some border adjustments.
Gold rushes and the mining industry
On January 24, 1848, James Marshall discovered gold in the
tailrace of the mill he had built for
John Sutter.
Sutter, a Swiss entrepreneur, had acquired a
land grant for over near present day Sacramento
and built himself what was, in effect, an
independent principality. According to Sutter's
reminiscence, "Marshall pulled out of his trousers pocket a white
cotton rag which contained something rolled up in it... Opening the
cloth, he held it before me in his hand... 'I believe this is
gold,' said Marshall, 'but the people at the mill laughed at me and
called me crazy.' I carefully examined it and said to him: 'Well,
it looks like gold. Let us test it.'" Prior to this discovery, gold
mining in the United States had been limited to primitive mines in
the Southeast, especially in Georgia. Word spread quickly across
the United States, after Polk told Congress in December 1848, "The
accounts of the abundance of gold in that territory are of such an
extraordinary character as would scarcely command belief were they
not corroborated by the authentic reports of officers in the public
service."
The word also reached experienced miners in South America and
Europe, who quickly headed to California. Thousands of
"Forty-Niners" reached California, many along the California trail,
boosting the population from about 14,000 in 1848 to over 200,000
in 1852.
San Francisco
was the main port of arrival, with Asians, South
Americans, Australians, and Europeans making long ocean journeys,
and the town grew from 800 to 20,000 people in eighteen months,
with only a fractional number of women and children.
Experienced foreign miners sometimes taught the willing American
amateurs, but most newcomers arrived, grabbed some supplies, and
headed willy-nilly to the gold camps without the slightest idea of
what mining entailed.
As in many other boomtowns, rapid growth in San Francisco resulted
in hastily erected housing, mob rule, vigilant justice,
hyper-inflated prices, environmental degradation, and considerable
squalor. Field conditions for miners were even worse. They lived in
log cabins and tents, and worked in all kinds of weather, suffering
disease without treatment. Supplies were expensive and food poor,
subsisting mostly of pork, beans, and whiskey. These highly male,
transient communities with no established institutions were prone
to high levels of violence, drunkenness, profanity, and
greed-driven behavior. A weekend's entertainment with a prostitute
and plentiful drink could cost hundreds of dollars, not including
gambling losses, wiping out a month or more of found gold.
Without courts or law officers in the mining communities to enforce
claims and justice, miners developed their own ad hoc legal system,
based on the "mining codes" used in other mining communities
abroad. Each camp had its own rules and often handed out justice by
popular vote, sometimes acting fairly and at times exercising
vigilantism—with Indians, Mexicans, and Chinese generally receiving
the harshest sentences. As miner John Cowden wrote, "Very few ever
think of stealing in the country of plenty and those who do so are
immediately strung up."
Prostitution grew
rapidly in the Western boom towns, attracting many female workers
from the East and Mid-West. In many towns, the ratio of "honest"
women to men was 1 to 100, thereby encouraging the flesh trade.
Until the 1890s, madams predominately ran the businesses, after
which "pimps" took over, and the treatment of the women generally
declined. The openness of bordellos in western towns depicted in
films was somewhat realistic, though the true appearance of most
prostitutes was far less attractive than those depicted by
Hollywood starlets. Gambling and prostitution were central to life
in these western towns, and only later―as the female population
increased, reformers moved in, and other civilizing influences
arrived―did prostitution become less blatant and less common.
The
Gold Rush radically
changed the California economy and brought in an array of
professionals, including precious metal specialists, merchants,
doctors, and attorneys, who supplemented the numerous miners,
saloonkeepers, gamblers, and prostitutes. A San Francisco newspaper
stated, "The whole country... resounds to the sordid cry of gold!
Gold!
Gold! while the field is left half planted, the
house half built, and everything neglected but the manufacture of
shovels and pick axes." Gold fever was a widespread affliction
among all classes.
Black Elk recalled,
gold was "the yellow metal that makes whites crazy." Later rushes,
though notable, possessed less of the "lunacy" and urgency of the
California strikes. The extraordinary size of early finds
(including nuggets of over . each), the surprise of the finds, and
the abundance of surface gold helps explain that irrational fervor.
Most of the gold discoveries of the California Gold Rush were
achieved through placer mining, the finding of nuggets and grains
loosened from rock by nature through erosion and carried down
streams from the Sierras. This was relatively easier and required
less capital and expertise than vein mining, which required
drilling down into rock and breaking gold and silver loose. Over
250,000 miners found a total of more than $200 million in gold in
the five years of the California Gold Rush. As thousands arrived,
however, fewer and fewer miners struck their fortune, and most
ended exhausted and broke.
Camps spread out north and south of the
American River and eastward into the
Sierras. In a few years, nearly all of
the independent miners were displaced as mines were purchased and
run by mining companies, who then hired low-paid salaried miners.
As gold became harder to find and more difficult to extract,
individual prospectors gave way to paid work gangs, specialized
skills, and mining machinery. Bigger mines, however, caused greater
environmental damage. In the mountains, shaft mining predominated,
producing large amounts of waste.
Independent miners began to leave
California in the 1850s as mines gave out, and moved on to new
finds in Nevada
, Idaho
, Montana
, Arizona
, New
Mexico
, and Colorado
. An exception were the
Chinese. After white prospectors left the
placer mining areas, many Chinese miners, previously excluded by
racism, found the freedom to buy up the old claims and re-work
them.
The
discovery of the Comstock Lode,
containing vast amounts of silver, resulted in the Nevada boomtowns
of Virginia
City
, Carson
City
, and Silver City.
The wealth from silver, more than from gold, fueled the maturation
of San Francisco in the 1860s and helped the rise of some of its
wealthiest families.
Following the California and Nevada discoveries, miners left those
areas and hunted for gold along the Rockies and in the southwest.
Soon gold was discovered in Colorado, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico,
Idaho, Montana, and South Dakota (by 1864).
Deadwood,
South Dakota
, in the Black Hills, was an archetypical late gold
town, founded in 1875. In 1876,
Wild Bill Hickok, accompanied by
Calamity Jane, came to town and cemented
Deadwood's fame by being murdered there ten days later.
Tombstone,
Arizona
was another notorious mining town. Silver
was discovered there in 1877, and by 1881 the town had a population
of over 10,000.
Wyatt Earp and his
brothers arrived in 1880, became actively involved as Republicans,
saloon owners, and real estate investors, and soon became involved
in the most famous gunfight of the Old West, the Gunfight at
the O.K.
Corral
. In the aftermath, Virgil Earp survived an
assassination and Morgan Earp was hunted down and killed. Wyatt
fled Tombstone with warrants issued against him and drifted through
California, Colorado, Idaho, Arizona, and Alaska. In his old age,
Wyatt Earp was an adviser in Hollywood for western movies, which
helped secure his legendary status.
As gold and silver played out, the large work force of experienced
miners gradually found work as industrial miners—working copper,
iron, coal, and rare earth deposits which fueled a rapidly
expanding national economy. Working the deeper mines was extremely
hazardous. Temperatures could exceed below and many died from heat
stroke. Poor ventilation concentrated a toxic brew of carbon
dioxide, dust, and other compounds and caused frequent headaches
and dizziness. Accidents, premature explosions, and cave-ins were
common and deadly. About half the miners had lung disorders,
shortening their lives to an average of 43 years. In the hard rock
mines, accidents annually disabled 1 of every 30 miners and killed
1 out of 80, the highest rates of any U.S. industry.
