Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Ch. 6 - Part 1 Reading Terms
Women in the West
40
History
Professional
10/24/2008

Additional History Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What does the "Wild West" refer to?
Definition

 

 

The popular folklore of the west - Miners, Cowboys/ Cowgirls, Prostitutes, etc.

 


 

Historical Significance: Brought American economic practices - miners and ranchers were drawn into paid labor and experienced wage dependence (like the industrial workers)

 

Source: Pg. 351

Term
Which gender played a more significant role in the "Wild West"?
Definition

 

 

Men

 


 

Source: Pg. 351

Term
What does "Family West" refer to?
Definition

 

 

Settlers domesticating the prairies of America's heartland

 


 

Historical Significance: Imported American social and cultural values of industriousness and domesticity

 

Source: Pg. 347

Term
Which gender played the more significant role in the "Family West"?
Definition

 

 

Women

 


 

Historical Significance: While men were trying to find their fortunes in the mines, women stayed at home and performed all of the domestic duties; unlike women who lived in urban areas, these women performed chores without the technological innovations available in more industrialized areas

 

Source: Pgs. 342, 347

Term
Who are some of the examples of Native American "Hostiles" who resisted compromising with whites?
Definition

 

 

Geronimo; Lozen

 


 

Source: Pg. 342

Term
After the Civil War ended in 1865, what was the focus of the U.S. militia?
Definition

 

 

"Closing the west"

 


 

  • This refers to the U.S. government's attempt to stuff all Native Americans on reservations in order to make room for white settlers

 

Source: Pg. 342

Term
Which Native American woman served as a U.S. Army scout and translator before becoming a "crusader against the reservation system"?
Definition

 

 

Sarah Winemucca

 


 

Source: Pg. 343

Term
Who is Lozen?
Definition

 

 

Native American Apache woman "hostile" who worked with Geronimo

 


 

Historical Significance: She was Geronimo's "right hand 'woman'" as she was his lieutenant and helped his band "evade and attack the U.S. Army for almost a decade."

 

Source: Pg. 342

Term
When was the massacre at Wounded Knee?
Definition

 

 

1890

 


 

Source: Pg. 342

Term
Who was involved at Wounded Knee?
Definition

 

 

Lakota Native Americans and U.S. soldiers

 


 

Source: Pg. 343

Term
What Lakota religion/ ritual developed prior to Wounded Knee that promised the "restoration of the Lakota's traditional lands and lives"?
Definition

 

 

The "Ghost Dance"

 


 

Source: Pg. 343

Term
Fill in the blank: During the "Ghost Dance" ritual, dancers wore a special robe that was believed to protect them from ____________.
Definition

 

 

Bullets

 


  

Source: Pg. 343

Term
Who designed the robes that the dancers wore in the "Ghost Dance" ritual?
Definition

 

 

The Lakota women

 


 

Source: Pg. 343

Term
Describe the massacre at Wounded Knee.
Definition

 

 

Soldiers were afraid that the "Ghost Dance" signaled a new insurgency and fired on a camp of mostly unarmed native people, killing hundreds

 

 


 

Source: Pg. 343

Term
When were Native American children forced into government boarding schools?
Definition

 

 

1890's

 


 

Source: Pg. 343

Term
What was the goal of the government boarding schools designed for Native American children?
Definition

 

 

To "save the child by destroying the Indian"

 


 

  • They did this by stripping the children of their culture and language, forcing them to assimilate into white culture  

 

Source: Pg. 343

Term
What were Native American girls taught at the government boarding schools?
Definition

 

 

Domestic roles

 


 

Historical Significance: In Native American society, women traditionally worked communally alongside men. When only taught these domestic roles, they were made dependent on men/ husbands, which followed the pattern of white society.

 

Source: Pg. 343

Term
How did Native American women use their skills learned in the government boarding schools?
Definition

 

 

  • Worked in Reservation Agencies
  • Became Teachers
  • Became Public Advocates
    • (like Susan and Susette La Flesche)

 


 

Source: Pg. 344

Term
Who was the first white-trained native women physician?
Definition

 

 

Susan La Flesche

 


 

Source: Pg. 345

Term
How did Susette La Flesche advocate for Indian rights to white audiences through her biracial experience?
Definition

 

 

By connecting the similarities between the lives of Native Americans and whites

 


 

Source: (Documents, Pgs. 373-378)

Term
What was the U.S. government's response to protests against corruptions of the reservation system?
Definition

 

 

Passing the "Dawes Severalty Act"

 


 

Source: Pg. 345

Term
When was the Dawes Severalty Act passed by Congress?
Definition

 

 

1887

 


 

Source: Pg. 345

Term
Which "white champion of native rights" advocated the Dawes Severalty Act as a better alternative to the degrading reservation system, and wrote A Century of Dishonor (1881) to show how "U.S. Native American policy violated American's promise of liberty and freedom?"
Definition

 

 

Helen Hunt Jackson

 


 

Source: Pgs. 345-345

Term

What was unfair about the Dawes Severalty Act?

