 
Traditions and Encounters, 4th Edition (Bentley)Chapter 31:
THE AMERICAS IN THE AGE OF INDEPENDENCEChapter Outline- The building of American states
- The United States: westward expansion and civil war
- By 1820s all adult white men could vote and hold office
- Rapid westward expansion after the revolution
- Britain ceded all lands east of the Mississippi River to United States after the revolution
- 1803, United States purchased France's Louisiana Territory, west to the Rocky Mountains
- By 1840s, coast-to-coast expansion was claimed as the manifest destiny of the United States
- Conflict with indigenous peoples followed westward expansion
- 1830, Indian Removal Act forced eastern natives to move west of the Mississippi
- Thousands died on the "Trail of Tears" to Oklahoma
- Stiff resistance to expansion: Battle of Little Big Horn, 1876, Sioux victory
- U.S. massacre at Wounded Knee, 1890, ended Indian Wars
- The Mexican-American War, 1845-1848
- Texas declared independence from Mexico in 1836, was annexed by United States in 1845
- U.S.-Mexican conflict over the border ended with resounding U.S. victory
- By Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, United States purchased Texas, California, New Mexico
- Sectional conflict: north versus south over slavery
- Nineteenth-century cotton cultivation in the south was dependent on slave labor
- Northern states did not want slavery expanded into new territories
- Abraham Lincoln elected president, 1860; publicly opposed to slavery
- The U.S. Civil War, 1861-1865
- With Lincoln's election, eleven southern states seceded from the Union
- Southerners believed their economy of cotton and slaves was self-sufficient
- Northerners fought to preserve the Union as much as in opposition to slavery
- In 1863, Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation made abolition a goal of the war
- By 1865, the industrial north defeated the agricultural south
- The war ended slavery, enhanced authority of the federal government
- The Canadian Dominion: independence without war
- Autonomy and division characterized Canadian history
- French Quebec taken by Britain after the Seven Years' War
- British authorities made large concessions to French Canadians
- After 1781, many British loyalists fled United States to seek refuge in Canada
- The War of 1812 unified Canada against U.S. invaders
- Anti-U.S. sentiments created sense of unity among French and British Canadians
- 1830s, tensions between French citizens and growing English population
- 1840-1867, British authorities granted home rule to Canadians
- Dominion of Canada created in 1867
- A federal government with a governor-general acting as the British representative
- Britain retained jurisdiction over foreign affairs until 1931
- Prime Minister John Macdonald strengthened Canadian independence and unity
- Persuaded western and maritime provinces to join the Dominion, 1860s
- Transcontinental railroad completed, 1885
- Latin America: fragmentation and political experimentation
- Creole elites faced political instability after independence
- Creole leaders had little experience with self-government
- White minority dominated politics; peasant majority was without power
- Political instability aggravated by division among elites
- Conflicts between farmers and ranchers and indigenous peoples common
- Intense fighting in Argentina and Chile; modern weapons against native peoples
- Colonists had pacified most productive land by 1870s
- Caudillos: military leaders who held power after revolutionary era
- Juan Manuel de Rosas dominated Argentina from 1835-1852
- Took advantage of chaotic times; brought order to Argentina
- Used personal army to crush opposition; opposed liberal reforms
- Mexico: war and reform from 1821-1911
- Shifted from monarchy to republic to caudillo rule
- La Reforma: liberal movement in 1850s led by President Benito Juarez
- Granted universal male suffrage; limited power of priests and military
- Reforms strongly opposed by landowning elites
- Mexico: revolution (1911-1920)
- Fundamentally a class conflict: 95 percent of people were landless and impoverished
- Middle class joined with peasants and workers to overthrow the dictator Diaz
- Emiliano Zapata and Pancho Villa led popular uprisings in countryside
- With U.S. support, Mexican government regained control
- New constitution of 1917 brought sweeping reform
- American economic development
- Migration to the Americas
- Industrial migrants to United States and Canada
- In 1850s, 2.3 million Europeans migrated to the United States, and the number increased after that
- The low cost of immigrant labor contributed to U.S. industrial expansion
- 1852-1875, two hundred thousand Chinese migrated to California to work in mines and railroads
- Latin American migrants mostly worked on agricultural plantations
- Italians migrated to Brazil and Argentina
- Asians migrated to Cuba and the Caribbean sugar fields
- Economic expansion in the United States
- British capital crucial for early development of U.S. industries
