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Write to It!Some people worked to build a better life, while others worked to strike it rich in the gold fields.. Photo locators denoted as follows: Top T, Center C, Bottom B, Left L, Ri

Trang 1

Scott Foresman Social Studies

Nonfi ction Compare

and Contrast

• Sidebars

• Captions

• Song

ISBN 0-328-14899-7

ì<(sk$m)=beijji< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

The Golden Dream

Following

by Cynthia Clampitt

Fascinating Facts

before widespread mining stopped

(1851), British Columbia (1858), Nevada (1859–60),

Colorado (1850s and 1890s), South Dakota (1876–78),

and South Africa (1886)

is real The original touchstone was a black stone that,

when rubbed with a piece of gold, showed if the gold

was pure

Scott Foresman Social Studies

Nonfi ction Compare

and Contrast

• Sidebars

• Captions

• Song

ISBN 0-328-14899-7

ì<(sk$m)=beijji< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

The Golden Dream

Following

by Cynthia Clampitt

Fascinating Facts

before widespread mining stopped

(1851), British Columbia (1858), Nevada (1859–60),

Colorado (1850s and 1890s), South Dakota (1876–78),

and South Africa (1886)

is real The original touchstone was a black stone that,

when rubbed with a piece of gold, showed if the gold

was pure

Trang 2

Write to It!

Some people worked to build a better life, while others worked to strike it rich in the gold fields What are some ways people try to “get rich quick” today? Write two or more paragraphs describing how “get rich quick” ideas are risky, unreliable, and sometimes dangerous, and why working to improve one’s life is both more reliable and better for a person

Write your paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper.

ISBN: 0-328-14899-7

Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of

America This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained

from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or

transmission in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or

likewise For information regarding permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott

Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V0G1 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05

Photographs

Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions.

Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education.

Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R) Background (Bkgd) Opener: ©Bettmann/Corbis

3 ©Bridgeman Art Library

4 ©James Randklev/Stone/Getty Images

5 ©Bettmann/Corbis

6 ©Corbis

9 ©Bettmann/Corbis

10 ©Bettmann/Corbis

12 ©Getty Images

14 ©Bettmann/Corbis

Vocabulary

manifest destiny blaze mountain men wagon train annex gold rush prospector forty-niner

Adventure, dreams, land, and gold attracted people to the

United States and across its plains By the mid-1800s

the country extended from the Atlantic Ocean to the

Pacific Ocean In this book you will read about the

people, trails, conflicts, and discoveries that fueled this

time of expansion and change

Editorial Offices: Glenview, Illinois • Parsippany, New Jersey • New York, New York Sales Offices: Needham, Massachusetts • Duluth, Georgia • Glenview, Illinois Coppell, Texas • Sacramento, California • Mesa, Arizona

The Golden Dream

Following

by Cynthia Clampitt

Trang 3

Hopes and Dreams

The dreams for coming to the United States may have been

different, but they had the same result: they made people come

here Some people followed the promise of building a home and a

future, while others pursued the often unreliable hope of gaining

quick wealth The dreams pulled people across the plains or across

the seas They drew people to places that were both difficult and

full of possibilities

Following these dreams changed people’s lives, and it changed

the United States By 1850 the United States extended from the

Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean Texas and California were

states, cities had been born, and the United States had become

one of the top gold-producing nations in the world

This growth was caused by more than dreams, however Many

Americans had begun to believe it was the nation’s manifest destiny

to grow More land meant greater strength for the country and

fewer borders to protect It meant more opportunities for the cities’

poor and the thousands of immigrants who continued to arrive

Also, part of the West was a land of freedom for escaped enslaved

people The West had to be opened up—hundreds of thousands

of people were depending on it

Unfortunately, this expansion did not come without a cost

American Indians were often pushed aside as newcomers laid claim to

land they had been living on, or gold miners took over waterways

they used to fish Thousands of people died on the trails or during

conflicts However, people still came to pursue their dreams

Jedediah Smith, shown here leading a party of trappers across the desert, is considered by many to have been one

of the greatest of the mountain men

3

Opening Up the West

Before the dreamers could head west, the land had to be explored

and trails had to be blazed, or marked It was the mountain men

who opened up the West These fur trappers, traders, and scouts made the unexplored regions their home They blazed the great western trails and stirred interest in this new land with their tales

of great forests and fertile valleys

The mountain men, who traded with American Indians, could usually speak several American Indian languages They sometimes wore American Indian clothing and often married American Indian women In time, this contact created problems It made the American Indians increasingly dependent on manufactured goods and sometimes led to the spread of diseases It created competition for trade goods among groups that had never before been enemies