The Great Reconnaissance
The end of the Mexican War and the first migrations to California
and Oregon prompted the federal government to undertake an
additional series of surveys to chart the remaining unexplored
regions of the West, to establish boundaries, and to plan possible
routes for a transcontinental railroad. Much of this work was
undertaking by the
U.S. Army's Corps of Engineers,
Corps of
Topographical Engineers, and
Bureau of Explorations and
Surveys, and became known as "The Great Reconnaissance."
Debates ensued among advocates of the "northern route", "central
route", and "southern route" for the railroad. Speculators were
quick to follow the activities of the surveyors and this prompted
further migration and business development.
Major requirements for the rail route were an adequate supply of
water and wood, surmountable geography, and a politically and
economically acceptable solution.
The survey parties also had civilian
scientists who collected specimens of flora and fauna along the
way, for study by institutions like the Smithsonian
. In some instances, as in the
Whipple Expedition, Indians provided
assistance, but at other times, such as with the
Gunnison Party, Indians harassed and
killed surveyors. By 1855, a twelve volume report was issued but
without any recommendation for a preferred route. The survey did
offer many more alternatives than expected as well as providing a
wealth of scientific knowledge which heightened public awareness of
the West. It also spurred further settlement which ultimately
increased conflict with the tribes of the Great Plains.
Pony Express and telegraph
The
Gold Rush and the subsequent spurt of
migration to California hastened the need for better communications
across the continent. Mail was being transported to San Francisco
by ship from New York, with a land crossing across the Isthmus of
Panama, normally a month's trip. Then the federal government
provided subsidies for the development of mail and freight
delivery, and by 1856, Congress authorized road improvements and an
overland mail service to California. There was even an experiment
to use camels for transportation. Commercial wagon trains began to
haul freight out west. For mail, the
Overland Mail Company was formed,
using what was called the "Butterfield route", through Texas, then
New Mexico and into Arizona, over the dangerous Apache Pass
protected by
Fort Bowie.
This route was
abandoned by 1862, after Texas joined the confederacy, in favor of
stagecoach services established via Fort Laramie
and Salt Lake City
, a 24 day journey, with Wells Fargo & Co. as the foremost
provider (initially keeping the "Butterfield" name).
William Russell, hoping to get a government contract for more rapid
mail delivery service, started the
Pony
Express in 1860, cutting delivery time to ten days. He set up
over 150 stations about apart. Riders were required to be expert
and weigh less than ., with an advertisement of the time asking
for, "young skinny wiry fellows, not over eighteen... willing to
risk death daily... Orphans preferred... Wages: $25 per week." If a
relief rider was not available at the next station, the rider was
required to change horses and keep going.
The service was short-lived, however, as the continental telegraph
was completed on October 24, 1861, just eighteen months later.
Samuel F. B. Morse developed his telegraph system in
the 1830s. It found acceptance by the mid 1840s, and over of wire
were laid out to form a single national network. The telegraph and
the
Morse Code made possible the
instantaneous transmission of information and the beginning of the
tele-communications industry. The new national communication system
soon proved a boon to newspapers, to freight hauling, to weather
reporting, to law enforcement, and to the railroads.
Though Russell did get a government contract, his business had
considerable losses anyway and failed. After the Pony Express
service folded, mail continued by overland coach and by sea.
However,
Wells Fargo (established in
1852) maintained special courier services across the Sierras for
carrying gold and mail through the 1860s, and its banking,
freighting, and business services flourished in California. It grew
through the consolidation of other overland mail companies until
the opening of the transcontinental railroad in 1869 caused Wells
Fargo to realign its services and delivery routes.
Bleeding Kansas
By the mid-1850s, the Kansas territory had a population of only a
few hundred settlers but it became the focus of the slavery
question. Of its neighboring states, Missouri was a slave state and
Iowa was not. With the
Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, Congress
repealed the
Missouri Compromise
which blocked slavery in Kansas, instead leaving the decision up to
Kansas. The stakes were high. Adoption of slavery in Kansas would
have given the slave states a two vote majority in the Senate and
abolitionists were intent on blocking that. To influence the
territorial decision, abolitionists (also called "Jayhawkers" or
"Free-soilers") financed the migration of anti-slavery settlers.
But pro-slavery advocates secured the outcome of the territorial
vote by bringing in "Border Ruffians", rowdies from Missouri who
stuffed ballot boxes and intimidated voters. The anti-slavers then
sent
Sharps rifles ("
Beecher's Bibles") and ammunition to
supporters in Kansas, leading to widespread violence and
destruction which prompted the
New
York Tribune to call the territory "Bleeding
Kansas".
Dred Scott
The
Dred Scott decision by the
Supreme Court of the United
States
in 1857 declared the Missouri Compromise
unconstitutional and that Congress had no authority to exclude
slavery from the territories, thus opening
these areas to slavery again depending on the local vote.
Despite the efforts by presidents
Franklin Pierce and
James Buchanan to influence Kansas
territorial governors to vote pro-slavery, Kansas voted to become a
free state and the thirty-fourth state of the Union in 1861. The
conflict also helped to foster the organization and development of
the
Republican
Party in 1856, a mixture of free-soilers, expansionists, and
federalists who opposed the extension of slavery into the Western
territories.
Abraham Lincoln, an
early Republican, made clear his position on slavery in the famous
Lincoln-Douglas debates
which helped propel him to the presidency in 1860, "Never forget
that we have before us this whole matter of the right or wrong of
slavery in this Union, though the immediate question is as to its
spreading out into new Territories and States". Lincoln branded
slavery as a "monstrous injustice" and a "moral, social, and
political evil". In 1862, Lincoln signed a law prohibiting the
spread of slavery into all the remaining territorial possessions.
During Lincoln's administration, two other important acts were
passed which impacted the West—the
Homestead Act and the
Pacific Railroad Act.
Civil War in the West
At the outset of the
American Civil
War, Westerners looked to the Civil War to settle the question
of slavery in their territories. But they also feared that the
federal government would be too preoccupied with the war to worry
about the stability of the territorial governments and that
lawlessness might spread. The Dred Scott Decision had made the
choice of slavery legal in all of the land west of the Mississippi
River, except for Kansas, Oregon, and California.
Although most of the battles of the Civil War took place east of
the Mississippi River, a few important campaigns occurred in the
West. However, Kansas, a major area of conflict building up to the
war, was the scene of only one battle, at
Mine Creek. But its proximity to
Confederate states enabled guerillas, such as
Quantrill's Raiders, to attack Union
strongholds, causing considerable damage. Both sides attacked
civilians, murdering and plundering with little discrimination,
creating an atmosphere of terror.
In Texas, citizens voted to join the confederacy. Local troops took
over the federal arsenal in San Antonio, with plans to grab the
territories of New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado, and possibly
California.
At the Battle of Glorieta Pass
, the Texans' campaign was defeated by Union troops
from Colorado and from Fort
Union
. Missouri, a Union state where slavery was
legal, became a battleground when the pro-secession governor,
against the vote of the legislature, led troops to the federal
arsenal at St. Louis
. When Confederate forces from Arkansas and
Louisiana joined him, Union General
Samuel
Curtis was dispatched to the area and regained Missouri for the
Union for the duration of the war.
