What are Milwaukee, Wisc, Superior, Minnesota, and Pleasant Michigan?
What were the places that the Ojibwa had moved to by 1641?
What is along the Atlantic Coast?
Where did the Ojibwa originally live in the U.S.?
What are metal knives, guns, and metal tools?
What did Europeans trade with the Ojibwa?
What are sod homes?
What are homes built with Sod bricks, with a layer of sod used as the roof?
What are canoes?
What did the Ojibwa use to travel around the norther Great lakes Region?
What are wild rice, and a mission?
What are some wild foods that the Ojibwa gathered, and what is a settlement set up to spread their religion and help out those around them?
What is a John Deere plow, and what are mink, otter, and beaver?p
What plow made of steel helped make farming easier, and what animals did the French traders trap?
What are trading post, and they were warm in the winter, and cool in the summer?
What was set up along the trail that Marquette and Joliet traveled, and what was a good thing about the sod homes?
What are log homes, and sod homes, and what is a meeting place of three rivers?
What are two of the main types of homes used on the prairie, and what caused St. Louis to become a major city?
What is a trading post, and what is farming?
What is a store at which goods are bought and sold, and what did most of the first settlers do for a job?
What was Chicago, birch trees, and what is Monks Mound?
What major city in the U.S. started out as a trading post, what were the canoes the Ojibwa made created from, and what is the largest of these mounds?
Who were the French, the first to pound their stakes claimed the land, and helped with trading?
Who were the first Europeans to come to the Midwest, why were the settlers running with white stakes in their hands, and what did these (boats) help with later on?
What are copper, shells, jewelry, pottery, and they pounded stakes into all four corners of the land being claimed, and they were often dirty?
What were a few of the many things traded at Cahokia, how did the settlers claim the land, and what was a negative thing about sod homes?
What are huge markets where 1000s could gather, what is a drought, and the dust was blown all the way to the East Coast?
What do historians believe that Monks Mounds where used for, what is a time of little rain, and what were some effects of the dirty 30s?
Who is Marquette and Joliet, what is they no longer produced everything they needed, and what are steamboats and the railroad?
Who came to the Midwest in 1673, what else changed for the Ojibwa people due to the trading, and what two things allowed the Midwest to become a farming center?
What is the US government took advantage to the weakened Native American tribes who signed away their land, The dirty 30s, and what was the Illinois, the Mississippi, and the Missouri Rivers?
Why were the Settlers able to come in and claim the land, what happened due to the farmer's inexperience with erosion, and what three rivers was Cahokia located near?
What is No, and the ground was hard to plow due to the thick grass roots, an interstate highway system?
Was farming easy on the prairie for the settlers, why, and what did the U.S. Government decide to build in the 1950s?
What is the Nakota, Dakota, Lakota, and they didn't have to follow a strict/certain railroad schedule?
What is another Native American Group that lives in this area still today, and why did people prefer cars over the trains?
What are mounds and what is 10mph?
What can you see that was built by Native Americans over 1000 years ago near St. Louis, and how fast did steamboats travel?
What is they sold their extra crops and animals, and what is "highways"?
What is a burial site for important people, a platform for important people in the tribe to build their homes, and a place for ceremonies to be held?
What were the mounds of earth and stone used for?
What is hunting, fishing, gathering wild rice, growing corn on their land, and it was built in the North and ran through Chicago?
How did the Ottawa and Potawatomi people survive the Great Lakes region, and due to the Civil War where did the railroad end up going
What is sold extra crops to traders at forts, what is made canoes, and what is brought furs to trade at forts?
What did the Ottawa, Ojibwa, and Huron tribes do during this time?
Who was Thomas Jefferson, and what is Chicago?
Who sent explorers to discover the area west of the St. Louis, and who was St. Louis' biggest rival for being a major center of trade?
What is the weather didn't slow it down, what is 1869, and what are cars?
What was the major advantage the railroad had over the steamboats, what year did they finish the transcontinental railroad, and what became the next popular mode of transportation?