In the early 1800s, however, life in the unspoiled land seemed beautiful and exciting to the mountain men, and they believed there was much work to be done

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John Colter traveled with Lewis and Clark before becoming

a trapper and scout He traveled on foot through the mountains

in the area that is now Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming In 1807

he became the first American to see the area American Indians

called Yellowstone His tales of boiling mud and geysers shooting

hundreds of feet into the air were not believed People thought he

had lost his mind

Jedediah Smith probably made his first trip west as a teenager

In 1824 he was part of a group that opened a passage to the

Northwest through Wyoming Two years later Smith found a

westward route to California, and he and the traders he was leading

became the first Americans to enter California from the east

Smith was also the first American to cross the Sierra Nevada

and the first to reach Oregon by traveling up the Pacific coast

Smith’s adventures were often dangerous He nearly died of thirst

in the desert, was almost killed by a grizzly bear, and survived several

attacks by American Indians While traveling in the Southwest,

Smith was finally killed by the Comanche

No one believed John Colter when

he described the geysers and other sights he saw in Yellowstone.

Jim Bridger’s name lives on in the Bridger Range in Montana, Bridger Pass in southern Wyoming, and Bridger-Teton National Forest in western Wyoming Bridger explored a territory that ranged from the Canadian border to New Mexico

Jim Beckwourth, the son of an enslaved African American woman, headed west when he gained his freedom He found a pass through the Sierra Nevada that later became part of the overland trail to California

Kit Carson was a mountain man who became a folk hero Carson ran away from home as a teenager and joined a group of trappers and frontiersmen He became a scout for the United States military In 1854 he was appointed to be an American Indian agent He became well known for his fairness and sympathy for the problems faced by American Indians

By the time the days of the mountain men were over, in about

1850, the West had been opened up and trails had been blazed to present-day Oregon, California, and New Mexico People other than explorers were beginning to follow these trails

Jim Beckwourth, the son

of an enslaved person, was a mountain man.

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Oregon Country

John Jacob Astor thought that opening a trading post in the

Pacific Northwest would increase his already successful business

He hoped to buy furs and ship them to Asia, where there was a

great demand In 1811 he opened his trading post at the mouth

of the Columbia River However, the British controlled most of

the fur trade in the region, and Astor’s trading post was a failure

Crossing the United States by wagon was not

easy Mountains and rivers were among the many

obstacles that settlers faced heading west.

7

Increased activity by British fur traders worried the United States government, but in 1818 the two countries agreed that they could share the part of the Northwest known as Oregon Country—an area that included all of present-day Oregon, Washington, and Idaho, and parts of Montana, Wyoming, and British Columbia

In 1819 a treaty between the United States and Spain set Oregon’s southern border, and Spain agreed not to settle Oregon

Many settlers went west including Marcus Whitman, a young doctor, and his wife, Narcissa Prentiss Whitman The Whitmans traveled to Oregon in 1836, setting up a mission near present-day Walla Walla, Washington They taught the Cayuse how to build houses, plow fields, irrigate crops, and build mills to grind corn and wheat Narcissa started a school, and Dr Whitman treated the Cayuse along with missionaries and other people in the region

In 1842 the Whitmans received news that their assignment was going to end Marcus Whitman made a three-thousand-mile journey

on horseback to Boston to ask that their work be continued He then journeyed to Washington, D.C., to persuade federal officials

to encourage settlement in Oregon

As Whitman returned to Oregon Country in 1843, he joined a group of nearly one thousand immigrants who were heading west

He guided their wagon train across the country, and it was because

of his efforts that they succeeded in crossing the mountains to the Columbia River This event became known as the “great migration.”