The decreased presence of Union troops in the West left behind
untrained militias which encouraged native uprisings and skirmishes
with settlers. President Lincoln appears to have had little time to
formulate new Indian policy. Some tribes took sides in the war,
even forming regiments that joined the Union or the rebel cause,
while others took the opportunity to avenge past wrongs by the
federal government. Engagements were fought against Indians in Utah
(Shoshones), Colorado (Apaches), and New Mexico (Navajo). Within
the "Indian Territory" (later Oklahoma), conflicts arose among the
Five Civilized Tribes, some of
whom sided with the South being slaveholders themselves.
The Postbellum West
Territorial governance after the Civil War
With the war over, the federal government focused on improving the
governance of the territories. It subdivided several territories,
preparing them for statehood, following the precedents set by the
Northwest Ordinance of 1787. It
also standardized procedures and the supervision of territorial
governments, taking away some local powers, and imposing much "red
tape", growing the federal bureaucracy significantly.
Federal involvement in the territories was considerable. In
addition to direct subsidies, the federal government maintained
military posts, provided safety from Indian attacks, bankrolled
treaty obligations, conducted surveys and land sales, built roads,
staffed land offices, made harbor improvements, and subsidized
overland mail delivery. Territorial citizens came to both decry
federal power and local corruption, and at the same time, lament
that more federal dollars were not sent their way.
Territorial governors were political appointees and beholden to
Washington so they usually governed with a light hand, allowing the
legislatures to deal with the local issues. In addition to his role
as civil governor, a territorial governor was also a militia
commander, a local superintendent of Indian affairs, and the state
liaison with federal agencies. State legislators, on the other
hand, spoke for the local citizens and they were given considerable
leeway by the federal government to make local law, except in
extreme cases, as when the Federal government squashed
polygamy by the Mormons in Utah.
These improvements to governance still left plenty of room for
profiteering. As
Mark Twain wrote while
working for his brother, the secretary of Nevada, "The government
of my country snubs honest simplicity, but fondles artistic
villainy, and I think I might have developed into a very capable
pickpocket if I had remained in the public service a year or two."
"Territorial rings", corrupt associations of local politicians and
business owners buttressed with federal patronage, embezzled from
Indian tribes and local citizens, especially in the Dakota and New
Mexico territories.
Federal land system
In acquiring, preparing, and distributing public land to private
ownership, the federal government generally followed the system set
forth by the
Land Ordinance of 1785.
Federal exploration and scientific teams would undertake
reconnaissance of the land and determine Native American
habitation. Through treaty, land title would be ceded by the
resident tribes. Then surveyors would create detailed maps marking
the land into squares of six miles (10 km) on each side,
subdivided first into one square mile blocks, then into lots.
Townships would be formed from the lots and sold at
public auction. Unsold land could be
purchased from the land office at a minimum price of $1.25 per
acre.
In theory, the system would provide a fair distribution of land and
reduce large accumulations of land by private owners. In reality,
speculators could exploit loopholes and acquire large tracts of
land. There was no limit to purchases of the unsold land by
speculators. Furthermore, settlers often got to the land ahead of
the surveyors and became squatters, living on land they held no
title to.
As part of public policy, the government would award public land to
certain groups such as veterans, through the use of "land script".
The script traded in a financial market, often at below the $1.25
per acre minimum price set by law, which gave speculators,
investors, and developers another way to acquired large tracts of
land cheaply. Land policy became politicized by competing factions
and interests, and the question of slavery on new lands was
contentious. As a counter to land speculators, farmers formed
"claims clubs" to enable them to buy larger tracts than the
allotments by trading among themselves at controlled prices.
The federal government also began to give away land for
agricultural colleges, Indian reservations, public institutions,
and the construction of railroads. It also gave away land when a
territory became a state, and it gave each state for each senator
and representative.
In 1862, Congress passed three important bills that impacted the
land system. The
Homestead Act granted
to each settler who improved the land for five years, to citizens
and non-citizens including squatters, for no more than modest
filing fees. If a six months residency was complied with, the
settler then had the option to buy the parcel at $1.25 per acre.
The property could then be sold or mortgaged and neighboring land
acquired if expansion was desired. Though the act was on the whole
successful, the size of parcels was not large enough for the needs
of Western farmers and ranchers, and it failed to address the needs
of the mining and timber operations as well.

Homesteaders
Early on after the
California Gold
Rush, the federal government decided to leave the regulation of
mining claims to local governments. This was reversed by later
acts, which helped legitimate land acquisition for all purposes but
which also made it easier for speculators and swindlers, especially
in the timber and ranching industries. Given the necessity of water
for ranching, squabbles over water rights ensued and complicated
the situation. The railroads got much of the best land and the land
available to homesteaders was not always arable or commercially
useful. On the whole, only about one-third of all Homestead Act
claimants actually completed the process of obtaining title to
their land.
The
Pacific Railroad Grant
provided for the land needed to build the transcontinental
railroad. Since several routes were under consideration, the amount
of land so provided was huge, over . The land given the railroads
alternated with government-owned tracts saved for distribution to
homesteaders. In an effort to be equitable, the federal government
reduced each tract to because of its perceived higher value given
its proximity to the rail line. Railroads had up to five years to
sell or mortgage their land, after tracks were laid, after which
unsold land could be purchased by anyone. Often railroads sold some
of their government acquired land to homesteaders immediately to
encourage settlement and the growth of markets the railroads would
then be able to serve. However, the railroads were slow to build in
some areas, waiting for the population to grow adequately on its
own, before selecting final routes. This caused a "chicken-and-egg"
situation which, in some cases, impeded rather than hastened
settlement. Congress also made loans to the railroads based on the
mileage of rail.
The
Morrill Act provided land grants to
states to build institutions of higher education for agricultural
purposes, in an effort to stimulate rural economic growth and the
education programs to support it. The states would sell the bulk of
the land to raise funds to build the institutions.
The federal government even attempted to forest the prairies to
make better use of undesirable land. Relying on the theory that
planting trees would alter the climate enough to produce the
rainfall need to sustain the forests long term, the government
encouraged homesteaders to plant trees. When the
"rain-follows-the-plow program" failed due to drought and pests,
the federal government turned instead to more practical programs to
develop irrigation, though large-scale irrigation projects came
decades later.
But by the 1870s, the large land giveaways
raised concerns about the management of remaining public lands,
particularly those of unique value such as the Grand Canyon
and Yellowstone
, and the conservation movement was born. In
1872, Yellowstone became the first
national park in the United States (and in the
world).
Transcontinental railroad
The
Pacific Railroad Act of
1862 finally hastened the transition of the transcontinental
railroad from dream to reality.
Existing rail lines, particularly belonging
to the Union Pacific, had already
reached westward to Omaha, Nebraska
, about half way across the continent.
The
Central Pacific, starting in Sacramento, California
, was extended eastward across the Sierras to link
with the Union Pacific heading west. The two finally met at
Promontory Point, Utah on May 10, 1869.
Leland Stanford, one of the prime backers of
the Central Pacific, hammered the
golden
spike in triumph, linking the two lines. A cross-country trip
was reduced from about four months to one week by the completion of
the railroad.
