Victoria Salazar
HIST 1302.720
Prof. Akins
8 June 2015
The South being readmitted into the Union was one main goal of Reconstruction. Another main goal was for the American society to define the status of freedom. Establishing order, securing the rights of each man, and readmit America into a nation again are tasks of Reconstruction. There were three main Reconstruction Plans: Lincoln’s, Johnson’s and Congress, which applied a plan to unify the nation.
In 1864, Lincoln’s plan was to issue a proclamation of amnesty and reconstruction for those areas of the Confederacy occupied by Union armies. Lincoln also planned and required the ten percent of the voting population of each state from the 1860 election. This requirement established that the
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The frontier was the most line of rapidness and effective Americanization. When the masters of the colonist found him, an European, it stripped him and provided him with a hunting shirt and moccasin. It settles him in a log cabin of the Cherokee and Iroquois. It provided a planting job of Indian corn and plowing with a sharp stick. Before going to planting he shouted the war cry and took the scalp in Indian fashion. Little by little his transformation outcomes were not old Europe and not the development of Germanic germs.
In the beginning the frontier was Atlantic coast. The frontier was Europe in some sort of real sense. While moving towards the west the frontier became more American. Form the frontier being advanced it meant a steady movement away from any influence from Europe, a constant growth of independence in American lines. The only way to study the frontier’s advance, the men who were growing up in the conditions, and the economic, and social results of it, is really the study of American part of our
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The technology from Slater produced greatly which increased the speed of the cotton thread that could be spun into yarn. When he introduced a new technology to the United States, economic takeoff of the Industrial Revolution requested other elements before turning into American life.
To increase productivity, the Industrial Revolution used new organizational strategies to change the economy very quickly. It started with the “Outwork System” which small parts from a larger production was carried into many single homes. “Factory System” was where they performed on a large scale in individual centralized locations.
During the rise of wage labor stunted working people in new ways. In 1824 the textile workers protested and the factory conditions and the mills model of Lowell faced large clashes in the 1830s. Another improved transportation system was essential for raw materials to be able to reach factories and to manufacture good that went to consumers. This improved transportation system was known as the market revolution. Work
In 1893, at the 400th anniversary of the appearance of Columbus in the Americas celebrated in Chicago , Frederick Jackson Turner presented an academic paper entitled, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History” In this essay, Turner proposes that, “The existence of an area of free land, its continuous recession, and the advance of American settlement westward explain American development.” The group dynamic that Turner champions is the farmer. More directly it is white, male farmers. While the expansion of the west by white male farmers was a factor in the development of America, it is not the only explanation for this progression. Turner fails to incorporate all of the demographics present during this expansion which were essential to the evolution of America.
What is the point of reconstruction? Reconstruction is suppose to bring the Confederate states back into the Union. Reconstruction was also supposed to bring the freedmen into the mainstream of everyday life. The reconstruction of 1863-1877 was not very successful. The reason that reconstruction was not very successful is that the Confederate states were brought in, but the freedmen were only treated good in one of the three stages.
Toward the finish of the war, Lincoln made an arrangement to revamp the South and reestablish the revolt states to the Union rapidly and effectively. His arrangement was ordinarily called Reconstruction. It had two stages: (1) All southerners, except for high positioning military and common pioneers, would be acquitted in the wake of taking a promise of constancy to the United States of America; and (2) when 10% of the voters in the state had guaranteed, the state would be permitted to frame a lawful government and rejoin the Union.
Although the history of the American frontier is glorified for the vanquishing of Indian and the march of manifest destiny that made America great and special, this is still evident today in society. For instance, in media today, the Dakota Pipelines were on Native American tribal land, yet we as Americans used the power of authority to make them leave their land for the supposed greater benefit of America. That was the notion in the past, and still is the notion today, Native Americans were not considered Americans, although the inhabited areas and lands way before we had. The representation of the West showcased triumph of “civilization” over “savagery.” Also, back in the 19th century, scholarly essays were written that stated moving west separated Americans from their European roots, those who were from there. This is evident today as well,
Correspondingly, Slater learned most of his textile machinery skills from working with a professional in Britain. Thus being the one of the reasons why In the United Kingdom he is known as “Traitor Slater”. Another reason being that he brought the idea of industrialization to the new world. In 1790 he opened the first industrial mill with a design that replicated one from the British. His technology heightened the rate at which cotton could be spun into yarn.