Definition

 

 

The lands given to Native Americans were not fertile enough to grow crops and support their families (while whites received all the fertile lands)

 


 

Source: Pg. 345

Term
What did the Dawes Severalty Act do?
Definition

 

 

It divided reservation lands into allotments for individual native families

 

(the "leftover" lands were sold to Non-Indians)

 


 

Source: Pg. 345

Term
How did the Dawes Severalty Act increase Native American women's dependence on men?
Definition

 

 

If she divorced her husband, she lost the land

 

 


  • The land was legally owned by the male head of household, which followed the pattern of white society
  • Losing the land would have been devastating because it provided for all of their economic resources - wouldn't be able to support themselves

 

Historical Significance: This Act took away the Native American traditional communal land holding and farming practices, in that women did not have any property rights at all, following the pattern of white society

 

Source: Pg. 345

 

 

Term
Which 1862 Act granted 160 acres to people willing to cultivate and "improve" the land?
Definition

 

 

The "Homestead Act"

 


 

Historical Significance:

  • European immigrants were able to attain land and form communities from Homesteads
  • After Reconstruction, African American families attained land through Homesteads in hopes of becoming independent farmers
  • Unmarried Mexican American women could attain land in the Southwest where they had authority in their communities and where female property owning was favored

 

Source: Pg. 347

Term
What two commonalities were shared among women throughout the family-based West?
Definition

 

 

  1. Unpaid labor
  2. Had to work everything from scratch

 


 

  •  Western women cooked, did laundry, and made clothes without benefit of the technological improvements available in more industrialized areas

 

Source: Pg. 348

Term
What was the worst part of life for women in the Family-based West?
Definition

 

 

Isolation

 


 

Source: Pg. 349

Term
What was established in 1867 that helped women overcome their isolation in the Family-based West?
Definition

 

 

National Grange

 


 

Source: Pg. 349

Term
When was the National Grange established?
Definition

 

 

1867

 


 

Source: Pgs. 349-350

Term
What did the National Grange prepare the way for?
Definition

 

 

Political expressions and agricultural discontent

 


 

  • Helped form the Farmer's Alliance in the 1880's, and the Populist Movement of the 1890's

 

 

Source: Pg. 350

Term
How did the National Grange enrich community life?
Definition

 

 

It sponsered social and cultural events


Source: Pg. 350

Term
Fill in the blank: The National Grange was "based on the premise that farm families had to cooperate to succeed against the growing power of ______________."
Definition

 

 

Railroad and other Corporate Monopolies

 


 

Source: Pg. 349

Term
What did the National Grange do to fight against the Railroad and other corporate monopolies?
Definition

 

 

  • Establish farmer-run stores and grain elevators
  • Promote laws against unfair railroad rates

 


 

Source: Pg. 350

Term

Fill in the blank: Initially, most of the women in the Wild West were ______________.

Definition

 

 

Prostitutes

 


 

Source: Pg. 351

Term

Fill in the blank: Historians refer to the Wild West prostitutes who worked for themselves (not hired by brothels) as ______________.

Definition

 

 

"Proprietor Prostitutes"

 


 

Source: Pg. 351

Term
True or False: A few proprietor prostitutes were able to earn or marry their way into respectable society.
Definition

 

 

True

 


 

Source: Pg. 351

Term

True or False: Although some women were successful in prostitution in the Wild West, it was a thoroughly losing proposition for most women.

Definition

 

 

True

 


 

  • Two-thirds of these prostitutes died young of STD's, botched abortions, alcohol abuse, suicide, or gunshots

 

Source: Pg. 351

Term
Which legendary Irish-born labor radical began her career as an organizer for miners' unions in the late 1890's and understood the power of miner's wives as an effective tool against strikebreakers?
Definition

 

 

Mary Harris "Mother" Jones

 


 

Source: Pg. 352

Supporting users have an ad free experience!