Building the railroad required six main activities: surveying the
route, blasting a right of way, building tunnels and bridges,
clearing and laying the roadbed, laying the ties and rails, and
maintaining and supplying the crews with food and tools. The work
was highly labor intensive, using mostly plows, scrapers, picks,
axes, chisels, sledgehammers, and handcarts. A few steam-driven
machines, such as shovels, were employed as well. Each iron rail
weighed . and required five men to lift. For blasting, they used
gunpowder, nitroglycerine, and limited amounts of dynamite. The
Central Pacific employed over 12,000 Chinese workers, 90 percent of
the work force. The Union Pacific employed mostly Irishmen. The
crews averaged about two miles (3 km) of new track per day but
they were driven to do more. Each man lifted a few tons a day of
weight. In the haste to complete the project, engineering errors
caused collapsing roadbeds and badly graded curves. Substandard
rails and ties were also serious problems. The defects became even
more apparent with freight runs, causing many accidents, and the
line eventually required millions of dollars to repair and replace
bad track.

The meeting of the lines on May 10,
1869.
With grants and loans, the federal government stimulated the land
and capital acquisition needed for the project.
Leland Stanford, former governor and part of
a group of businessmen known as the "Big Four", sold stock and
bonds in the enterprise to finance construction, with the help of
Wall Street money men like
Jay Gould who
connected with investors in the United States and Europe. The
enterprise was considered risky, given the high construction costs,
and the bonds need to yield high interest (similar to today's "junk
bonds") to be attractive to investors. The huge dollars involved in
the project and the participation of so many groups out to profit
resulted in substantial corruption and influence peddling. The
owners of both construction companies, using mostly "other people's
money", insured their own profits with shady dealing and with slush
funds used to bribe government officials.
The worst corruption revolved around
George Francis Train's
Crédit Mobilier, the construction
company for the Union Pacific, which, according to author Richard
White, drew in "dozens of congressmen, a secretary of the treasury,
two vice-presidents, a leading presidential contender, and an
eventual president. It caused
a scandal that
remained an issue in four presidential elections". Train's other
enterprises, including the
Credit Foncier of America,
Train Town and Omaha's
Cozzens Hotel, succeeded, further burnishing
Train's image. While the Central Pacific-Union Pacific railroad
succeeded, other transcontinental projects failed to reach the
Pacific coast until many years later. The most notorious was the
Northern Pacific project which failed to sell its bonds, resulting
in the collapse of the
Jay Cooke
and Company investment house and helping to trigger the
financial
Panic of 1873. The most
profitable of the transcontinental lines was the
Great Northern railroad which ran along the
northern tier of the United States, providing freight service to
the Northwest. The cost of moving freight on the Great Northern was
2.88 cents per ton early on, falling to less than. 80 cents by
1907.
Despite the engineering problems and political scandals, the
transcontinental railroad was a big success in helping to open up
the West. In the first year, 150,000 passengers made the trip for
"pleasure, health, or business" and enjoyed the "luxurious cars and
eating houses" as advertised by the Union Pacific. Settlers were
encouraged with promotions to come West on scouting trips to buy
land near the line and to use the rails for freight needs. The
railroads had "Immigration Bureaus" which advertised the "promised
land" abroad. Railroad "Land Departments" sold land on easy terms.
The
Great
Plains
, a harder "sell" than California or Oregon, was
promoted as "prairie which is ready for the plow" and "a flowery
meadow" only requiring "diligent labor and economy to ensure an
early reward."
The transcontinental railroad spurred the development of trunk and
feeder lines and the
rapid growth of
Omaha specifically, creating a rail network extending from the
city that eventually reached over most of the West. The railroads
made possible the transformation of the United States from an
agrarian society to a modern industrial nation. Not only did they
bring eastern products west and agricultural products east, but
they also helped the establishment of western branches of eastern
companies. Mail order businesses grew rapidly, bringing city
products to rural families, sometimes dominating local companies
and forcing them out of business. The building and the operation of
railroads, which required vast amounts of coal and lumber, spurred
the timber and mining industries. Most industries benefited from
the lower costs of transportation and the expanding markets made
possible by the railroads. Railroads also had a profound social
effect. Rail travel brought immigrant families to the West as women
were less intimidated by the rail journey west than by wagon. The
greater numbers of women and children migrating west helped
stabilize and tame some of the wild frontier towns, as these
settlers organized and demanded schools, law enforcement, churches,
and other institutions supportive of family life.
Life on the Frontier
Migration after the Civil War
After the Civil War, many from the East Coast and Europe were lured
west by reports from relatives and by extensive advertising
campaigns promising "the Best Prairie Lands", "Low Prices", "Large
Discounts For Cash", and "Better Terms Than Ever!". The new
railroads provided the opportunity for migrants to go out and take
a look, with special "land exploring tickets", the cost of which
could be applied to land purchases offered by the railroads. Some
migrants went west reluctantly, particularly women tied to their
husbands economically, who viewed the dangers of the West more
objectively. As one farm wife stated, "There's nothing up there but
Indians and rattlesnakes and blue northers and prairie fires". The
truth was that farming the plains was indeed more difficult than
back east. Water management was more critical, lightning fires were
more prevalent, the weather was more extreme, rainfall was less
predictable.
Most migrants, however, put those concerns aside. Their chief
motivation to move west was to find a better economic life than the
one they had. Farmers sought larger and more fertile areas;
merchants and tradesman new customers and less competitive markets;
laborers higher paying work and better conditions. The major
exception was the
Mormons, who sought a
religious and economic
Utopia, free of
persecution, which would allow their entire community to thrive. In
many cases, migrants sank their roots in communities of similar
religious and ethnic backgrounds. For example, many
Finns went to Minnesota and Michigan,
Swedes to South Dakota,
Norwegians to North Dakota,
Irish to Montana,
Chinese to San Francisco,
German Mennonites in Kansas, and
German Jews to Portland, Oregon.
The California Gold Rush set off large migrations of Hispanic and
Asian people which continued after the Civil War. Chinese migrants,
many of whom were impoverished peasants, provided the major part of
the workforce for the building of Central Pacific portion of the
transcontinental railroad. They also worked in mining, agriculture,
and small businesses, and many lived in San Francisco. Significant
numbers of
Japanese also arrived
in California. Some migrants intended to make their fortune and
return home and others sought to stay and start a new life.
Many Hispanics who had been living in the former territories of
New Spain, lost their land rights to fraud
and governmental action when Texas, New Mexico, and California were
formed. In some cases, Hispanics were simply driven off their land.
In Texas, the situation was most acute, as the "
Tejanos", who made up about 75% of the population,
ended up as laborers employed by the large white ranches which took
over their land.
In New Mexico
, only six percent of all claims by Hispanics were
confirmed by the Claims Court. As a result, many Hispanics
became permanently migrating workers, seeking seasonal employment
in farming, mining, ranching, and on the railroads. Border towns
sprang up with
barrios of intense poverty. In
response, some Hispanics joined
labor
unions, and in a few cases, led revolts. The California "Robin
Hood",
Joaquin Murieta, led a gang
in the 1850s which burned houses, killed miners, and robbed
stagecoaches. In Texas,
Juan Cortina
led a 20-year campaign against Texas land grabbers and the
Texas Rangers, starting around 1859.
Instead of the reality of Hispanic life, in the United States the
public's image became one of quaint peasants happy with their
lot.
