America: A Narrative History - Chapter 13.1: Western Expansion
概要
TLDRChapter 13 of David Emory Shi's "America: A Narrative History" focuses on westward expansion in the 19th century United States. The video, led by Professor Casey, explores the migration driven by economic instability in the eastern states and the promise of land and wealth in the west, notably due to mining opportunities and agricultural expansion. The concept of Manifest Destiny, coined by John O'Sullivan in 1845, justified this expansion as a divine right. The lecture also addresses the harsh realities and misconceptions of the westward migration process, including the infamous Donner Party's journey, which resulted in cannibalism due to dire conditions. Additionally, the impact on Native American tribes and Hispanic communities in Mexican territories such as Texas, which were heavily influenced by American settlers, is examined. The video touches on the significant migration routes like the Oregon Trail and the influence of key figures, such as John C. Fremont, on exploration and settlement. Overall, the expansion is depicted as a complex amalgamation of ambition, hardship, and cultural tension.
収穫
- 🗺️ Westward expansion was driven by economic opportunities and the promise of new land.
- 📜 The term "Manifest Destiny" was coined by John O'Sullivan in 1845.
- ⛏️ The California Gold Rush in 1848 was a significant factor for migration.
- 👥 Westward journeys were fraught with hardships, exemplified by the Donner Party incident.
- 🏞️ The Oregon Trail was a crucial migration route for settlers.
- 🤝 Native American tribes and Mexican territories were heavily impacted by expansion.
- ⚖️ Manifest Destiny was used to morally justify expansion, despite its racist implications.
- 🚀 John C. Fremont played a key role in exploring and mapping western territories.
- 🛠️ Cultural and social dynamics were challenged and altered by westward settlement.
- 📉 The Native American population decreased significantly due to disease and displacement.
タイムライン
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
Discussion of Chapter 13 of 'America: A Narrative History', focusing on westward expansion driven by economic instability in the east, religious freedom, and opportunities in new lands, especially in mining and agriculture. The concept of 'Manifest Destiny' emerges, leading to significant migration westward.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
From 1841 to 1867, mass migration to the Pacific Northwest occurred with settlements along the way. Texas was under Mexican control, but by 1845 around 5,000 people annually made the journey. 1848 saw a gold rush in California drawing in 30,000 people along the Oregon Trail.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
Native American presence in the west, with over 325,000 by 1840 across the Great Plains to California. Many Native tribes are farmers or nomadic, using horses for hunts and raids. Mexican area influence and U.S. interest in Northern Mexican areas increase.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
The Great Basin and Pacific Northwest tribes relied on hunting and fishing. Mexico, seen as culturally inferior by whites, gained independence in 1821. Americans migrated to Texas and surrounding areas following Mexican independence, looking to capitalize on fur trade.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
By the 19th century's early decades, territories in the northwest include Nebraska, Washington, and Oregon, shared by U.S. and Britain. Oregon becomes vital to settlement due to its fertile land. Migration is illustrated by experiences on the Oregon Trail.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
Challenges of westward migration include disease, with cholera and dysentery being rampant. Family dynamics change as traditional roles are impractical. The Donner Party tragic story exemplifies the perilous journey, where survivors resorted to cannibalism for survival.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:04
Settlement of California highlighted Spain's efforts to prevent Russian expansion. Missions controlled local Natives; after Mexican independence, missions declined, giving rise to local governance. John Charles Fremont's exploration paved the way for U.S. interest, with his mapping and surveys facilitating U.S. settlement strategies.
マインドマップ
ビデオQ&A
What motivated westward expansion in the 19th century?
The primary motivations included economic opportunities, religious freedom, and the idea of Manifest Destiny.
Who coined the term "Manifest Destiny" and when?
John O'Sullivan coined the term "Manifest Destiny" in 1845.
What is Manifest Destiny?
Manifest Destiny was the belief that American settlers were destined to expand across North America, supported by the belief that it was a divine right and moral obligation.
What hardships did the Donner Party face?
The Donner Party faced extreme hardships including getting lost, lack of food, and being trapped by snow, which led to cannibalism for survival.
What event attracted many settlers to California in 1848?
The Gold Rush of 1848 attracted a large number of settlers seeking fortunes in California.
How did westward expansion affect Native American tribes?
Westward expansion led to the displacement of Native American tribes and conflict due to the influx of settlers.
What was the Oregon Trail?
The Oregon Trail was a historic east-to-west route used by settlers moving to Oregon, California, and other western territories.
Who was John C. Fremont?
John C. Fremont was an American explorer and pathfinder who mapped the Oregon Trail, among other contributions.
Why did Americans embrace their expansion as Manifest Destiny?
This perception arose from the belief that the Americas were divinely ordained to be leaders in spreading Christian capitalism and civilization.
What challenges did settlers face during westward expansion?
Challenges included disease, lack of resources, harsh weather, and conflicts with Native Americans.
