6.29.2024

Continental Reckoning: The American West In The Age Of Expansion, West - B

              "Between February 19, 1846, and July 4, 1888, the United States acquired more than 1.2 million square miles of land."  The three events that expanded our nation were the annexation of Texas, settlement of the Oregon issue with Great Britain, and the US victory in the Mexican War. The acquisition of all this territory  placed great stress on the compromises made between the Northeast and Southeast over slavery. 

             The first event in the making of the West and the ensuing national transformation was the discovery of gold in California. The population and economy exploded, and thenceforth "the region would be the most culturally and ethnically mixed part of the nation." The region's isolation, population growth, and gold created wealth led to a booming, diversified, and quickly mature economy. One observer said it was as if "the lights went on all at once." Throughout the country, Indians were starved, slaughtered, and evicted from their homes. In the fortyyears after the finding of gold, 90% of the indigenous peoples were eliminated in California.  

            An important question was if, and how,  the western half of the continent would come under the suzerainty of Washington. Surveys in the 1850's were the first steps in establishing what lay between California and the settled eastern half of America. Of prime import was agreeing on a route for the first transcontinental railroad. The Southerners, hoping to spread slavery west, were pining for a southern route through Texas and the New Mexico Territory.

           "The emerging West's fluidity, its sheer up-for grabness, brought a near fatal continental disharmony." "Bleeding Kansas was as clear an instance as we would have of how the emerging West could interact with the East to shift the nation's course, in the case of making national calamity more likely." The territory of Kansas adopted two constitutions - one endorsing slavery and one outlawing it. Violence ensued, and the federal government backed the slaveholders, although there were only a few hundred slaves in the state. Kansas would only join the union after the southerners seceded. The western aspect of Kansas's struggles was about the confiscation of land given to the Indians in order to accommodate railway interests. Indians lost approximately one-fourth of the lands of the entire state.

           The war saw a  profound expansion of federal power through laws establishing land grant universities, 160 acre homesteads and the Pacific railway. The West was further organized by the admission of new states and  territories. The government's concern about the safety of travelers going west led to ongoing confrontations and more death for the Indians of the Plains. As the war closed, the government had to implement policies integrating the freed slaves, resolving the status of the hundreds of thousands of Chinese in California, and continuing to incorporate the Hispano's who became American by treaty. The plan for the hundreds of thousands of Plains Indians was to make them Christian herdsmen or farmers.

         Binding the West to the rest of the country became a priority. The two most important tools in the process were the railroads and the telegraph. With governmental financial support, the first transcontinental telegraph was completed in late 1861. Eight years later, the country would be linked by a railway system stretching from coast to coast. Roads spread to every corner of the West carrying freight and passengers. "More land in the nation was pulled into connection with other places...than in the previous two and a half centuries." Railways and roads led to extensive exploration and mapping. Ethnologists and linguists studied the indigenous people of the plains with the goal of "occupying native homelands and commanding their resources" and "fitting Indian peoples properly within the nation with as little disruption and conflict as possible."

          The number of non-Indians on the plains grew from 179,000 to three and a half million. The Americans who poured into the West were a diversified group, creating cities and towns with the highest percentages of foreign born in the US. The majority, about 60%, were men. "The West can be imagined as a college of masculine subculture at work seizing and transforming the land." Women and children would eventually follow as the land was settled.

        "Farmers, ranchers, and miners did not intend to cut the legs from under Native Economies, but they were doing exactly that." Cattle ranching is a "prime illustration of how the West was being sewn into a larger national and global framework." Cattle were amassed in the southwest, but needed in the northeast. Thus began the cattle drives north to railheads, and the physical transformation of the region.  "Ranching imposed both and economic an cultural order on the national homeland." The grasslands where the Indians grazed their horses and where the bison roamed were consumed by cattle and later fenced-in. Farming also took away more grasslands. The foundation of Indian life on the plains was gone.

        Washington believed it imperative to make the Indians farmers. Many tribes tried, but failed, because the prairies where they lived were not susceptible to long term agrarian success. Drought, fires, and most often locusts and grasshoppers defeated them at every turn. The reservation system led to the once mighty freemen of the Plains living on handouts from the US government. In the end, it was not the US Cavalry that removed the Plains Indians from their homes. It was financially driven civilians seeking wealth in mining, stability in farming, and a market for cattle.

         This book is the winner of this year's Bancroft Prize. Academic histories have their ups and downs, and chapters about locusts, mining camps, the economics of farming, and the legalities of mining claims can be wearying. But the big picture perspectives about how the West drove so many national issues, about the absorption of the lands taken from Mexico, and the physical reordering of half of the United States  are intriguing and fascinating. 

         



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