Among the first
African-Americans
to arrive in the West were deserting sailors and
slaves of white prospectors who came during the
California Gold Rush, numbering about four thousand by 1860.
However, the number of blacks in the West remained at only a few
thousand throughout the 19th century. Blacks did participate in
nearly all segments of Western society but many lived in segregated
communities. They served in expeditions that mapped the West and as
fur traders, miners, cowboys, Indian fighters, scouts, woodsmen,
farm hands, saloon workers, cooks, and
outlaws. The famed
Buffalo Soldiers were members of the Negro
regiments of the U.S. Army and they played a substantial role in
fighting the Plains Indians and the Apache in Arizona.
Relatively few freed
slaves, known as "Exodusters", became
prairie settlers in all-black towns like Nicodemus
, KS.
Bison versus cattle
The rise of the cattle industry and the cowboy is directly tied to
the demise of the huge
bison herds of the
Great Plains. Once numbering over 25 million, bison were a vital
resource animal for the Plains Indians, providing food, hides for
clothing and shelter, and bones for implements. Drought, loss of
habitat, disease, and over-hunting steadily reduced the herds
through the 19th century to the point of near extinction. Overland
trails and growing settlements began to block the free movement of
the herds to feeding and breeding areas. Initially, commercial
hunters sought bison to make "
pemmican," a
mixture of pounded buffalo meat, fat, and berries, which was a
long-lasting food used by trappers and other outdoorsmen. Not only
did white hunters impact the herds, but Indians who arrived from
the East also contributed to their reduction. Adding to the kill
was the wanton slaughter of bison by sportsmen, migrants, and
soldiers. Shooting bison from passing trains was common sport.
However, the greatest negative effect on the herds was the huge
markets opened up by the completion of the transcontinental
railroad. Hides in great quantities were tanned into leather and
fashioned into clothing and furniture. Killing far exceeded market
requirements, reaching over one million per year. As many as five
bison were killed for each one that reached market, and most of the
meat was left to rot on the plains and at trackside after removal
of the hides. Skulls were often ground for fertilizer. A skilled
hunter could kill over 100 bison in a day.

By the 1870s, the great slaughter of bison had a major impact on
the Plains Indians, dependent on the animal both economically and
spiritually. Soldiers of the U.S. Army deliberately encouraged and
abetted the killing of bison as part of the campaigns against the
Sioux and Pawnee, in an effort to deprive them of their resource
animal and to demoralize them.
The sharp decline of the herds of the Plains created a vacuum which
was exploited by the growing cattle industry. Spanish cattlemen had
introduced cattle ranching and longhorn cattle to the Southwest in
the 17th century, and the men who worked the ranches, called
"vaqueros", were the first "cowboys" in the West. After the Civil
War―with railheads available at Abilene, Kansas City, Dodge City,
and Wichita―Texas ranchers raised large herds of longhorn cattle
and drove them north along the Western, Chisholm, and Shawnee
trails. The cattle were slaughtered in Chicago, St. Louis, and
Kansas City.
The Chisholm
Trail, laid out by cattleman Joseph McCoy along an old trail
marked by Jesse Chisholm, was the major artery of cattle commerce,
carrying over 1.5 million head of cattle between 1867 and 1871 over
the from south Texas to Abilene, Kansas
. The long drives were treacherous, especially
crossing water such as the Brazos and the Red
River
and when they had to fend off Indians and rustlers
looking to make off with their cattle. A typical drive would
take three to four months and contained two miles (3 km) of
cattle six abreast. Despite the risks, the long Texas drives proved
very profitable and attracted investors from the United States and
abroad. The price of one head of cattle raised in Texas was about
$4 but was worth more than $40 back East.
By the 1870s and 1880s, cattle ranches expanded further north into
new grazing grounds and replaced the bison herds in Wyoming,
Montana, Colorado, Nebraska and the Dakota territory, using the
rails to ship to both coasts. Many of the largest ranches were
owned by Scottish and British financiers. The single largest cattle
ranch in the entire West was owned by American John W. Iliff,
"cattle king of the Plains", operating in Colorado and Wyoming.
Gradually, longhorns were replaced by the American breeds of
Hereford and
Angus, introduced by settlers from the
Northwest. Though less hardy and more disease-prone, these breeds
produced better tasting beef and matured faster.
Then disaster struck the cattle industry. A terribly severe winter
engulfed the plains toward the end of 1886 and well into 1887,
locking the prairie grass under ice and crusted snow which starving
herds couldn’t penetrate. After their livestock died by the
thousands, great syndicates and “barons”, already under pressure
from declining prices and tightening credit, were financially
ruined. Many of them had spent much more each year than they made
in order to expand their land and cattle empires, but now they were
forced to liquidate most of their remaining holdings just to pay
for living expenses and to help satisfy a host of demanding
creditors.
Sheep grazing took over as sheep were easier to feed and needed
less water. However, sheep also helped cause ecological changes
that enabled foreign grasses to invade the Plains and also caused
increased erosion. Open range cattle ranching came to an end and
was replaced by barbed wire spreads where water, breeding, feeding,
and grazing could be controlled. This led to "fence wars" which
erupted over disputes about water rights. Cattlemen and sheep
ranchers sometimes engaged in violence against each other as did
large and small cattle ranchers, culminating in the
Johnson County War.
Anchoring the booming cattle industry of the 1860s and 1870s were
the cattle towns in Kansas and Missouri.
Like the mining towns
in California and Nevada, cattle towns such as Abilene
, Dodge
City
, and Ellsworth experienced
a short period of boom and bust lasting about five years.
The cattle towns would spring up as land speculators would rush in
ahead of a proposed rail line and build a town and the supporting
services attractive to the cattlemen and the cowboys. If the
railroads complied, the new grazing ground and supporting town
would secure the cattle trade. However, unlike the mining towns
which in many cases became
ghost towns
and ceased to exist after the ore played out, cattle towns often
evolved from cattle to farming and continued on after the grazing
lands were exhausted. In some cases, resistance by moral reformers
and alliances of businessmen drove the cattle trade out of town.
Ellsworth, on the other hand, floundered as the result of Indian
raids, floods, and
cholera.
The early years of male-dominated life in cattle towns gave way to
a more balanced community of farm families and small businesses as
the boom passed. Though lawlessness, prostitution, and gambling
were significant in cattle towns, especially early on, the greed
factor in the mining towns added an extra element of danger and
violence. Since these towns grew rapidly, law and order often took
a while to establish itself. Vigilante justice did occur, but in
many cases, it subsided when adequate police forces were appointed.
While some vigilante committees served the public good fairly and
successfully in the absence of law officers and judges, more often
than not vigilantism was motivated by bigotry and base emotion and
produced imperfect justice directed at those considered socially
inferior. Indian hunting and race riots against the Chinese were
severe manifestations of vigilantism.
A contemporary eyewitness of Hays City, Kansas paints a vivid image
of a cattle town:
"Hays City by lamplight was remarkably lively, but not
very moral.
The streets blazed with a reflection from saloons, and
a glance within showed floors crowded with dancers, the gaily
dressed women striving to hide with ribbons and paint the terrible
lines which that grim artist, Dissipation, loves to draw upon such
faces...
To the music of violins and the stamping of feet the
dance went on, and we saw in the giddy maze old men who must have
been pirouetting on the very edge of their graves."
