The Westward Expansion of the United States of America

Contributed by:
Steve
This booklet describes the Westward Expansion, a glimpse of the manifest destiny, and the Transcontinental Railroad. It also listed the factors that contributed to the settlement of the west.
1. Westward
Expansion
MANIFEST DESTINY AND THE TRANSCONTINENTAL RAILROAD
2. America in the 1820s
3.  America in 1865
 No major Railroads
went West
 Travel West was
extremely long
and dangerous –
2-3 Months by
land (Native
American
Resistance)
 4-6 Months by
boat, All the way
around South
America
4. Factors That Contributed to
the Settlement of the West
1. Manifest Destiny
2. Gold Discovered in California
3. Homestead Act of 1862
4. Transcontinental Railroad
5. The American Dream
5. Manifest Destiny: Go
West Young Man
 The west was viewed as the great
untapped Frontier
 Manifest Destiny – The belief that
it was America’s mission to
expand from ocean to ocean,
spreading democracy and freedom
 Americans believed it was their
God-given duty to conquer the
Western territories and unify the
Nation
6.
7. Territorial Expansion of
 1803 Louisiana Purchase
 1845 Texas
 1848 Mexican-American War: Colorado, Arizona,
New Mexico, Wyoming, California, Nevada, and
Utah
 By 1850, America gains the Oregon Territory
8.
9. 1848-49 Gold Rush
 1848 Gold Discovered in California
 Thousands of Americans head West lured by
the idea of becoming instant millionaires
 West becomes the land of opportunity
 Americans were on the move
10. Homestead Act of
1862
 The U.S. Government encouraged the
settlement of the West
 1862 Homestead Act – Millions of acres were
given away free in the West to anyone that
would claim land and live on it for 5 years
 First come first serve basis
 Other Public land was sold for $2.50 an acre
11. The Oregon Trail
 The only way West by land was via the Oregon
Trail
 2,170 Mile route
 Dangerous and Difficult/Donner Party
12.
13. The Other way
West was
by Boat
14. The Railroad Boom
 In 1865, America had 50,000 miles of railroad,
primarily in the Northern states
 No railroads went West
 America experienced a tremendous railroad
boom after the Civil War
 Over 150,000 miles of track was built between
1865-1895
15. Man of Steel: Henry
 Before 1850, railroads
and trains were made
of iron
 Iron is brittle, and
railroads were
unreliable and under
constant repair
 1850 Henry Bessemer
(England) invents a way
to turn iron ore into
steel
16. Bessemer Process
 Converted Iron ore into steel
 Steel is lighter, stronger, and more
malleable (flexible) than iron
 Steel could now be mass produced
 Steel was inexpensive
 Bessemer opens the door to an
Industrial revolution in America
 A new age of building began:
skyscrapers, bridges, and railroads
17. Transcontinental
Railroad
 The 1st Transcontinental Railroad
was started in 1869
 Gov. granted over 200 million
acres of land for the project and
offered low interest rate loans
 It ran from Sacramento, California
to Omaha, Nebraska
 Union Pacific RR began laying
track Westward out of Omaha
 Central Pacific RR began laying
track Eastward out a Sacramento
18.
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25.
26. The Golden Spike
 On May 10th, 1869, at Promontory Point,
Utah, the “Golden Spike’ was driven
into the ground uniting both the Union
Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads
 1st railroad line connecting the East to
the West
 Travel time about 4-5 days from NY to
California
 Considered one of the greatest
architectural achievements in American
History
 Nothing could stop Manifest Destiny
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32.  RR track was standardized – width of
steel rail, and width from rail to rail
 National signals are established
 George Westinghouse developed air
brakes
 1883, A National time and Time
Zones are established
 For scheduling, everyone was on the
same time
33.
34. The Railroad’s Impact
 Transportation of people and goods was
quicker and cheaper
 New era of interstate trade and
commerce
 1865 – it cost $3.45 to ship a barrel of flour
from NY to Chicago
 1890 it costs .68 cents
 New jobs – Irish/Chinese
 Westward Expansion –
Safer/Quicker/Cheaper
 Native American wars and removal
35. Eminent Domain
 What happened to the land or property people if a
railroad was designed to ge through it?
 Eminent Domain – 5th Amendment
 Gov. can take any land as long as it is for the
public good
 What is the Public Good?
 Indian territory decimated
Eminent Domain still a part of our lives today
Private property vs. Public Use – airport runways,
parks, highways, shopping centers etc.
The Government – federal, state, and local can take
what it wants
New buildings and structures create increased tax
revenue – Newport, KY
Blighted areas become economic goldmines