If you were to ask someone about the character of the American frontier experience, the answer could be different depending on who you ask. The experience of the American voyagers is one of adventure, yet the Indian perspective is anything but that. While reading Chief Josephs address to a white audience, you can see the pain and struggle that the Indians went through during this period in history. The Indians battled long and hard for their territory and the preservation of their culture. While most tribes wanted peace, the Americans viewed the Indians as savages and did everything in their power to try to change their way of life. Richard Pratt’s article displays this idea perfectly. Throughout the article, Richard talks about why society
Over the years, the idea of the western frontier of American history has been unjustly and falsely romanticized by the movie, novel, and television industries. People now believe the west to have been populated by gun-slinging cowboys wearing ten gallon hats who rode off on capricious, idealistic adventures. Not only is this perception of the west far from the truth, but no mention of the atrocities of Indian massacre, avarice, and ill-advised, often deceptive, government programs is even present in the average citizen’s understanding of the frontier. This misunderstanding of the west is epitomized by the statement, “Frederick Jackson Turner’s frontier thesis was as real as the myth of the west. The development of the west was, in
American frontiersmen during the 19th century were some of the fiercest pioneers that have ever roamed newly unexplored territories. After the American Revolution, the United States gained territory that the British Empire claimed as their own west of the Appalachians. This created new opportunities for many Americans throughout the liberated country to travel west, specifically the well-known pioneer--Daniel Boone—who was very famous for his successful settlements in Kentucky. As a result, many men were inspired by the great pioneer to travel across the country, encouraged to move from the passing of the Northwest Ordinance (1787), and the “Manifest Destiny” Movement. Throughout the course of the 19th century many frontiersmen will make their way even further west for exploring, hunting (fur trapping), trading, and even pirating. To greater enhance knowledge of how these mighty frontiersmen lived their lives, this term paper will confer about how the western frontier came to be, while focusing on Jim Bridger, Jedediah Smith, and Hugh Glass, icons of the American frontier.
The emergence of western history as an important field of scholarship started with Frederick Jackson Turner’s (1861-1932) famous essay “The Significance of the Frontier in American history.”[1] This thesis shaped both popular and scholarly views of the West for the next two generations. In his thesis, Turner argued that the West had to be taken seriously. He felt that up to his time there had not been enough research of what he in his essay call “the fundamental, dominating fact in the U.S. history”: the territorial expansion from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast. The frontier past was, according to Turner, the best way to describe the distinctive American history and character.
The time between 1790 and 1830 is what people best known as the industrial revolution. The revolution first began in Britain. Many people say that Samuel Slater is the main person who helped start this fast productivity in America. Slater opened the first mill in 1790. He had worked in a mill in Britain before so he gained ideas and based his mill off the British model. His main accomplishment was that he helped increase the production of cotton thread in the United States. Many say this was the start of the revolution! Although Slater had a big part in the industrial revolution, many other people had part in the revolution. People started using new organization skills, otherwise known as “systems.” The most popular known mill was in Lowell,
The most important of the changes that the Industrial Revolution brought was the invention of machines to do the work of hand tools, the use of steam, and later of other kinds of power, in place of the muscles, and the adoption of the factory system. The Industrial Revolution came gradually. However, when measured against the centuries people had worked entirely by hand, it happened in a short span of time. Until the inventions of the flying shuttle in 1733 and the spinning jenny in 1764, the making of yarn and the weaving of cloth had been much the same for thousands of years. By 1800 a host of new and faster processes were in use in both manufacture and transportation.
I learn that the American Frontier is dangerous and not safe while the Indians might visit and attack the local villages in the American frontier. For example, the Magua and his Heron’s warrior ambush the British and kill Colonel Munro in the countryside, which showing that the American frontier is always under the threat of Indians.
In the book The Frontier In American culture the two authors Limerick and White try to address the many different topics throughout the book and try to appreciate their influence in American history and culture. The authors of the book address the different topics with the help of many different artifacts from the Newberry Library, also the authors show their attitudes toward the old American west and explain to us how we know and understand that time era.
During the industrial revolution there was great migration of workers from rural areas to the cities. Workers moved from rural area to the urban areas for job. There was a mass scale of movement during this period that the cities were barely able to cope. They had to add roads and infrastructure, sanitation and waste management, policing and the adding parks school and collages.
The Industrial Revolution grows out of changes brought about by the Agricultural Revolution as well as the natural resources, increased food production, growing population and a steady supply of workers in the increasing labor force. Just as earlier changes help bring about this revolution, the Industrial Revolution brings about changes that will lead to new developments such as ideologies, wealth, larger economies, the growth of cities and the problems that also come with large urban populations in crowded living spaces. Steam driven machinery would lead to large manufacturing factories and the textile industry of England is the first major industry changed by the faster ability of weaving and spinning cotton. Changes are experienced by all groups of people throughout Europe and America but the middle and working classes of these civilizations are the new classes created and sustained by the revolution. The increased productions of the agricultural fields lead to people looking for new work in the growing industrial centers. The new factories help build the towns and cities and the steady supply of new people searching for work also leads to the building of both tenements and businesses to supply the consumer goods of the people. Entire families work for the same factories because the wages are not enough to provide for the family and all members are part of the labor force. For many who manage the factories, own the machines and the tenements; the labor force are no