ビデオをもっと見る
Half a million secrets | Frank Warren
The Couch Ep. 3 - Ana Lara
America: A Narrative History - Chapter 13.2: The Mexican-American War
Upgrading mining exploration and operations with modern GIS
Why Good Writers Rule the World
Psychological facts about human | Psychology quotes on human behavior | Amazing physiological fact |
- 00:00:00hi everyone it's professor casey again
- 00:00:02welcome back
- 00:00:03today we're discussing chapter 13 from
- 00:00:05david emory shy's america a narrative
- 00:00:07history
- 00:00:08and now we're going to focus a little
- 00:00:10bit more on westward expansion okay
- 00:00:12we've discussed
- 00:00:13uh the different sectional areas of the
- 00:00:15united states or at the northeast we
- 00:00:17discuss the south parts of the midwest
- 00:00:19and so now we can actually begin to
- 00:00:20discuss on the area that's gradually
- 00:00:22being colonized at this point in time
- 00:00:25and especially beginning in the middle
- 00:00:26part of the 19th century okay this is
- 00:00:28when really
- 00:00:29a lot more expansion westward begins to
- 00:00:32develop
- 00:00:33okay primarily because of mining
- 00:00:34exploits and of course because of the
- 00:00:36promise of new land
- 00:00:42so by this point in time the west really
- 00:00:44has a lot to offer for people living
- 00:00:46back east okay we've already gone
- 00:00:47through a period
- 00:00:48of long-term economic instability back
- 00:00:51east okay
- 00:00:52from the embargo acts during the
- 00:00:53jeffersonian administration
- 00:00:55um all the way through um the aftermath
- 00:00:58of the war of 1812 where the cotton
- 00:01:00industry is gradually just beginning to
- 00:01:02get on its feet
- 00:01:03and even into the jacksonian era okay
- 00:01:05where we've already seen
- 00:01:07a lot of economic stability to do to the
- 00:01:09bank of the united states going under
- 00:01:11okay so a lot of people are really
- 00:01:13looking for a stable way of life
- 00:01:14out west and the pacific northwest in
- 00:01:17particular
- 00:01:18uh has a lot of stability to offer
- 00:01:20especially where hunting and fishing is
- 00:01:22concerned okay there are
- 00:01:24viable food sources out there and also
- 00:01:26there's an active fur trade with the
- 00:01:27native tribes
- 00:01:28okay and more so than that if we go
- 00:01:31beyond the boundaries of the continental
- 00:01:33united states right
- 00:01:34the pacific coast also links up with
- 00:01:37several other trading ports
- 00:01:38that connect to asia as well okay so
- 00:01:41there's a lot of promise for what could
- 00:01:42potentially happen
- 00:01:43on the west coast over time it could
- 00:01:45become very wealthy
- 00:01:49and again when it comes to economic
- 00:01:51improvement especially that's really
- 00:01:52what drives
- 00:01:53most people to move out west right to
- 00:01:55strike it rich or at least to become a
- 00:01:57little bit more successful than they
- 00:01:58have been
- 00:02:01and again some people do choose to move
- 00:02:02west for religious freedom as we've
- 00:02:04already seen when it comes to
- 00:02:06groups like the mormon church okay
- 00:02:08sometimes they're looking to
- 00:02:09obtain new converts right we still do
- 00:02:11have a little bit of a presence of
- 00:02:13catholicism that is gradually trying to
- 00:02:15convert a few native tribes here and
- 00:02:17there but still um
- 00:02:18it's it's largely protestant movements
- 00:02:20now that are beginning to
- 00:02:22go out west and the west is by no means
- 00:02:25empty either this is another
- 00:02:26misconception
- 00:02:28of people at the time anyways that this
- 00:02:30is an undeveloped
- 00:02:31empty country okay there are tons of
- 00:02:34native american tribes
- 00:02:36that are still in existence west of the
- 00:02:37mississippi river
- 00:02:39and there's a lot of hispanic residents
- 00:02:40too that have been pushed aside by white
- 00:02:42settlers along the way
- 00:02:43okay remember a lot of the area that is
- 00:02:46still to the
- 00:02:47southwest in particular is still the
- 00:02:48territory of new spain
- 00:02:50and this is the area that eventually
- 00:02:53ends up going into independent status
- 00:02:55becomes part of mexico
- 00:02:56and then over time becomes another area
- 00:02:59of intrigue for the united states
- 00:03:02and southerners in particular who end up
- 00:03:04going west are really doing this to try
- 00:03:06to expand their own agricultural
- 00:03:08pursuits okay whether it's
- 00:03:10crops that they can grow for subsistence
- 00:03:13or in many cases when it comes to land
- 00:03:15speculators especially
- 00:03:16looking to expand the cotton industry
- 00:03:19and the south still maintains a large
- 00:03:21political edge because of the
- 00:03:22three-fifths compromise remember this is
- 00:03:24still the thing that's been in existence
- 00:03:26since the country began okay counting
- 00:03:29slaves as part of the population
- 00:03:30but not treating them as 100 percent
- 00:03:33human beings remember they're only
- 00:03:34considered
- 00:03:35three-fifths of a person even though
- 00:03:37they're not even counted as humans
- 00:03:39nor are they counted as registered
- 00:03:41voters either
- 00:03:45now in 1845 we get a democratic party
- 00:03:48propagandist named john o'sullivan
- 00:03:51who actually coins the term manifest
- 00:03:53destiny for the first time
- 00:03:54okay we've already discussed this idea
- 00:03:56is something that people have already
- 00:03:58begun to think about
- 00:03:59right this um somewhat misguided concept
- 00:04:02right that's an understatement really
- 00:04:04um to describe how people moving west
- 00:04:07can actually claim the land in the name
- 00:04:09of the united states claim it as god
- 00:04:11fearing individuals
- 00:04:13quote unquote right and really as a way
- 00:04:16of
- 00:04:16justifying everything that goes on in
- 00:04:18the aftermath of colonization
- 00:04:20okay or during the duration of it
- 00:04:24and the u.s tries its best to extend
- 00:04:26christian capitalism especially
- 00:04:28across the country and even beyond its
- 00:04:30shores okay especially once we get into
- 00:04:32the later part of the 19th century
