Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and...

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Transcript of Chapter 13 Pioneer Life. Immigration 1836-1845 Population tripled Immigrants came from U.S. and...

Immigration 1836-1845

• Population tripled

• Immigrants came from U.S. and Europe · Immigrant Agents— same as

empresarios

• 2,000 families from Missouri, Illinois and Tennessee settle through W.S. Peters and Associates. (Sounds like a modern Real Estate Agency, doesn’t it?)

Europeans

• Henri Castro, French Immigrant Agent: over 2000 families from France, Switzerland and Germany

• Established town of Castroville

• German Emigration Company settled about 7,000 Germans.

• Many Germans settled in the hill country around Austin: New Braunfels, Fredericksburg, Gruene, Schulenberg

Slave Population grew

• By 1845, African Americans made up 1/3 of the population of Texas and most were slaves.

• Free African Americans required to petition Congress to stay in Texas during Republic

• Not all slaves worked on plantations or farms and some were skilled laborers such as blacksmiths and carpenters.

Tejanos faced prejudice

• Tejanos were viewed with suspicion by settlers and even those who fought for Texas were treated poorly.

• The new settlers assumed they had sided with Mexico.

• This is called stereotyping.

Farming and Ranching

• Most Texans had agricultural jobs.• Corn was most important “subsistence crop”:

for human and animal consumption• Cotton was most important “cash crop”: for

profit, and was grown in East Texas during this time period.

• Ranching was easy to start because wild cattle roamed all over South and East Texas left over from Spanish days.

Transportation improved

• Stagecoaches: Butterfield Overland Line crossed Texas all the way to El Paso for passengers and mail.

• Roads were dirt. Goods were transported over roads by mule and oxen driven freight wagons often using Tejano drivers. (The term “teamsters” as in Teamsters Union comes from this.)

• Railroads started coming to Texas, connected towns around Houston

• Steamboats were difficult to operate in Texas due to crooked rivers, few rivers large and deep enough.

Education:

• No public schools

• Towns and families hired teachers.

• 1854, legislature to set aside $2,000,000.00 as a permanent school fund and the interest was divided between counties according to the number of school-age children they had living there.

Know Nothing Party

• Also called the “American Party”

• Tried to keep immigrants from holding office or voting

• Only lasted a few years in Texas

• “I know nothing”

• Started the practice of electing candidates at conventions

Why camels didn’t last

• This was the idea of U.S. Secretary of War Jefferson Davis

• When the South seceded, Jefferson Davis became President of the Confederate States

• Once the war was over, the U.S. stopped the experiment because anything involving the South or Jefferson Davis was not popular!

General Zachary Taylor

How it started:

Mexico claimed the boundary between Mexico and Texas was the Nueces River.

Texas claimed the Rio Grande, as Santa Anna had agreed in the Treaty of Velasco.

A battle between Mexico and Texans occurred north of the Rio Grande at Palo Alto in Texas.

President Polk treated this as an invasion, causing American casualties and declared war.

• Gen. Zachary Taylor’s U.S. forces were successful in occupying Northern Mexico

• They captured the Mexican city of Monterrey.

• A large Mexican force under Santa Anna’s command was defeated at the battle of Buena Vista.

• American troops landed in Veracruz and marched to Mexico City.

• Mexico City was captured, and American forces occupied California.

• Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo settled the conflict.

Terms of Treaty

• Rio Grande became boundary • Mexico abandoned all claims to Texas• The U.S. paid Mexico $15 million for the lands

between Texas and the Pacific Ocean owned by Mexico.

• U.S. covered claims of U.S. citizens against Mexico due to Texas Revolution

• Mexicans living in the territories gained by the U.S. were guaranteed U.S. citizenship, right to keep land.

Compromise of 1850

• The disputed territory was now a part of the U.S., but Texas did not keep all of it.

• Under this compromise, Texas surrendered the part that became New Mexico in return for $10 million.

• This allowed Texas to pay off her debts!

Texas grows rapidly

• The population grew• 1847: 106,000• 1850: 212,000• 1860: 604,000• Under Homestead Act, settlers living on

the land and improving it owned the land• Southerners used the term “GTT”: Gone to Texas!

Mexicans and Europeans

• Mexicans crossed the border and settled along the Rio Grande and in the San Antonio-Goliad area.

• South Texas towns grew rapidly.

• Most Mexican Americans were farmers and ranchers.

• Prejudice continued

• Tejanos retained their cultural heritage.

Many cultures of Texans

• Polish, Irish, British, French, Czech, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Dutch, Scottish, etc. also migrated in large numbers

• Also, Chinese, Lebanese and Syrians, Jews and Japanese came during the 1800s.