To control violence, sometimes cowboys were segregated into brothel
districts away from the main part of town.
Cattle rustling was a serious offense
sometimes punished by lynching. However, free-shooting brawls, also
known as "hurrahing", were not as frequent as in the movies. In
Wichita, handguns were outlawed within city limits and in many
towns some form of gun control existed. Also unlike in the movies,
marshals rarely shot outlaws, especially in the middle of Main
Street in a showdown. Famed lawmen such as
Wyatt Earp,
Bat
Masterson, and
Wild Bill
Hickok, and less remembered ones like
Michael Meagher,
Thomas James Smith, and
Bill Tilghman actually averaged only one or
two killings in a year.
Code of the West
A new code of behavior was becoming acceptable in the West. People
no longer had a
duty to retreat when
threatened. This was a departure from British common law that said
you must have your back to the wall before you could protect
yourself with deadly force. In 1876 an Ohio court held if attacked
you were not “obligated to fly”. The Indiana Supreme Court upheld
the legality of ‘no duty to retreat”. The code of the West dictated
that a man did not have to back away from a fight. He could also
pursue an adversary even if it resulted in death. He needed to
retreat no further than “the air at his back”.
In reality, the main activity of law enforcement in cattle towns
was knocking down drunks and hauling them away before they hurt
themselves or others, somewhat akin to naval military police
controlling shore leave. They also disarmed cowboys who violated
gun control edicts, tried to prevent dueling, and dealt with
flagrant breaches of gambling and prostitution ordinances. When the
cattle were not in town, Wyatt Earp and other lawmen might be
heading up street repair projects or doing other civic chores, or
tending to their own business interests. Usually, justices of the
peace were poorly schooled in law, politically corrupt, and
depended on assessing fees and fines to make a living. The better
ones ruled by common sense and experience, but could be
inconsistent as they did not resort to statutes to guide their
rulings. Only federal judges tended to be the highest quality and
followed written law. Honest jurors were hard to find and most
jurors were biased by their personal relationships and
acquaintances.
Much of the banditry of the West was carried out by Mexicans and
Indians against Anglo-American targets of opportunity along the
U.S. – Mexico border, particularly in Texas, Arizona, and
California.
Pancho Villa,
after leaving his father's employ, took up the life of banditry in
Durango
and later in the state of Chihuahua
. He was caught several times for crimes
ranging from banditry to horse thievery and cattle rustling but,
through influential connections, was always able to secure his
release. Villa later became a controversial revolutionary folk
hero, leading a band of Mexican raiders in attacks against various
regimes and was sought after by the U.S. government. The second
major type of banditry was conducted by the infamous outlaws of the
West, including
Jesse James,
Billy the Kid, the
Dalton Gang,
Black
Bart,
Butch Cassidy and the
Wild Bunch and hundreds of others who
preyed on banks, trains, and stagecoaches. Some of the outlaws,
such as Jesse James, were products of the violence of the Civil War
(James had ridden with Quantrill's Raiders) and others became
outlaws during hard times in the cattle industry. Many were misfits
and drifters who roamed the West avoiding the law. When outlaw
gangs were near, towns would raise a posse (like in the movies) to
attempt to drive them away or capture them.
Seeing that the need
to combat the gunslingers was a growing business opportunity,
Allan Pinkerton ordered his
detective agency to open branches out West, and they got into the
business of pursuing and capturing outlaws, like the James Gang, Butch Cassidy, Sam Bass
, and dozens of others. Pinkerton devised the
"rogues gallery" and employed a systematic method for identifying
bodies of criminals.
Cowboys
Central to the myth and the reality of the West is the American
cowboy. His real life was a hard one and
revolved around two annual roundups, spring and fall, the
subsequent drives to market, and the time off in the cattle towns
spending his hard earned money on food, clothing, gambling, and
prostitution. During winter, many cowboys hired themselves out to
ranches near the cattle towns, where they repaired and maintained
equipment and buildings. On a long drive, there was usually one
cowboy for each 250 head of cattle.

Before a drive, a cowboy's duties included riding out on the range
and bringing together the scattered cattle. The best cattle would
be selected, roped, and branded, and most male cattle were
castrated. The cattle also needed to be dehorned and examined and
treated for infections. On the long drives, the cowboys had to keep
the cattle moving and in line. The cattle had to be watched day and
night as they were prone to stampedes and straying. The work days
often lasted fourteen hours, with just six hours of sleep. It was
grueling, dusty work, with just a few minutes of relaxation before
and at the end of a long day. On the trail, drinking, gambling,
brawling, and even cursing was often prohibited and fined. It was
often monotonous and boring work. Food was barely adequate and
consisted mostly of bacon, beans, bread, coffee, dried fruit, and
potatoes. On average, cowboys earned $30 to $40 per month. Because
of the heavy physical and emotional toll, it was unusual for a
cowboy to spend more than seven years on the range. As open range
ranching and the long drives gave way to fenced in ranches in the
1880s, the glory days of the cowboy came to an end, and the myths
about the "free living" cowboy began to emerge.
Many of the cowboys were veterans of the Civil War, particularly
from the
Confederacy,
who returned to ruined home towns and found no future, so they went
west looking for opportunities. Some were Blacks, Hispanics, Native
Americans, and even Britons. Nearly all were in their twenties or
teens.
The earliest cowboys in Texas learned their
trade, adapted their clothing, and took their jargon from the
Mexican vaqueros or "buckaroos", the heirs of Spanish cattlemen
from Andalusia
in Spain. Chaps, the heavy protective
leather trousers worn by cowboys, got their name from the Spanish
"chaparreras", and the rope was derived from "la reata". All the
distinct clothing of the cowboy—boots, saddles, hats, pants, chaps,
slickers, bandannas, gloves, and collar-less shirts—were practical
and adaptable, designed for protection and comfort. The
cowboy hat quickly developed the capability, even
in the early years, to identify its wearer as someone associated
with the West. The most enduring fashion adapted from the cowboy,
popular nearly worldwide today, are "blue jeans", originally made
by
Levi Strauss for miners in 1850. It
was the cowboy hat, however, that came to symbolize the
American West.
The modern
rodeo or "Frontier Day" show is the
only American sport to evolve from an industry. It exists on both
the amateur and professional level, and it remains a favorite form
of entertainment in many towns of the West. Rodeos combine the
traditional skills of the range cowboy - calf and steer roping,
steer wrestling, team roping, bronco riding, and horsemanship with
the showmanship of bull riding, and barrel racing.
Conquering the Frontier
Military forts and outposts
As the frontier moved westward, the establishment of U.S. military
forts moved with it, representing and maintaining federal
sovereignty over new territories. The military garrisons usually
lacked defensible walls but were seldom attacked. They served as
bases for troops at or near strategic areas, particularly for
counteracting the Indian presence.
For example, Fort
Bowie protected Apache
Pass
in southern Arizona along the mail route between
Tucson and El Paso and was used to launch attacks against Cochise and Geronimo.
Fort Laramie
and Fort Kearny helped
protect immigrants crossing the Great Plains and a series of posts
in California protected miners. Forts were constructed to
launch attacks against the Sioux. As Indian reservations sprang up,
the military set up forts to protect them. Forts also guarded the
Union Pacific and other rail lines.
