Mining Frontier
Transcontinental Railroad
Cattle Frontier
Farmers & the Great Plains
Wild West & Alaska
100

Why did some mining towns become known as boom towns?

They sprung up and grew rapidly.
100

What are the names of the oceans on the East Coast of America and the West Coast of America?

The Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean.

100

What natural resource on the Great Plains gave rise to the Cattle Industry?

Grass

100

When was the Homestead Act signed?

1862

100
What are the names of the two most famous outlaws of the West?

Billy the Kid and Jesse James

200

What are ghost towns?

Towns with few people or no people and empty buildings.

200

What were the names of the two companies that built the transcontinental railroad?

The Union Pacific Company and the Central Pacific Company.

200

What danger did cowboys face on the long drive?

Stampedes

200

What were the exact terms of the Homestead Act?

Homesteaders got 160 acres of land free. They had to farm and settle the land for at least 5 years.

200

What did the Census Bureau announce in 1890?

The frontier no longer existed.

300

Why did mining camps not have official laws, police, and courts?

They emerged in frontier areas where normal systems of government did not yet exist.

300

Who helped build the transcontinental railroad?

Chinese and Irish immigrants, African Americans, Native Americans, and Mexican Americans.

300

Why did Texas ranchers want to get cattle to northern railroad cities?

Texas had too many cattle for ranchers to sell them there and make money. They needed to sell their cattle to more distant markets, such as cities in the East. In order to do so, they had to transport their cattle.

300
Why were grasshoppers such a problem for farmers?
There were millions of them, and they could eat everything in their path, including crops.
300

What was "Seward's Folly?"

It refers to Secretary of State Seward's purchase of the Alaskan territory from Russia.

400

Why did boom towns become ghost towns?

Once mineral resources were used up, mining was done more by companies with expensive machinery.

400

Why did the two railroad companies agree to build the line?

Congress gave each company a gift of land along each mile of track laid.

400

Why did the cattle kingdom move North?

Land in the north was much closer to railroad lines, and ranchers learned their cattle could survive the colder winters.
400

Why did settlers build their houses out of sod?

There was a lack of wood.

400

How accurate were the portrayals of the West?

They focused on cowboys, outlaws, and gunfights, but life in the West was really about day-to-day struggles for survival by farmers, ranchers, and Native Americans.

500

What happened to the Comstock Lode?

Comstock sold the claim to Californian business people. The new owners mined $500 million worth of silver and gold from the claim.

500

Where did the two lines meet?

Promontory Point, Utah

500

What happened to cowboys when cattle ranchers moved north and fenced off their lands?

The cowboy became an ordinary ranch hand.

500

How did settlers get fresh water?

Settlers either dug deep wells or traveled back and forth to nearby streams and ponds.

500

What benefits did some see in the purchase of the Alaskan territory?

They saw plentiful fish and timber that could become valuable and provide jobs.

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