- 00:04:34once the us finally reaches the other
- 00:04:37half of the country right once we
- 00:04:38actually get to the pacific ocean
- 00:04:40and have a transcontinental nation we
- 00:04:43eventually begin to expand beyond our
- 00:04:45own borders
- 00:04:47and again this becomes a form of moral
- 00:04:49justification anytime
- 00:04:51expansion tactics are employed and
- 00:04:53especially where racism is concerned
- 00:04:55remember the
- 00:04:56the race myths that go along with
- 00:04:58enlightenment era
- 00:04:59policies uh and uh stuff that goes along
- 00:05:02with biblical precedent as well is still
- 00:05:04used as justification for all this
- 00:05:06okay whether individuals agree with
- 00:05:08slavery or not
- 00:05:11and from 1841 to 1867 it's estimated
- 00:05:13that around 350 000 men women and
- 00:05:16children
- 00:05:17end up trekking overland into the
- 00:05:18pacific northwest okay this is the
- 00:05:20large-scale
- 00:05:21migration that we end up seeing during
- 00:05:23this time period
- 00:05:27and not everybody goes all the way the
- 00:05:29full distance here either they don't all
- 00:05:31settle at the end goal in the pacific
- 00:05:34northwest right
- 00:05:35several hundreds of thousands of
- 00:05:36individuals actually end up stopping
- 00:05:38along the way okay so that's why we get
- 00:05:40multiple settlements in colorado in
- 00:05:43arkansas
- 00:05:43and texas right in several other areas
- 00:05:46along the way and still some of these
- 00:05:47areas are
- 00:05:48not a part of u.s territory either okay
- 00:05:51texas in particular at this point
- 00:05:53is being controlled by mexico which has
- 00:05:56been
- 00:05:57has gained an independent status since
- 00:05:581820 okay so we'll talk about that
- 00:06:01in the second half of this uh this
- 00:06:02particular chapter
- 00:06:05by 1845 though about 5 000 people are
- 00:06:07estimated to have made the trip on an
- 00:06:09annual basis okay
- 00:06:10and these are large-scale groups okay
- 00:06:12this is not necessarily like little
- 00:06:14house on the prairie where you only see
- 00:06:16one covered wagon making the trip by
- 00:06:18itself okay
- 00:06:19usually it's the equivalent of a small
- 00:06:20town getting up
- 00:06:22packing several wagons in a row and
- 00:06:25going out on an actual wagon train
- 00:06:27okay so you might have anywhere from a
- 00:06:29dozen or more wagons
- 00:06:32and by 1848 the other big impetus for
- 00:06:34people moving west again
- 00:06:36this pairs very conveniently with
- 00:06:37economic expansion
- 00:06:39is the gold rush okay gold is discovered
- 00:06:42in california
- 00:06:43in many cases when it first is
- 00:06:45discovered too
- 00:06:46in riverbeds you could find gold the
- 00:06:48size of a softball
- 00:06:50literally lying out in the open and
- 00:06:52people could simply walk down the
- 00:06:53riverbed and pick up a small fortune
- 00:06:55along the way
- 00:06:56so this of course draws tons and tons of
- 00:06:58people out west
- 00:06:59for the promise of this okay and so in
- 00:07:021848 alone
- 00:07:04you have a migration of about 30 000
- 00:07:07people
- 00:07:07okay and this extends into 1849 along
- 00:07:10what we now call the oregon trail
- 00:07:12for those of you who are remember the
- 00:07:15the old
- 00:07:168-bit pc game from the you know from the
- 00:07:181980s and 1990s this is
- 00:07:20exactly what we're talking about here
- 00:07:22and as you know
- 00:07:24somewhat primitive as that video game
- 00:07:26seems to be to a modern audience
- 00:07:28it's actually very accurate okay all of
- 00:07:30the different uh
- 00:07:31struggles that you end up encountering
- 00:07:33uh along the way
- 00:07:34wagon wheels breaking um animals going
- 00:07:37lame people
- 00:07:38dying of dysentery and disease and all
- 00:07:40that kind of stuff it's actually very
- 00:07:42very accurate
- 00:07:44and by 1850 travel is peaking at about
- 00:07:4655 000 people in a single year okay so
- 00:07:49this is
- 00:07:50a massive amount of people who are going
- 00:07:52all at the same time okay
- 00:07:58now when it comes to the presence of
- 00:07:59native americans okay um
- 00:08:01by 1840 the estimate here is over 325
- 00:08:05000 native americans living across the
- 00:08:07great plains
- 00:08:09all into california and in the pacific
- 00:08:11northwest okay so these are tribes that
- 00:08:13have come into very brief contact
- 00:08:16perhaps with white settlers
- 00:08:17but not quite as often as we see in the
- 00:08:20later part of the 19th century
- 00:08:23and this is more than 200 nations in
- 00:08:25particular okay
- 00:08:26so it's not just two or three uh small
- 00:08:29tribes of natives now these are
- 00:08:31several hundreds of um various cultures
- 00:08:35with their own languages their own
- 00:08:36religions their own system of governance
- 00:08:39and their own um methods for actually
- 00:08:42talking to whites okay in some cases
- 00:08:45they end up actually
- 00:08:46going to war with anybody who comes into
- 00:08:48their territory
- 00:08:50and some people actually end up you know
- 00:08:51gaining um you know beneficial trade
- 00:08:53from one another okay
- 00:08:55but there are no actual uh literal lines
- 00:08:58drawn in the sand here so no one really
- 00:09:00knows
- 00:09:01whose territory they're going into and
- 00:09:03whether these tribes are going to be
- 00:09:04friendly or not
- 00:09:07and the plains indians in particular
- 00:09:08during this time period include the
- 00:09:10arapaho
- 00:09:11the blackfoot the cheyenne the kiowa and
- 00:09:13the sioux
- 00:09:14okay the sioux nation is the one that
- 00:09:16comes into the most
- 00:09:17conflict with the federal government
- 00:09:19especially once we get into the period
- 00:09:20known as the indian wars
- 00:09:22this occurs in the about the 15 years or
- 00:09:25so after
- 00:09:26the civil war comes to an end and some
- 00:09:29of them are farmers and some are nomadic
- 00:09:31hunters okay this is still in the time
- 00:09:33period where
- 00:09:34native americans have just begun to use
- 00:09:36horses probably for the
- 00:09:38last oh maybe 100 years or so okay so
- 00:09:41now they're actually
