When was the midwest settled
The advertisements used by the federal government, land speculators, and railroad companies were aimed to attract all types of people to the land. This is evident in the different types of ads produced. Some of these ads appealed to those who could read, while others were aimed towards people who could not.
Promises of "bountiful" and "fertile" land drew many to the western territory of the United States. Johnson, Robert. Windet for S. Macham, Iowa and Nebraska. Call Number Portfolio , Folder Nebraska State Department of Immigration, B accessed April 6, You must be logged in to post a comment. Land was quickly filled with farms leaving surprisingly little room for new immigrants from southern and eastern European nations; subsequently cities like Detroit, Chicago, and Cleveland began to grow.
Early farmers made a living off of the production of wheat. Soon, farmers in Wisconsin and Minnesota turned to raising dairy cows as an alternative to growing wheat, which was hard on the land. Farmers in the Ohio Valley began growing corn as a fattener for cattle and hogs.
Farmers in the Middle West practiced a three-year crop rotation. Pioneer farm families who settled in the state of Michigan needed to provide some form of protection from the harsh winters for themselves, their animals, and their harvested crops.
Many families lived in tiny cabin homes with dirt floors, yet built huge barns to ensure their livelihood and survival Hartman, These barns, as illustrated in the picture below, were raised through the combined effort of a family and their community. When pioneer families moved to Michigan, they often built log cabins for their first homes. Springfield: Illinois State Historical Library, Balesi F amiliar maps of the Midwest are filled with French names; Detroit straights , Des Moines the place of the monks , and farther west the famous Grands Tetons.
Perhaps some reasonably well-informed person may allude to French missionaries. If one is unusually well versed in colonial history, the reader may even suggest canoes, rivers, and the fur trade.
The average person's knowledge, however, is still quite blurry when it comes to the history hidden in his or her backyard. Why don't these French names at every corner of our regional geography arouse more curiosity?
One explanation might stem from the curriculum that Midwestern states mandate in their public schools. In most history books, the reader will find barely more than a paragraph or two about the French and.
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