2. COURSE LECTURE: WEEK #5
Today’s Lecture Covers The Following:
• Media Propaganda Discussion
• Chief Joseph “Indian Perspective”
• Homestead and Transcontinental Railroad Act
(1862)
• Dawes Act (1887)
• Turner from “The Frontier”
• Andrew Carnegie “The Gospel Of Wealth”
• Upton Sinclair “The Jungle”
3. CHIEF JOSEPH “INDIAN PERSPECTIVE” (1)
•Best known for his resistance to the U.S. Government's attempts
to force his tribe onto reservations.
•Spent much of his early childhood at a mission maintained by
Christian missionaries.
•The Nez Perce were a peaceful nation spread from Idaho to
Northern Washington. The tribe had maintained good relations with
the whites after the Lewis and Clark expedition.
•In 1855 Chief Joseph's father, Old Joseph, signed a treaty with the
U.S. that allowed his people to retain much of their traditional
lands. In 1863 another treaty was created that severely reduced
the amount of land, but Old Joseph maintained that this second
treaty was never agreed to by his people.
4. CHIEF JOSEPH “INDIAN PERSPECTIVE” (2)
•A showdown over the second "non-treaty" came after Chief
Joseph assumed his role as Chief in 1877. After months of
fighting and forced marches, many of the Nez Perce were
sent to a reservation in what is now Oklahoma, where many
died from malaria and starvation.
•Chief Joseph tried every possible appeal to the federal
authorities to return the Nez Perce to the land of their
ancestors. In 1885, he was sent along with many of his band
to a reservation in Washington where, according to the
reservation doctor, he later died of a broken heart.
5. HOMESTEAD & TRANSCONTINENTAL
RAILROAD ACT OF 1862
Industrialists looked to the Northwest Territory as a
market for manufactured goods. A protective tariff
restricted the American market to American industry
alone. The Homestead Act in 1862 opened more
land to settlers, and the Transcontinental Railroad
Act of 1862 gave the railroads incentives to link
western markets to eastern industry.
6. DAWES ACT (1887)
•The attempt to assimilate Indians into the population.
•Senator Henry L. Dawes: “Till this people will consent to
give up their lands [reservations], and divide them among
their citizens, so that each can own the land he cultivates,
they will not make much more progress.”
•Emphasis on private property as a means of citizenship. To
“civilize” the savage, eliminate cultural patterns.
Plains Indians were hunters; other tribes claimed the land
was not arable.
•Actually resulted in the reduction of Indian lands as the act
permitted sale of land to government at @$2.50/acre.
7. TURNER FROM “THE FRONTIER” (1)
•Turner’s thesis: “The existence of an area of free land, its
continuous recession, and the advance of American settlement
westward, explain American development.”
•As a type of determinism, Turner’s thesis ties geography to national
ideology/culture, defining the character of Americans and American
society: a type of “primitivism” where “[T]he wilderness masters the
colonist.” (“meeting point between savagery and civilization.”).
•American social development “continually beginning over again on
the frontier.” (“perennial rebirth,” “fluidity of American life”).
8. TURNER FROM “THE FRONTIER” (2)
•“European life entered the continent” and “America modified and
developed that life and reacted on Europe.”
•“New Product” “away from the influence of Europe, a steady
growth of independence on American lines.”
•“Composite Nationality”; “tides of continental immigration”; “mixed
race”
•Dangers of individualism out of control; relate to DeToequeville.
•What endures? The notion of going west for opportunity, ground
for new ideas? Consider that the real move was to the towns and
cities along with the expansion into free, wilderness land.
9. CARNEGIE FROM “WEALTH”
Andrew Carnegie (18351919) was a massively successful
business man - his wealth was based on the provision of iron
and steel to the railways, but also a man who recalled his
radical roots in Scotland before his immigration to the United
States. To resolve what might seem to be contradictions
between the creation of wealth, which he saw as proceeding
from immutable social laws, and social provision he came up
with the notion of the "gospel of wealth". He lived up to his
word, and gave away his fortune to socially beneficial projects,
most famously by funding libraries. His approval of death taxes
might surprise modern billionaires!
10. UPTON SINCLAIR’S “THE JUNGLE”
•Upton Sinclair was a poor reformer who sought to write the Great
American Novel.
•“The Jungle” examined the unsanitary methods of Chicago’s
meatpacking industry of Chicago. It was released in 1906.
•President Theodore Roosevelt received advanced copy. Used his
influence to push Congress to pass a law establishing the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA). Roosevelt coined the term “muckrakers”
to describe Sinclair and other reformist crusaders.
•Roosevelt’s phrase was not meant to be wholly complimentary.
•Muckrackers are journalists who expose political and commercial
corruption.