- 00:09:42their culture has changed and they're
- 00:09:44using horses
- 00:09:45to go on raids to hunt buffalo
- 00:09:48and they're pretty formidable right not
- 00:09:50everybody who goes out west has more
- 00:09:52than maybe one or two horses
- 00:09:53in their possession and the pueblo
- 00:09:57nations in the southwest
- 00:09:58uh include the akoma the hopi the laguna
- 00:10:01the taos the zia and the
- 00:10:03these are groups that are actually
- 00:10:06farmers living in adobe villages out in
- 00:10:08the desert
- 00:10:10um and they tend to be rivals with the
- 00:10:12apache and the novel
- 00:10:13right and the apache and the navajo are
- 00:10:14both much more war like
- 00:10:16uh nomadic hunters okay they actually
- 00:10:19get into
- 00:10:20um they they use guerrilla warfare they
- 00:10:22get into pretty brutal conflicts with
- 00:10:24others
- 00:10:24along the way okay and most of the
- 00:10:26pueblo nations tend to be rather
- 00:10:28peaceful for the most part
- 00:10:31um and the apache and the navajo also
- 00:10:32have to deal with their own rivals the
- 00:10:34comanche okay and the comanche nation at
- 00:10:36this point
- 00:10:37is arguably the most powerful native
- 00:10:39tribe in the southwest
- 00:10:41okay it's certainly the most wealthy
- 00:10:43because of the presence of horses okay
- 00:10:45the comanche control
- 00:10:47easily 75 of all of the um
- 00:10:50the horses living in the southwest
- 00:10:54and the great basin indians which are
- 00:10:56around the the colorado and utah area
- 00:10:58include the paiutes and go shoots
- 00:11:00okay and these individuals don't really
- 00:11:03do quite as well because we have a lot
- 00:11:05more
- 00:11:06um settlers who are actually beginning
- 00:11:09to settle in these areas along the way
- 00:11:11in the great basin okay so they end up
- 00:11:13coming into more and more conflict
- 00:11:15uh with the um with the whites who are
- 00:11:18uh there okay so the whites and the
- 00:11:20natives
- 00:11:20in colorado and utah uh all the way into
- 00:11:23california in some cases
- 00:11:25end up not necessarily getting along and
- 00:11:28there's a very small contingency that
- 00:11:29still remains
- 00:11:31uh in certain reservation areas even
- 00:11:33today
- 00:11:35and most of the great basin hunter
- 00:11:37groups are actually hunter gatherers
- 00:11:39okay so
- 00:11:40um again they they don't always try to
- 00:11:43settle down and actually plant farms or
- 00:11:45anything like that
- 00:11:46because if nothing else there's so much
- 00:11:47wild game in colorado at this point
- 00:11:49and in that particular region okay up in
- 00:11:52the mountains
- 00:11:53it's it's very difficult to find of
- 00:11:54course a flat
- 00:11:56space where you can actually farm
- 00:11:58anything and of course it gets very cold
- 00:12:00up there quickly so the planting season
- 00:12:02has to be extremely short
- 00:12:05and of course we also have the pacific
- 00:12:06northwest tribes okay the nisqually the
- 00:12:08spokane
- 00:12:09yakama chinook klamath and venez pierce
- 00:12:12okay and these groups are specifically
- 00:12:15hunters okay they have been
- 00:12:16for hundreds and hundreds of years by
- 00:12:18this point and they utilize the natural
- 00:12:20resources and climate
- 00:12:22uh to their own benefit okay they they
- 00:12:24tend to do a lot of fishing
- 00:12:26whale and sea hunting uh uh and of
- 00:12:28course they still have
- 00:12:29uh the the entire pacific northwest
- 00:12:32forest right at the grass okay so they
- 00:12:34do a lot of woodworking
- 00:12:35uh they use uh the wood to build boats
- 00:12:38they use it to construct totem poles
- 00:12:40and they have a very distinctive culture
- 00:12:42from the others
- 00:12:47now when it comes to mexico here um it's
- 00:12:50estimated at this point and it's
- 00:12:51arguably so
- 00:12:52the whites are just as prejudiced
- 00:12:54against hispanics as they are toward
- 00:12:56native americans
- 00:12:57okay they view them as being um
- 00:12:59culturally inferior
- 00:13:01rather than being intellectually
- 00:13:02inferior okay
- 00:13:04um because the the hispanics have
- 00:13:07struggled quite a bit
- 00:13:08in this case for um a couple of
- 00:13:10centuries by now
- 00:13:11under spanish rule okay and most of the
- 00:13:13hispanics living in the territory
- 00:13:16of what eventually becomes mexico during
- 00:13:18this time period are actually the
- 00:13:19descendants
- 00:13:20of the mestizos right if you recall from
- 00:13:22a few chapters
- 00:13:24back right the mestizos were the group
- 00:13:26that were um
- 00:13:27native uh you know native tribes people
- 00:13:30who uh intermarried with the spanish and
- 00:13:33then had mixed ethnicity
- 00:13:35descendants okay and so these groups
- 00:13:37have
- 00:13:38you know constantly intermarried with
- 00:13:39one another down the line
- 00:13:41and so they're they're still removed in
- 00:13:43many cases from
- 00:13:44native tribes and they also feel
- 00:13:46alienated from spanish culture
- 00:13:48as well and spanish
- 00:13:51colonization tends to be less successful
- 00:13:53in places like arizona and in texas
- 00:13:55than it does in florida and new mexico
- 00:13:57for some reason okay
- 00:13:59in texas partly because of the presence
- 00:14:01of the comanche in the command she
- 00:14:02actually
- 00:14:03uh run most of the territory all
- 00:14:05throughout central texas
- 00:14:07up into north texas and even parts of
- 00:14:09the panhandle
- 00:14:11and the yuma the apache and the comanche
- 00:14:13in particular
- 00:14:15prevent the establishment of spanish
- 00:14:17missions okay they're actually fully
- 00:14:18against any more
- 00:14:20spanish encroachment in this regard and
- 00:14:23by 1807 the french forces under napoleon
- 00:14:25end up
- 00:14:26occupying spain and they imprisoned the
- 00:14:28king okay so this is what actually
- 00:14:30leads to the spanish colony suddenly
- 00:14:32being thrown into a state of confusion
- 00:14:34okay and why all these areas that
- 00:14:37end up eventually becoming mexico fall
- 00:14:40back into independent status
- 00:14:43now in one particular individual here
- 00:14:45miguel dalgody castilla