Other important forts were Fort Sill
(Oklahoma), Fort
Smith
(Arkansas), Fort Snelling
(Minnesota), Fort Union
(Montana), Fort Worth
(Texas), and Fort Walla Walla
(Washington). By the 1890s, with the threat
from Indian nations eliminated, and with migrant populations
increasing enough to provide their own law enforcement, most
frontier forts were abandoned.
Fort Omaha
(Nebraska) was home to the Department of the Platte
, and was responsible for outfitting most
Western posts for more than 20 years after its founding in the late
1870s.
Indian wars
As settlement sped up across the West after the transcontinental
railroad was completed, clashes with Native Americans of the Plains
and southwest reached a final phase. The military's mission was to
clear the land of free-roaming Indians and put them onto
reservations. The stiff resistance after the Civil War of
battle-hardened, well-armed Indian warriors resulted in the
Indian Wars.
In the
Apache and
Navajo Wars, Colonel
Christopher "Kit" Carson fought the Apache around
the reservations in 1862. Skirmishes between the U.S. and Apaches
continued until 1886, when
Geronimo
surrendered to U.S. forces. Kit Carson used a
scorched earth policy in the
Navajo
campaign, burning Navajo fields and homes, and stealing or
killing their livestock. He was aided by other Indian tribes with
long-standing enmity toward the Navajos, chiefly the
Utes. He later fought a combined force of
Kiowa,
Comanche and
Cheyenne to a draw at the
First Battle of Adobe Walls, but
he managed to destroy the Indian village and winter supplies. On
June 27, 1874 'Bat' Masterson and a small group of buffalo hunters
fought a much larger Indian force at the
Second Battle of Adobe
Walls.
Red Cloud's War was led by the
Lakota chief
Makhpyia luta (Red Cloud) against the military who
were erecting forts along the Bozeman trail. It was the most
successful campaign against the U.S. during the Indian Wars. By the
Treaty of Fort Laramie
, the U.S. granted a large reservation to the Lakota, without
military presence or oversight, no settlements, and no reserved
road building rights. The reservation included the entire Black
Hills.
Captain Jack was a chief of
the Native American Modoc tribe of California
and Oregon
, and was
their leader during the Modoc War.
With 53 Modoc warriors, Captain Jack held off 1,000 men of the
U.S. Army for 7
months. Captain Jack killed
Edward
Canby.
The
Great Sioux War of
1876-77 was conducted by the Lakota under
Sitting Bull and
Crazy
Horse. The conflict began after repeated violations of the
Treaty of Fort Laramie
once gold was discovered in the hills.
One of its famous
battles was the Battle of the Little Bighorn
, in which combined Sioux and
Cheyenne forces defeated the 7th Cavalry,
led by General George Armstrong
Custer.
The end of the Indian Wars came at the
Massacre of Wounded Knee (December
29, 1890) where Sitting Bull's half-brother,
Big Foot, and some 200 Sioux were killed by the
U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment. Only
thirteen days before, Sitting Bull had been killed with his son
Crow Foot in a gun battle with a group of
Indian police that had been sent by the American government to
arrest him.
Oklahoma land rush
In 1889, President
Benjamin
Harrison authorized the opening of of unoccupied lands in the
Oklahoma territory acquired from the native tribes. On April 22,
over 100,000 settlers and cattlemen (known as "boomers") lined up
at the border, and with the army's guns and bugles giving the
signal, began a mad dash into the newly opened land to stake their
claims (
Land Run of 1889). A
witness wrote, "The horsemen had the best of it from the start. It
was a fine race for a few minutes, but soon the riders began to
spread out like a fan, and by the time they reached the horizon
they were scattered about as far as the eye could see".
In a day,
the towns of Oklahoma
City
, Norman
, and Guthrie came into
existence. In the same manner, millions of acres of
additional land was opened up and settled in the following four
years.
Johnson County War

Right
The
Johnson County War was a range
war which took place in Johnson County, Wyoming
, in the Powder River
Country in April 1892. The large ranches
were organized as the Wyoming Stock Growers Association (the WSGA)
and hired killers from Texas; an expedition of 50 men was
organized, which proceeded by train from Cheyenne
to Casper, Wyoming
, then toward Johnson County, intending to eliminate
alleged rustlers and also, apparently, to replace the government in
Johnson County. After initial hostilities, the sheriff of
Johnson County raised a posse of 200 men and set out for the
ruffians' location. The posse led by the sheriff besieged the
invading force at the TA Ranch on
Crazy Woman Creek. After two days, one of
the invaders escaped and was able to contact the acting governor of
Wyoming. Frantic efforts to save the besieged invaders ensued, and
telegraphs to Washington resulted in intervention by President
Benjamin Harrison. The Sixth
Cavalry from Fort McKinney was ordered to proceed to the TA ranch
and take custody of the invaders and save them from the posse. In
the end, the invaders went free after the court venue was changed
and the charges were dropped.
Closing out the century
In his highly influential
Frontier
Thesis in 1893,
Frederick
Jackson Turner concluded that the frontier was all but gone.
(But with the discovery of
gold in
the Klondike in 1896, a new frontier was opened up in the vast
northern territory.
Alaska
became
known as "the last frontier".) After the eleventh U.S. Census
was taken in 1890, the superintendent announced that there was no
longer a clear line of advancing settlement, and hence no longer a
frontier in the continental United States. The West was finally
conquered, achieving Manifest Destiny, in less than one hundred
years after the frontier breached the Mississippi River. By
century's end, the population of the West had reached an average of
two people per square mile, which was enough to be considered
"settled". Towns and cities began to grow around industrial
centers, transportation hubs, and farming areas.
In 1880, San Francisco
dwarfed all other Western cities with a population
of nearly 250,000. Over opposition from mining and timber
interests, the federal government began to take steps to preserve
and manage the remaining public land and resources, hence
exercising more control over the affairs of Westerners.

Poster for Buffalo Bill Wild West
Show
The mythologizing of the West began with minstrel shows and popular
music in the 1840s. During the same period,
P. T. Barnum presented Indian chiefs, dances, and
other Wild West exhibits in his museums, However, large scale
awareness really took off when the
dime
novel appeared in 1859, the first being
Malaeska, the
Indian Wife of the White Hunter. By simplifying reality and
grossly exaggerating the truth, the novels captured the public's
attention with sensational tales of violence and heroism, and fixed
in the public's mind stereotypical images of heroes and
villains—courageous cowboys and savage Indians, virtuous lawmen and
ruthless outlaws, brave settlers and predatory cattlemen. Millions
of copies and thousands of titles were sold. The novels relied on a
series of predictable literary formulas appealing to mass tastes
and were often written in as little as a few days. The most
successful of all dime novels was Edward S. Ellis'
Seth
Jones (1860).
Ned Buntline's
stories glamorized
Buffalo Bill
Cody and Edward L. Wheeler created "Deadwood Dick", "Hurricane
Nell", and "Calamity Jane".
Buffalo Bill Cody grabbed the
opportunity to hop on his own bandwagon and to promote his own
legend as well as other Western stereotypes. He presented the first
"Wild West" show in 1883, creating a caricature of the Old West
with skits and demonstrations by Indians and cowboys hired for the
occasion. He offered feats of roping, marksmanship, and riding,
including those of sure-shooting
Annie
Oakley. Cody took his show to Europe and was wildly received,
further spreading the myth of the West to nations abroad.