- Foreign capital supported textile, iron and steel, railroads
- Helped create an industrial rival that soon surpassed Britain
- Railroads integrated national economy by late nineteenth century
- Two hundred thousand miles of railroad in United States by 1900, coast to coast
- Economic stimulus: 75 percent of steel went to railroads, supported other industries
- Railroads changed American landscape and timetables; set time zones by 1880s
- Dramatic economic growth between 1870 and 1900
- New inventions and technologies: electric lights, telephones, and so on
- Labor conflicts over wages and working conditions: big business usually won
- Canadian prosperity
- The National Policy: plan to develop national economy
- Wanted to attract migrants and British capital but to protect Canadian industries
- Construction of Canadian Pacific Railroad opened the west to settlement
- Boom in agricultural and industrial production late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
- Heavy U.S. investment in Canada; owned 30 percent of Canadian industry by 1918
- Latin American dependence
- Colonial legacy prevented industrialization of Latin American states
- Spain and Portugal never encouraged industries
- Creole elites continued land-based economies after independence
- British didn't invest in industry in Latin America; no market for manufactured goods
- Instead invested in cattle and sheep ranching in Argentina
- Supplied British wool and beef; most of profits returned to Britain
- Some attempts at industrialization with limited success
- Diaz encouraged foreign investors to build rails, telegraphs, and mines
- Profits to Mexican oligarchy and foreign investors, not for further development
- While Mexican industry boomed, average Mexican standard of living declined
- Economic growth in Latin America driven by exports: silver, beef, bananas, coffee
- American culture and social diversity
- Multicultural society in the United States
- By late nineteenth century, United States was a multicultural society but was dominated by white elites
- Native peoples had been pushed onto reservations
- Dawes Act, 1887: encouraged natives to take up farming, often on marginal land
- Slaughter of buffalo threatened plains Indians' survival
- Children sent to boarding schools, lost native language and traditions
- Freed slaves often denied civil rights
- Northern armies forced the south to undergo Reconstruction (1867-68)
- After Reconstruction, a violent backlash overturned reforms
- South rigidly segregated; blacks denied opportunities, political rights
- American women's movement had limited success in nineteenth century
- "Declaration of Sentiments" issued by American feminists in 1848
- Sought education, employment, and political rights
- Migrants: 25 million Europeans to America from 1840-1914
- Hostile reaction to foreigners from "native-born" Americans
- Newcomers concentrated in districts like Little Italy and Chinatown
- Antagonism to Asians led to legal exclusion of Chinese and Japanese migrants
- Canadian cultural contrasts
- Ethnic diversity beyond dominant British and French populations
- Significant minority of indigenous people displaced by whites
- Blacks free after 1833 but not equal; former slaves, some escaped from United States
- Chinese migrants came to goldfields of British Columbia, worked on railroad
- Late nineteenth and early twentieth century, waves of European migrants
- Expansion into Northwest Territories increased British and French conflicts
- Northwest Rebellion by the métis, descendents of French traders and native women
- Conflict between natives, métis, and white settlers in west, 1870s and 1880s
- Louis Riel, leader of western métis and indigenous peoples
- Riel organized a government and army to protect land and trading rights
- Canadian authorities outlawed his government and exiled him, 1870s
- In 1885 Riel again led métis resistance against railroads and British settlements
- Rebels were subdued, and Riel was executed for treason
- French Canadians suspicious of British elites after Northwest Rebellion
- Ethnicity, identity, and gender in Latin America
- Latin American societies organized by ethnicity and color, legacy of colonialism
- Large-scale migration in nineteenth century brought cultural diversity
- Small number of Chinese in Cuba assimilated through intermarriage
- Larger group of East Indians in Trinidad and Tobago preserved cultural traditions
- European migrants made Buenos Aires "the Paris of the Americas"
- Gauchos: Argentine cowboys on the pampas
- Gaucho society: ethnic egalitarianism, mostly mestizos or castizos (mixed race)
- Distinctive gaucho dress, independent, celebrated in legend and song
- Caudillo rule disrupted gaucho life: impressed into armies, lands enclosed
- Male domination central feature of Latin American society in nineteenth century
- Machismo: culture of male strength, aggression
- No significant women's movement; some efforts to improve education for girls
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