- 00:14:46is a creole priest who convinces the
- 00:14:49indians and the hispanics
- 00:14:51to work together and actually revolt
- 00:14:53against spanish rule in mexico okay
- 00:14:55and in this first iteration it actually
- 00:14:58ends up failing okay it's a little bit
- 00:14:59too early for this to end up happening
- 00:15:02but fast forward 13 years and a second
- 00:15:05resistance
- 00:15:06actually ends up rising and this
- 00:15:08actually causes the spanish officials to
- 00:15:10completely flee mexico by 1821
- 00:15:12okay and this is the year that mexico
- 00:15:14gains independent status
- 00:15:17now of course when the americans see
- 00:15:19this happening right they know that
- 00:15:21um spain has left the region finally uh
- 00:15:24this kind of goes along with what we
- 00:15:25talked about previously with the monroe
- 00:15:27doctrine right
- 00:15:28where they know if spain tries to
- 00:15:29intervene and retake mexico
- 00:15:31then the united states is obligated to
- 00:15:34step in okay
- 00:15:35and americans look at this too and think
- 00:15:37well if this region is in a weakened
- 00:15:39state right now if it doesn't really
- 00:15:41have a very effective government
- 00:15:43um this could be a possible opportunity
- 00:15:45for us to see some of the northern
- 00:15:47provinces of it right
- 00:15:48namely the areas that become the
- 00:15:50southwest states of the united states
- 00:15:52eventually
- 00:15:53texas new mexico arizona nevada
- 00:15:56california and even parts of oklahoma
- 00:15:59colorado kansas and wyoming
- 00:16:02and so now we get a mass wave of
- 00:16:05american settlers flooding into these
- 00:16:07regions
- 00:16:08to try to corner the market on the fur
- 00:16:11trade
- 00:16:11try to establish american presence there
- 00:16:13and gradually
- 00:16:15in some cases very forcefully edge the
- 00:16:17competition
- 00:16:21now when it comes to the oregon trail
- 00:16:23which we mentioned briefly earlier
- 00:16:25um by the early 19th centuries the far
- 00:16:27northwest territories are divided into
- 00:16:29three distinct
- 00:16:30territories okay and these territories
- 00:16:32haven't gained statehood status yet
- 00:16:34because there's not that many white
- 00:16:36settlers there
- 00:16:36yet okay so we have the nebraska
- 00:16:38territory the washington territory and
- 00:16:41the oregon territory
- 00:16:43and the oregon country includes
- 00:16:44modern-day oregon idaho
- 00:16:47and washington parts of montana wyoming
- 00:16:50and british columbia as well
- 00:16:53um in the convention of 1818 great
- 00:16:55britain and the united states agreed to
- 00:16:57uh engage in joint occupation of this
- 00:16:59region okay so it's still a contested
- 00:17:01region
- 00:17:02to a certain regard and from the 1820s
- 00:17:06to 30s
- 00:17:07the us gradually sends mountain men
- 00:17:10into these regions right and these
- 00:17:11individuals completely abandoned
- 00:17:13civilization altogether
- 00:17:15they exist very primitively in the
- 00:17:17wilderness they build long cabins with
- 00:17:19their own hands
- 00:17:20and they get involved in the fur trade
- 00:17:22okay and again this is to try to
- 00:17:24establish
- 00:17:25an american presence without being
- 00:17:26directly tied
- 00:17:28as a government agent of some kind
- 00:17:31and oregon in particular becomes a
- 00:17:32target for settlement because of all the
- 00:17:34fertile soil
- 00:17:35the heavy rainfall and of course like we
- 00:17:37said before it has plenty of forest
- 00:17:39region in 1840 we have several
- 00:17:43immigrants who go along the oregon trail
- 00:17:45beginning in st
- 00:17:46louis and eventually ending uh again in
- 00:17:49the
- 00:17:50the uh on in the pacific ocean
- 00:17:53and if you ever play the computer game
- 00:17:55you begin in st louis
- 00:17:57and take the exact same trail
- 00:18:00from 1841 to 42 the first wagon train
- 00:18:02begins its own journey
- 00:18:04okay and mass migration is of course
- 00:18:07underway by 1843.
- 00:18:10and again these wagon trains are
- 00:18:12typically again they're they're small
- 00:18:13communities they're several miles long
- 00:18:16uh they involve families in some cases
- 00:18:18they even involve church congregations
- 00:18:20okay so
- 00:18:20similar to what we've seen uh with the
- 00:18:22mormon church
- 00:18:23uh kind of packing up and leaving on
- 00:18:25mass during this time period okay
- 00:18:27kind of falls in in line with that same
- 00:18:29time period and the same goals
- 00:18:32and sometimes these are nicknamed
- 00:18:34prairie schooners because
- 00:18:36um again the prairie itself seems like
- 00:18:38an endless sea of grass if you ever get
- 00:18:40out in the
- 00:18:41wide open flat areas of the country at
- 00:18:43this time where you won't see
- 00:18:45another human being for several days or
- 00:18:47even weeks
- 00:18:48and so the um the wagons themselves with
- 00:18:51the you know the white tarp over the top
- 00:18:53right the canvas material
- 00:18:54looks like a ship almost sailing on the
- 00:18:57sea of grass
- 00:19:00and the the common image of native
- 00:19:02americans attacking these wagon trains
- 00:19:05is actually very much um a stereotypical
- 00:19:09falsehood okay it's usually the exact
- 00:19:11opposite
- 00:19:12okay um typically people who go out west
- 00:19:16uh in in these wagon trains tend to
- 00:19:19actually
- 00:19:20misunderstand just how long they will go
- 00:19:23without finding any kind of natural
- 00:19:25resources
- 00:19:26food etc okay and so when desperation
- 00:19:29kicks in if they've been out
- 00:19:31in the prairie for several days or weeks
- 00:19:33without water
- 00:19:34without a water source food source a
- 00:19:37fuel
- 00:19:38source to burn fire or anything like
- 00:19:40that
- 00:19:41they might end up attacking just about
- 00:19:42anybody who comes by right including
- 00:19:44native americans
- 00:19:45okay so typically it's actually um the
- 00:19:48people in the covered wagons attacking
- 00:19:50the natives
- 00:19:51rather than the other way around and the
- 00:19:54track itself is usually
- 00:19:56about a six month journey okay so it
- 00:19:59takes a lot of
- 00:20:00organization a lot of planning to make