Toward the close of the century, magazines like
Harper's Weekly featured illustrations
by artists
Frederic Remington,
Charles M. Russell, and others, and married them to
action-filled stories by writers like
Owen
Wister, together conveying vivid images of the Old West to the
public. Remington lamented the passing of an era he helped to
chronicle when he wrote, "I knew the wild riders and the vacant
land were about to vanish forever...I saw the living, breathing end
of three American centuries of smoke and dust and sweat."
The discovery, exploration, settlement, exploitation, and conflicts
of the "American Old West" form a unique tapestry of events, which
has been celebrated by Americans and foreigners alike—in art,
music, dance, novels, magazines, short stories, poetry, theater,
movies, radio, television, song, and oral tradition—continuing to
today.
See also
- General
- Cowboy action shooting is
a competitive shooting sport which originated in the early 1980s
that requires shooters to compete using firearms typical of the mid
to late 19th century including single action revolvers, lever
action rifles (chambered in pistol calibers) and side by side
double barrel shotguns or pump action shotguns with external
hammers.
- Cowboy hat a hat
- Boss of the plains also a
hat
- Historical reenactment :
an activity in which participants recreate some aspects of a
historical event or period.
- National Cowboy
& Western Heritage Museum : museum and art gallery, in
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, housing one of the largest collections in
the world of Western, American cowboy, American rodeo, and American
Indian art, artifacts, and archival materials.
- Reno Gang : Southern Indiana post
civil war gang. First Train Robbers in US History. 10 members
lynched by vigilante mob in 1868.
- Rodeo : demonstration of cattle wrangling skills.
- The Oregon-California Trails
Association preserves, protects and shares the histories of
emigrants who followed these trails westward.
- Wanted poster : a poster, popular
in mythic scenes of the west, let the public know of criminals whom
authorities wish to apprehend.
- Wild West Shows : a following of
the wild west shows of the American frontier.
- People
- Fiction
- Chris Enss : author of historical
nonfiction that documents the forgotten women of the Old West.
- Zane Grey : author of many popular
novels on the Old West
- Karl May : best selling German writer
of all time, noted chiefly for wild west books set in the American
West.
- Winnetou : American-Indian hero of
several novels written by Karl May.
References
Notes
- Robert M. Utley, ed., The Story of The West, DK
Publishing, New York, 2003, pp.116–22, IBSN 0-7894-9660-7.
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.133
- Alvin M. Josephy, Jr. ed., The American Heritage History of
The Great West, Simon and Shuster, New York, 1965, p.63.
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.137
- Josephy (1965), p.77
- Josephy (1965), p.73.
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.145-147
- Howard R. Lamar (1987), p.422
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.423
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.150
- Josephy (1965), p.81
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.424-426
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.149
- Richard White (1991), p.57
- Richard White (1991), p.58
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.153
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.937
- Josephy (1965), p.118
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.156
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.63-64
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.162
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- Josephy (1965), p.147
- Josephy (1965), p.128
- Richard White (1991), p.66.
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.160-161
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.162-163
- Josephy (1965), p.153
- Josephy (1965), p.154
- Richard White (1991), p.86
- Richard White (1991), p.89
- Josephy (1965), pp.155-156
- Richard White (1991), p.90
- Richard White (1991), p.91
- Federal Writers Project. (1939)
Nebraska: A guide to the Cornhusker state. Nebraska State Historical
Society. Retrieved 4/28/08.
- Richard White (1991), pp.91-92
- Richard White (1991), p.321
- Richard White (1991), p.95
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.172-175
- Richard White (1991), pp.73-75
- Richard White (1991), p.76
- Richard White (1991), p.75
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.176
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.179-180
- Richard White (1991), p.193
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.188-189
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.181-183
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.185
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.187
- Richard White (1991), p.78
- Richard White (1991), p.82
- Josephy (1965), p.242
- Josephy (1965), p. 248
- Josephy (1965), p.240
- Richard White (1991), p.191
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.193
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.449
- Richard White (1991), p.305
- Josephy (1965), p.249
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.446-447
- Josephy (1965), p.251
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.192
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.194
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.195
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.328-329
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.196
- Richard White (1991), pp.280-281
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.200-201
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.202-203
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.204-206
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.1189
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- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.198
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.1251
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- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.609
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- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.1167
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- Richard White (1991), pp.176-177
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- Richard White (1991), p.141
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- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.639
- Richard White (1991), pp.146-147
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.640
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- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.146
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- Richard White (1991), p.249
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- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.994
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- Richard White (1991), p.196
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- Josephy (1965), p.347
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- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.818-820
- Richard White (1991), pp.218-219
- Richard White (1991), pp.219-220
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.176
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.269
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- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.181-182
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.243
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- Richard White (1991), pp.345-346
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.184
- Richard White (1991), p.330
- Richard White (1991), p.344
- Horan & Sann, Pictorial History of the Wild West,
Bonanza Books, New York, 1964, p.52
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.182-184
- Brown, Richard Maxwell. (1994) Oxford History of the
American West, p.393 ISBN 0195112121
- Wallis Michael. Billy the Kid: The Endless Ride
(2007), p.121 ISBN 0393060683
- Utley, Robert M. High Noon in Lincoln: Violence on the
Western Frontier (1987), pp.176-177
- Sonnichsen. C.L. I’ll die before I’ll run: The Story of the
great feuds of Texas (1962), pp.8-9 ASIN B001KCZ9QM
- Holden William C. “Law and Lawlessness on the Texas
Frontier 1875-1890 (1940), pp.188-203
http://www.tshaonline.org/publications/journals/shq/online/v044/n2/contrib_DIVL3002.html
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.656
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.655
- Richard White (1991), p.336
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.940
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.268-270
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.245
- Reynolds, William and Rich Rand (1995) The Cowboy Hat book.
Pg10 ISBN 0-87905-656-8
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.272
- Reynolds, William and Rich Rand (1995) The Cowboy Hat book.
Pg.15 ISBN 0-87905-656-8
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.1030-1031
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.394-399
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), p.559
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.559-561
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.225
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.602-602
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.256
- Robert M. Utley (2003), p.253
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.303-304
- Ishi: The Last Yahi see also Uncontacted
peoples
- Robert M. Utley (2003), pp.253-254
- Howard R. Lamar (1977), pp.1008-1009
- Josephy (1965), p.407
Further reading
- Lamar, Howard, ed. The New Encyclopedia of the American
West (1998); this is a revised version of Reader's
Encyclopedia of the American West ed. by Howard Lamar
(1977)
- Mitchell, Lee Clark. Westerns: Making the Man in Fiction
and Film (1998)
- Jules David Prown, Nancy K. Anderson, and William Cronon, eds.
Discovered Lands, Invented Pasts: Transforming Visions of the
American West (1994)
- Slotkin, Richard. The Fatal Environment: The Myth of the
Frontier in the Age of Industrialization, 1800-1890
(1998)
- Slotkin, Richard. Gunfighter Nation: The Myth of the
Frontier in Twentieth-Century America (1960)
- Smith, Henry Nash. Virgin Land: The American West as Symbol
and Myth, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1950 ISBN
0674939557
- Tompkins, Jane. West of Everything: The Inner Life of
Westerns (1993)
External links
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