This great migration convinced many people that the Oregon Trail was safe By the mid-1840s, six thousand settlers had moved

to Oregon Country

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This sudden increase in settlement forced the United States

and Great Britain to reconsider their agreement about Oregon In

1846 the United States accepted the British suggestion that the

northern border of Oregon be set at forty-nine degrees latitude, as

was the rest of the United States and the Canadian border

With this area now officially part of the United States, more

migration took place Wagon trains of as many as one hundred

covered wagons were soon crossing the continent Families loaded

all the possessions they could fit into these wagons The

two-thousand-mile journey could take as many as four to six months

to complete

make repairs Children could play once their chores were done,

and violins or guitars were sometimes brought out to provide

entertainment

Mountains and rivers were difficult to cross Thunderstorms,

strong winds, and snow could make traveling extremely difficult

and dangerous Contaminated water or food often caused sickness

and even death to sweep through groups of travelers, and the Oregon

Trail became lined with graves However, the promise of a new

life and the possibility of escaping poverty motivated people to

continue on the trail

During the 1840s about twelve thousand people used the Oregon

Trail to reach the Pacific Northwest Of all the great overland routes

to the West, the Oregon Trail was used the longest

Whole families, including children, traveled in the wagon trains

People had to bring their pets and farm animals with them.

The Whitman Massacre

In 1847 a severe outbreak of measles affected both American Indians and settlers Dr Whitman cared for many sick children, but unlike many of the settlers’ children, many American Indian children had no immunity to the disease and died The Cayuse were angry, believing that the Whitmans were intentionally killing their children to make room for more settlers On November 29, 1847, the Cayuse attacked, killing Marcus and Narcissa Whitman and twelve other settlers, and kidnapping fifty-three women and children The Whitman Massacre, as it was called, led to the United States government’s decision to create the Oregon Territory, with a local government and soldiers to protect its citizens

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Mexican Land, United States Land

The 1800s were a time of turmoil in Mexico In 1821 Agustín

de Iturbide (ah gus TEEN day ee ter BEE day) and Vincente

Guerrero (vin CHEN tay ger AIR oh) raised an army and took

control of most of Mexico Spain appointed its own military officer

to govern Mexico, but it was too late to regain control The

Treaty of Córdoba, signed on August 24, 1821, gave Mexico its

independence from Spain

Iturbide crowned himself emperor of Mexico in 1822, and the

United States gave formal recognition to the Mexican

empire The military, headed by Antonio López de Santa Anna,

revolted against the emperor the next year Iturbide was forced

from power, and in 1824 he was arrested and shot

Santa Anna surrenders to Sam Houston, who was wounded

in the Battle of San Jacinto.

11

Santa Anna declared that Mexico was now a republic Men were given the right to vote Government protections, however, were removed for native peoples, who were now worse off than under Spanish rule Different military groups began fighting for control, and the government changed hands every year or two Mexico’s debts skyrocketed

By 1833 Santa Anna was again in charge, this time as president

Santa Anna adopted a new constitution in 1836, one that eliminated states’ rights The people most affected by this were the thirty thousand United States immigrants who had been invited to settle the previously undeveloped area known as Texas

When the Texans revolted, Santa Anna crushed the first group he encountered at the Alamo in February 1836 Santa Anna’s army was then defeated by Sam Houston’s troops in April 1836, and Santa Anna was captured

In exchange for his freedom, Santa Anna promised not to try

to recapture Texas, but he refused to recognize its independence

When the United States annexed Texas in 1845, the Mexican

people removed Santa Anna from power because he had been willing

to negotiate with the United States

President James Polk tried to make peace He offered Mexico

$30 million for New Mexico and California Mexico needed the money badly but refused When United States troops occupied the Texas borderlands that Mexico claimed as its own territory, the Mexican troops attacked them in April 1846 Polk saw this as an act of war The Mexican War lasted until February 1848 The Treaty

of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the war, gave the United States

a vast territory that included most of the American Southwest It also gave Mexico $15 million and granted citizenship to the seventy-five thousand Mexicans living in the Southwest

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The Lure of Gold

Only a few days before Mexico signed the Treaty of Guadalupe

Hidalgo, a carpenter from New Jersey named James Wilson Marshall

picked up a few yellow pebbles in a California stream The pebbles

turned out to be gold John Sutter, a rancher from Switzerland,

owned the land where the gold was found Sutter knew that news of

the discovery could ruin everything he had built and that people

would come by the thousands and overrun his land He asked

his workers to tell no one, but word leaked out anyway With no

telephones or telegraphs, the news spread slowly at first, from friend

to friend, but everyone who heard soon headed for Sutter’s land

By March 1848, several newspapers had published the story of

Marshall’s discovery The news electrified the country and sped

around the world

At the beginning of the gold rush, miners usually worked on

their own, panning in streams or digging nearby.