- 00:20:03sure that you know where you're going
- 00:20:05and you know what you're doing
- 00:20:09now there's plenty of difficulties along
- 00:20:11the way
- 00:20:13if nothing else disease itself probably
- 00:20:16kills more than anything else okay
- 00:20:19primarily cholera and one in one case
- 00:20:22because we have
- 00:20:22uh cholera typically lives in water that
- 00:20:25has gone stagnant
- 00:20:26okay so if you have a barrel full of
- 00:20:28water for example
- 00:20:30um and it stays that way too long if
- 00:20:32insects get in it
- 00:20:34if you have a rat that gets in it browns
- 00:20:36for example if it becomes tainted
- 00:20:38somehow
- 00:20:39okay it becomes very easy to contract
- 00:20:42cholera
- 00:20:42and cholera gradually causes you to
- 00:20:44become more and more dehydrated over
- 00:20:46time okay your skin becomes
- 00:20:48pale and very doughy and it doesn't have
- 00:20:51the
- 00:20:51elasticity to it anymore okay and
- 00:20:53eventually
- 00:20:54you die of what essentially amounts to
- 00:20:56dehydration
- 00:20:58and dysentery is the exact same thing in
- 00:21:00terms of dehydration
- 00:21:02okay except dysentery ends up attacking
- 00:21:04your gastrointestinal system okay
- 00:21:06and you essentially end up with diarrhea
- 00:21:08until you expire
- 00:21:10okay that's a very horrible way to go
- 00:21:13and again
- 00:21:13water sources along the way are
- 00:21:16typically few and far between okay and
- 00:21:18if you do happen to find a pond of some
- 00:21:20kind
- 00:21:21there's a good chance that the water has
- 00:21:22been sitting there out in the sun for a
- 00:21:24while
- 00:21:25and it has probably gone stagnant and
- 00:21:27contains disease of some kind okay so
- 00:21:29you have to plan
- 00:21:30very very carefully and know exactly
- 00:21:32what to carry
- 00:21:33and how much and the most startling
- 00:21:37statistic i've ever come across with
- 00:21:38this is it's estimated that along the
- 00:21:40oregon trail there's about one grave
- 00:21:42every 80 yards there's that many people
- 00:21:45who died along the way simply from
- 00:21:48disease if nothing else
- 00:21:51and people attempt to their credit here
- 00:21:54right to a certain extent to try to
- 00:21:56get the same division of labor employed
- 00:21:59in the east
- 00:22:00out west okay so they try to transplant
- 00:22:02the exact same social dynamics as much
- 00:22:04as they can
- 00:22:05but they realize along the way very
- 00:22:06quickly that it's almost impossible to
- 00:22:08do that
- 00:22:10the women try to cook wash sow and
- 00:22:12monitor the children right be filler
- 00:22:14kind of involved in this cult of
- 00:22:15domesticity even though there is not
- 00:22:17really
- 00:22:18a domicile to do it in and the men tend
- 00:22:21to do most of the manual labor right
- 00:22:23driving wagons
- 00:22:24tending the livestock lifting things uh
- 00:22:27hunting when necessary and eventually it
- 00:22:30becomes a major
- 00:22:32realization and a wake-up call that it's
- 00:22:34almost impossible to continue this type
- 00:22:36of labor division okay that
- 00:22:38everybody has to pitch in and do the
- 00:22:40exact same thing in order for everyone
- 00:22:42to survive
- 00:22:43okay so women end up gathering buffalo
- 00:22:45dung for fuel because
- 00:22:47there's very few trees right there's
- 00:22:48almost nothing to burn
- 00:22:50okay for fuel they have to help drive
- 00:22:52wagons
- 00:22:53uh help pull wagon wheels out of the mud
- 00:22:56construct makeshift bridges to get
- 00:22:58across a river if
- 00:23:00possible pitch tents right they have to
- 00:23:02start engaging in a lot of the actual
- 00:23:03manual labor that men do
- 00:23:05okay and the the women who come from the
- 00:23:07south who are part of
- 00:23:09um kind of this uh small farmer
- 00:23:11contingency might have already been
- 00:23:13somewhat familiar with this right if
- 00:23:15everyone in the family
- 00:23:16has been working together on the farm
- 00:23:19from a young age
- 00:23:20then it typically goes a little bit
- 00:23:21smoother okay but if they're not used to
- 00:23:24this type of labor
- 00:23:25there's enough of a pushback where it
- 00:23:26ends up causing problems
- 00:23:29and naturally family relations become
- 00:23:31heavily strained over time too
- 00:23:33okay if the only people you're seeing
- 00:23:35for six months
- 00:23:36is your own family or your own community
- 00:23:39you get very tired of them quickly
- 00:23:40okay and unsurprisingly divorce rates
- 00:23:43end up soaring
- 00:23:44once people actually do reach the west
- 00:23:49now the most infamous example of what
- 00:23:52not to do when it comes to going out
- 00:23:54west during this period
- 00:23:55concerns a group known as the donner
- 00:23:57party okay
- 00:23:59now in 1846 in april a man named george
- 00:24:02donner leads his family including
- 00:24:0474 other settlers and 23 wagons on the
- 00:24:07oregon trail
- 00:24:08okay and he makes several mistakes along
- 00:24:11the way here
- 00:24:11okay again this acts as a perfect
- 00:24:13template of how not to do this
- 00:24:16for one thing he starts very very late
- 00:24:18in the year okay starting in april
- 00:24:20okay you have six months to get there
- 00:24:22and by the time that you
- 00:24:24reach the last leg of your journey right
- 00:24:26winter is already beginning to settle in
- 00:24:30you he ends up overloading the wagons
- 00:24:31they carry way too much
- 00:24:33okay and the wagons are strained the
- 00:24:35wheels break the animals get lame
- 00:24:37along the way and the stuff that they do
- 00:24:40bring is not stuff
- 00:24:41they need okay so they don't bring the
- 00:24:42right kind of food they don't bring
- 00:24:44enough water
- 00:24:45uh they don't bring enough winter
- 00:24:46clothing and again they don't have
- 00:24:47anybody who's extremely experienced
- 00:24:51and so the donors actually get end up
- 00:24:53getting end up getting lost in the
- 00:24:54wasatch range
- 00:24:56and lose three weeks of progress right
- 00:24:58this is the the first
- 00:24:59major misstep okay by september snow
- 00:25:03actually begins to fall
- 00:25:05and eventually they descend into the
