Isolating a person or animal for a period of time to prevent the spread of a contagious disease

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CHISHOLM TRAIL—The most famous route for cattle drives. it went from San Antonio, Texas to Abilene, Kansas

Texas Fever—A disease spread by cattle ticks from southwest Texas

quarantineIsolating a person or animal for a period

of time to prevent the spread of a contagious disease

Obsolete—No longer in use

Railroad Land GrantsThe federal governments gave public land to railroads if they would build tracks in specific locations

Locomotive at Leavenworth, Lawrence, & Galveston Railroad Bridge over the Kansas River, Lawrence, Kansas, 1867-First railroad track ever laid in Kansas

When only one company provides or produces a certain product or service activity

monopoly

1908 A.T. & S.F. Railroad Wellington Kansas Postcard

INCENTIVE—Serving to induce or motivate

In KS, railroads were given 1/6 of the land in our state. Some people thought that was too much

Why did the railroads compete to sell land in Kansas?

•The railroads made money selling their land grants•If towns grew up along the railroads, more people would use railroad services

What was the role of a town site association?•Surveyed the lands•Planned the selected town sites

Plat—A map showing actual or planned features, such as streets and building lots

Plat of SW Olathe

Why did the railroads encourage small specialized businesses to settle in their towns?

Several smaller specialized stores, rather than one general store, would result in more business lots being sold.

Downtown Olathe c. 1910 looking east down Park St.

Cyrus K. Holliday

•One of Kansas’ most prominent businessmen•Director of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad•Donated land for the state capitol in Topeka

Retail—The sale of goods in small quantities directly to consumers

Downtown Olathe 1909

Dispatch—A written message

Fred Harvey

Founder of 47 Harvey House Restaurants, 15 hotels, & 30 dining cars on the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad

Chanute, KS

Emporia, KS

Wellington, KS

Depot—A railroad station

Train Station in Garnett,KS

Yield—An amount produced

Subsistance—Having enough food or resource to live

Surplus—An amount or a quantity in excess of what is needed

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130&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dolathe%2Btrain%2Bdepot%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Dactive%26sa%3DN%26rls%3Dcom.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox%26tbs%3Disch:1

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Chapter 7 Railroads, Cattle and Agriculture.Timeframe: 1859- 1885.Key Topics: Population Growth in KS. Cattle

Industry in Kansas. The railroad in KS. Development of railroad towns in KS. Changes in farming practices.

Essential Questions.1. Why did Cattle drives come to Kansas?2. What effects did cattle drives have on

people in Kansas?3. Why did the Cattle Drives end?4. How did the Government encourage the

growth of the Railroads? (subsidy, monopoly, Cyrus K. Holliday.)

5. What was the impact of having a town near a railroad. (Fred Harvey, depots).

Essential Questions.

What was life like for most farmers in Kansas?

How did new technology affect farm production in KS?

Essential Questions cont.

Between 1859 and 1885 the state was growing in population.

Population grew because there were jobs to be had.

Factors that brought people here were railroads, cattle drives, and land available to farm.

Growing the Economy

Texas had a surplus of Cattle.There was a demand for cattle in the East.It made sense to drive cattle herds to Kansas,

put them on trains to get them back east.The drives spanned 750 miles for 30-40 days.

Cattle industry.

Teams of Young men called cowboys brought the cattle.

When they arrived in KS, they were paid for their services

They then could spend the money in the towns.

Locals did not like the herds, they brought disease and destroyed crops and land.

Diseases led to the banning of Texas cattle. Eventually railroads came to Texas.

Cowboys and Cowtowns

The Federal government wanted a transcontinental railroad to connect the country.

To encourage this, they gave land grants to RR companies to build on.

Companies could sell the extra land given.Railroad companies had monopolies on land

and could charge what they wanted for land and shipping costs.

The Railroad

Planning of new towns was important.If a town was not close to a railroad it would

not survive.Businesses were located right near tracks.Local farmers would bring crops to towns for

sale and shipment.

Town Development.

Farmers relied on towns to sell goods and buy equipment that they couldn’t make or repair.

Most farmers grew enough food to sell extra for profit.

Early in the State’s history corn was an important crop because it could be eaten as is or ground into meal.

Wheat became popular when railroads came because it could be shipped off to mills.

Living in the Country

More mechanical equipment allowed farmers to work more land.

With horses it took roughly a day to work an acre of ground.

As more machinery became available it took less manpower to plant and harvest.

More food was produced this way and more was available for sell.

New farming practices

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