13

Chinese Immigration

The Chinese name for California was “Gum Shan” or “Gold Mountain.” News of the discovery of gold reached China in 1848, and by 1852, twenty-five thousand Chinese had reached Gold Mountain As was true of American miners, only a few struck it rich in the gold fields, and many of those who did returned to China with their wealth Others stayed, some as miners, but most found work as cooks, farmers, and merchants Some opened stores or restaurants The first Chinese laundry opened in San Francisco in 1851, followed by many more

Though 1863 was a good year for Chinese miners, most had left mining by 1868 Many of the former miners went on to help build the transcontinental railroad.

California had never attracted large numbers of people Much

of the state was dry, with little of the fertile land that drew farmers

to Oregon It was mountainous and hard to reach During the Mexican War, Mexico had hardly bothered to defend California

Now suddenly everyone wanted to go there—the gold rush was

on As “gold fever” took hold, people left their homes and their jobs Soldiers deserted their camps, stores and schools were closed, and farms were abandoned In one year, eighty thousand men flooded into California Sutter’s fears proved correct, and within a few months his land was covered with tents and was being torn up

by miners’ picks and shovels

Trang 9

The first prospectors, or people who came searching for gold,

were called forty-niners because they arrived in 1849 There

was great ethnic diversity among the prospectors, with dozens

of languages spoken on the gold fields—but most of those who

arrived in 1849 were men Life in the gold fields was not pleasant

Most miners lived in small tents, and there were few services such

as doctors or barbers Without any laws, government, or police,

mining camps were lawless and dangerous places Few people

wanted their wives or daughters to face these hardships—though

a few women did make the trip, some even to search for gold

Immigrants, Hispanic Californios, and American Indians

often worked together, at least when gold was plentiful

You can see how mining could damage the land.

15

Darling Clementine

One of the best-known songs about the gold rush is “Clementine.”

In it a miner sings about his daughter who drowned He could not save her because he could not swim.

In a cavern, in a canyon, Excavating for a mine Lived a miner forty-niner And his daughter, Clementine.

Oh my darling, oh my darling,

Oh my darling Clementine, You are lost and gone forever, Dreadful sorry, Clementine.

While life was not easy for the miners, it was very hard for the region’s American Indians Some joined the rush for gold, but many were driven off by hostile prospectors and forced to flee Those who stayed found their lands and waterways ruined as digging

continued Californios, the Hispanics who lived in California before

it became part of the United States, also found their land overrun

The poverty that resulted from losing their land and livelihood would last for decades after the gold rush ended

By 1853 a total of 250,000 fortune-seekers had arrived in California, which had become a state in 1850 Though many prospectors left for the big gold rush in Australia in 1851, and many of the disappointed moved back east, California continued

to grow, as settlers replaced the miners The gold rush was over, but California was just getting started

Trang 10

Glossary

annex to add or attach

blaze to mark a trail, especially by cutting off a piece of

tree bark

forty-niner a nickname for a person who arrived in

California in 1849 to look for gold

gold rush the sudden movement of people to an area

where gold has been found

manifest destiny the belief that the United States should

expand west to the Pacific Ocean

mountain men scouts, fur trappers, and traders who

opened up the American West to westward settlement

in the 1800s

prospector a person who explores or examines a region,

searching for gold or other valuable resources

wagon train a common method of transportation to the

West, in which wagons traveled in groups for safety

Write to It!

Some people worked to build a better life, while others worked to strike it rich in the gold fields What are some ways people try to “get rich quick” today? Write two or more paragraphs describing how “get rich quick” ideas are risky, unreliable, and sometimes dangerous, and why working to improve one’s life is both more reliable and better for a person

Write your paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper.

ISBN: 0-328-14899-7

Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of

America This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained

from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or

transmission in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or

likewise For information regarding permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott

Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V0G1 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05

Photographs

Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions.

Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education.

Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R) Background (Bkgd) Opener: ©Bettmann/Corbis

3 ©Bridgeman Art Library

4 ©James Randklev/Stone/Getty Images

5 ©Bettmann/Corbis

6 ©Corbis

9 ©Bettmann/Corbis

10 ©Bettmann/Corbis

12 ©Getty Images

14 ©Bettmann/Corbis

Vocabulary

manifest destiny blaze mountain men wagon train annex gold rush prospector forty-niner

Adventure, dreams, land, and gold attracted people to the

United States and across its plains By the mid-1800s

the country extended from the Atlantic Ocean to the

Pacific Ocean In this book you will read about the

people, trails, conflicts, and discoveries that fueled this

time of expansion and change

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