- 00:25:07desert of the great salt lake
- 00:25:08but they end up losing over a hundred
- 00:25:10oxen and wagons in the process okay so
- 00:25:12this is another
- 00:25:14major pitfall here and if they had
- 00:25:16decided to stay there and not continue
- 00:25:19then things might have gone a little bit
- 00:25:20better okay
- 00:25:22unfortunately they do continue though
- 00:25:24and they get trapped by a two week long
- 00:25:26blizzard in the truckee pass in eastern
- 00:25:28california
- 00:25:29okay and by the end of december there's
- 00:25:31only enough food to last through the end
- 00:25:32of the month
- 00:25:33okay half of the pioneers in this
- 00:25:35particular party by the way are children
- 00:25:3817 of the strongest individuals of the
- 00:25:41group end up continuing
- 00:25:42and agree that they're going to send a
- 00:25:44search party to come back and help
- 00:25:45everyone
- 00:25:46two of them turn back and eight of them
- 00:25:48end up dying of starvation
- 00:25:52now things take a very brutal turn here
- 00:25:54because one settler named billy graves
- 00:25:56urges his daughters to eat his body
- 00:25:58after his death okay because he's
- 00:25:59already uh either sick or injured i
- 00:26:02forget which
- 00:26:02and knows that his days are numbered two
- 00:26:05more settlers end up being cannibalized
- 00:26:07after they die
- 00:26:08and out of the 17 who end up continuing
- 00:26:11on only seven of them end up surviving
- 00:26:14okay and these are the survivors who
- 00:26:16have committed cannibalism who actually
- 00:26:18end up going all the way and then
- 00:26:21having to relate their story and send
- 00:26:23other people back to help
- 00:26:26now when the search party finally does
- 00:26:29manage to
- 00:26:29get back okay they discovered that all
- 00:26:31the livestock has been slaughtered
- 00:26:33okay two indian guides have been killed
- 00:26:35and cannibalized along the way
- 00:26:37and when the rescue team does finally
- 00:26:39arrive at the original encampment
- 00:26:41two months later um 47 members of the
- 00:26:44donner party the 47 who remain
- 00:26:46kill and eat 13 people total
- 00:26:50so this is an extremely uh horrific
- 00:26:52example
- 00:26:53of desperation okay and what can
- 00:26:56actually happen
- 00:26:57um and there are actually eyewitness
- 00:26:59accounts of what people
- 00:27:00um the you know the the people the
- 00:27:02members of the search party who actually
- 00:27:04discovered the cabins
- 00:27:06young children who have actually
- 00:27:07consumed parts of their parents
- 00:27:09of some really really nightmarish
- 00:27:12instances here so there's plenty that
- 00:27:13you can read about this
- 00:27:15out there on the internet if you if you
- 00:27:17have a strong stomach but it's a
- 00:27:18it's a very very horrific episode
- 00:27:21and george donner and his wife elect
- 00:27:23that they are going to stay behind and
- 00:27:24die right he feels like he has
- 00:27:26completely failed his party
- 00:27:27and this seems to be the only way that
- 00:27:29he can really save face
- 00:27:35next thing we'll talk about quickly here
- 00:27:36is the settlement of california which
- 00:27:38again is becoming more and more
- 00:27:40of a goal for people over time
- 00:27:42especially once we get into the middle
- 00:27:43part of the 19th century in 1769 spain
- 00:27:47decides it's going to settle the pacific
- 00:27:49coast to try to prevent
- 00:27:50russia from gaining more territory and
- 00:27:52because russia has a little bit
- 00:27:54of territory along the uh the upper
- 00:27:56regions near
- 00:27:57oregon uh into washington and even parts
- 00:28:00of alaska okay alaska doesn't actually
- 00:28:02become
- 00:28:03a state until we get into the 1950s
- 00:28:07now we talked about presidios already
- 00:28:09right these are um you know
- 00:28:11spanish government uh installations that
- 00:28:13are typically military forts of some
- 00:28:15kind right these are constructed at san
- 00:28:16diego and at monterey
- 00:28:18and if you go to san diego in particular
- 00:28:20today you can still see some of the
- 00:28:22remnants of one of these
- 00:28:24um the franciscan friars who end up
- 00:28:26settling the region are led by junipero
- 00:28:28serra who you see here
- 00:28:30and they establish a catholic mission
- 00:28:31there in san diego you can actually find
- 00:28:33a large statue of him there
- 00:28:35on the uh the coast there by the
- 00:28:37lighthouse
- 00:28:39and the california missions tend to be
- 00:28:41much larger they're better funded
- 00:28:43and they last a lot longer okay again
- 00:28:45they're not as neglected as the ones out
- 00:28:47in the desert
- 00:28:49and the spanish catholic missions in
- 00:28:50california end up controlling the large
- 00:28:53portion of the indians who are living
- 00:28:55along the pacific coast okay so there's
- 00:28:57not very much freedom for native tribes
- 00:28:59living in the region
- 00:29:00they tend to fall under the auspices of
- 00:29:02spain
- 00:29:04and they're very complex these missions
- 00:29:06okay they contain churches
- 00:29:08villages fortresses which you've already
- 00:29:10talked about
- 00:29:11uh individual homes and schools shops
- 00:29:14farms and even spanish outposts uh you
- 00:29:17know out in the
- 00:29:19the more remote regions okay so these
- 00:29:21are much more well developed than what
- 00:29:22we've seen in places like new mexico
- 00:29:26and still the same precedent remains
- 00:29:28that native americans provide most of
- 00:29:30the labor
- 00:29:30okay um and the franciscan friars tend
- 00:29:33to be a little bit more brutal when it
- 00:29:34comes to
- 00:29:35um well i take that back the franciscans
- 00:29:38are not as
- 00:29:40overbearing as the dominican friars are
- 00:29:42the dominicans are the ones who tend to
- 00:29:44be a little bit more brutal in their
- 00:29:45treatment of the natives
- 00:29:46franciscans believe that this is
- 00:29:48something morally enriching okay that
- 00:29:50this is
- 00:29:50uh that you know toiling out in the heat
- 00:29:52is going to help
- 00:29:54save the souls of these individuals okay
- 00:29:57they're misguided at best
- 00:30:00um and the typical daily routine is
- 00:30:03individuals rise every morning before
- 00:30:05dark they enter into prayer until the
- 00:30:07sun rises
- 00:30:08and then they go and work out in the
- 00:30:10fields until dusk
- 00:30:13and the men again tend to work in fields
- 00:30:15sometimes in specialized skill sets at
- 00:30:17their facilities for it
- 00:30:19they become blacksmiths carpenters
- 00:30:21leather workers etc
- 00:30:23and again the women are still
- 00:30:24pigeonholed into this kind of domestic
- 00:30:26sphere right they tend to handle
- 00:30:28washing you know being a laundress a
- 00:30:30seamstress that sort of thing
- 00:30:33and everyone is expected to work in the
- 00:30:35fields during the harvest season so
- 00:30:37this sounds very very similar to what
- 00:30:39you would hear in
- 00:30:40in a plantation situation in the south
- 00:30:44and the indians are paid with food with
- 00:30:46a little bit of clothing
- 00:30:48housing and again religious instruction
- 00:30:50whether they want it or not
- 00:30:54and the numbers that live out west
- 00:30:57during this period
- 00:30:58end up dropping considerably over time
- 00:31:00in large part because of
- 00:31:01disease but also in part because of
- 00:31:03abuse okay physical
- 00:31:05sexual etc uh so we from 1769 until 1821
- 00:31:10the native population
- 00:31:11drops from 72 000 to roughly 18 000 okay
- 00:31:14so this is a
- 00:31:15dramatic drop in numbers
- 00:31:19and once the mexican independence end up
- 00:31:21occurring right most of the spanish
- 00:31:23officials
- 00:31:24end up playing the country the money
- 00:31:26dries up and the missions end up falling
- 00:31:27into disuse
- 00:31:28okay and so now um the individuals who
- 00:31:32end up taking over
- 00:31:34are individuals known as caballeros or
- 00:31:36rancheros okay and they end up lording
- 00:31:38over
- 00:31:38um the six thousand odd mexicans who
- 00:31:41still live in the regions
- 00:31:42as well as the indians themselves who
- 00:31:44end up surviving okay so it's a
- 00:31:47uh it's kind of a martial law type
- 00:31:49situation right where these
- 00:31:50um these individuals end up taking over
- 00:31:53the missions
- 00:31:54and kind of reintroducing the feudal
- 00:31:56system to a certain regard
- 00:31:59and so over the course of the next 20 or
- 00:32:01so years um the californios
- 00:32:03who are the is the name given to the
- 00:32:05hispanics living in the region
- 00:32:07end up launching 10 different revolts
- 00:32:09against the mexican governors
- 00:32:10trying to push them out of the region
- 00:32:15the last individual we'll talk about in
- 00:32:17this first half here is an individual
- 00:32:18named
- 00:32:19john charles fremont okay in the 1840s
- 00:32:22he is the one who begins to champion the
- 00:32:25settlement and exploration of mexican
- 00:32:26california okay
- 00:32:28and again he is an american okay so he
- 00:32:30is the
- 00:32:31one of the first ones to say you know if
- 00:32:34california really
- 00:32:35has uh all this to offer right this is
- 00:32:37still in the period
- 00:32:38right before the gold rush occurs if we
- 00:32:41can take control of this region right
- 00:32:43then it would give us an actual anchor
- 00:32:44point uh between the east coast and the
- 00:32:46west coast
- 00:32:481838 he's commissioned as a second
- 00:32:50lieutenant in the u.s topographical
- 00:32:52corps these are individuals who actually
- 00:32:54are map makers
- 00:32:55so he is tasked with actually going out
- 00:32:58west
- 00:32:58and mapping the region okay and he's a
- 00:33:01very
- 00:33:02um excellent uh frontiersman okay he's a
- 00:33:04map maker a surveyor
- 00:33:07he knows woodcraft which means he knows
- 00:33:08how to track animals
- 00:33:10he knows how to you know build his own
- 00:33:12campfires uh you know you know he knows
- 00:33:14how to take care of himself in the
- 00:33:15wilderness okay
- 00:33:17and he's also very gifted when it comes
- 00:33:18to zoology geology botany
- 00:33:21ornithology the study of birds right so
- 00:33:23he's uh he's a naturalist
- 00:33:25in many ways and by 1842
- 00:33:29he sets out to map the oregon trail in
- 00:33:31five months and collects specimens along
- 00:33:33the way so he's kind of like a one man
- 00:33:35lewis and clark
- 00:33:37and his expeditions end up being
- 00:33:38published in these little excerpts kind
- 00:33:40of like lewis and clark's do
- 00:33:41uh in several national newspapers and he
- 00:33:43gets a lot of
- 00:33:44um publicity for this right he becomes
- 00:33:46kind of a national celebrity okay
- 00:33:48and he's given the nickname the
- 00:33:49pathfinder for his exploits
- 00:33:53now in august of 1845 he launches a
- 00:33:55quote-unquote military expedition
- 00:33:57okay he takes 62 armed men right
- 00:34:00soldiers
- 00:34:01sailors a few scientists frontiersmen
- 00:34:04and hunters
- 00:34:04to go along with him okay they head
- 00:34:07south of the
- 00:34:08sierra nevada mountains in december and
- 00:34:10into mexican controlled california
- 00:34:13and in january he's instructed by the
- 00:34:15president at the time
- 00:34:17to encourage this spontaneous uprising
- 00:34:20to take control of california okay so
- 00:34:22he's trying to launch some kind of a
- 00:34:24mutiny among the americans who live
- 00:34:25there
- 00:34:26to take control of the state
- 00:34:29and fremont ends up leaving the province
- 00:34:31under orders from mexico to do so okay
- 00:34:34he resigns from the army and decides to
- 00:34:36go into business as a private citizen
- 00:34:38for himself
- 00:34:40so this is something that he very
- 00:34:41narrowly escapes being arrested
- 00:34:43and potentially executed for
- 00:34:48in june of 1846 americans managed to
- 00:34:50capture sonoma
- 00:34:51and proclaim the republic of california
- 00:34:53for the first time
- 00:34:55so from this point on now we'll start to
- 00:34:57look a little bit more
- 00:34:58at the advent of the mexican-american
- 00:35:00war see you guys next time
- Westward Expansion
- Manifest Destiny
- Donner Party
- Oregon Trail
- Native American Tribes
- Mexican Territories
- 19th Century America
- California Gold Rush
- John C. Fremont
- Economic Opportunities