1. Sooners were settlers who "jumped the gun" in order
to
a. pan gold in California.
b. stake claims in the
Comstock Lode in Nevada.
c. claim land in Oklahoma before the
territory was legally opened to settlement.
d. drive the first
cattle to Montana and Wyoming.
e. grab town sites in the Dakotas.
C
2. All of the following are true statements about Native Americans
who ended up on reservations in the 1870s and
1880s
EXCEPT
a. they were fed meagerly by the U.S. government and not
annihilated by the U.S. Army.
b. they were forced to eke out an
existence.
c. they became wards of the U.S. government.
d.
they felt protected and well-provided for by the U.S.
government.
e. many died from diseases.
D
3. Arrange the following events in chronological order: (A) Dawes
Severalty Act is passed; (B) Oklahoma land
rush takes place; (C)
Native Americans are granted full citizenship; and (D) Congress
restores the tribal basis
of Native American life.
a. A, B,
C, D
b. B, A, C, D
c. A, D, B, C
d. D, C, A, B
e.
C, B, D, A
A
4. The Nez Perce people of Idaho were goaded into war when
a.
the Sioux began to migrate onto their land.
b. gold was
discovered on their reservation.
c. the federal government
attempted to force them onto a reservation.
d. the Canadian
government attempted to force their return to the United
States.
e. the U.S. government reneged on a treaty agreement to
permit the Nez Perce to keep their native lands.
C
5. The buffalo were nearly exterminated
a. as a result of being
overhunted by Native Americans.
b. when their grasslands were
turned into wheat and corn fields.
c. when their meat became
valued in eastern markets.
d. by disease.
e. through
wholesale butchery by whites.
E
6. In the long run, the group that probably did the most to shape the
modern West were the
a. small businessmen that provided products
and services to miners, railroad men, and cowboys.
b.
miners.
c. railroad men.
d. cowboys.
e. hydraulic engineers.
E
7. The safety valve theory that the West dampened class conflict,
while exaggerated, did have some validity
because
a. free
Western land did attract many immigrants to the West who might have
crowded urban job markets.
b. Western farmers tended to be
politically more conservative than those in the East.
c. wealthy
western farmers hired many unemployed laborers from eastern
cities.
d. Eastern city dwellers headed west to get free
homesteads during depressions.
e. Western cities had less class
conflict than those in the East.
A
8. The Native Americans of the Plains were finally forced to
surrender and end their resistance to losing their
lands
a.
because they were decimated by their constant inter-tribal
warfare.
b. when they realized that agriculture was more
profitable than hunting.
c. after such famous leaders as Geronimo
and Sitting Bull were killed.
d. when the government extended a
better offer to relocate their people to unoccupied, large Western
lands.
e. by the coming of the railroads and the virtual
extermination of the buffalo.
E
9. Helen Hunt Jackson's novel, Ramona, was centered around
a.
the cruel mistreatment of Native Americans in California.
b. the
cheating of Native Americans by federal agents on the
reservations.
c. the efforts of Christian reformers to prevent
the killing of Native Americans.
d. an indigenous girl's attempt
to retain her culture in a Native American boarding school.
e.
the last wars between the U.S. Army and the Apaches in the Southwest.
A
10. Match each Native American chief below with his tribe.
A.
Chief Joseph 1. Apache
B. Sitting Bull 2. Cheyenne
C.
Geronimo 3. Nez Perce
4. Sioux
a. A-1, B-2, C-3
b. A-3, B-4, C-1
c. A-2, B-4,
C-3
d. A-4, B-3, C-2
e. A-1, B-3, C-4
B
11. What did the superintendent of the census announce in
1890?
a. a frontier line was no longer discernable
b. more
Americans lived in the West than the East
c. the frontier line
had expanded
d. gold rushes in the West had tripled the
population
e. Buffalo outnumbered people in Montana
A
12. Which of the following was not an affect on Native-American life
resulting from the 1887 Dawes Severalty
Act?
a. The act
dissolved Native-American tribes as legal entities.
b. The act
wiped out tribal ownership of land.
c. It set up schools for
Native Americans as a way to retain their history and culture.
d.
It promised citizenship and property rights to Native Americans after
25 years.
e. The act reallocated land to Native American family heads.
C
13. Among the following, the least likely to migrate to the cattle
and farming frontier were
a. Eastern city dwellers.
b.
Eastern farmers.
c. recent immigrants.
d. freedmen.
e. women.
A
14. The bitter conflict between whites and Native Americans
intensified
a. during the Civil War.
b. as mining operations
receded in the West.
c. when big business took over the mining
industry.
d. as the mining frontier expanded.
e. after the
Battle of Wounded Knee.
D
15. The 19th-century humanitarians who advocated kind treatment of
native Americans
a. had no more respect for traditional Native
American culture than those who sought to exterminate them.
b.
advocated improving the reservation system.
c. opposed passage of
the Dawes Act.
d. understood the value of the Native Americans'
religious and cultural practices.
e. None of these choices are correct.
A
16. The largest single source of silver and gold in the frontier of
the West was discovered in 1859 in
a. Montana.
b. the Black
Hills of South Dakota.
c. California.
d. New Mexico.
e. Nevada.
E
17. A new round of warfare between the Sioux and U.S. Army began in
1874 when
a. the U.S. Army decided to retaliate for the Fetterman
massacre.
b. Sioux Chief Crazy Horse began an effort to drive all
whites from Montana and the Dakotas.
c. Colonel George Custer led
an expedition to Little Big Horn, Montana.
d. Colonel George
Custer discovered gold on Sioux land in the Black Hills.
e. the
federal government announced that it was opening all Sioux lands to settlement.
D
18. A major problem faced by settlers on the Great Plains in the
1870s was
a. the high price of land.
b. the low market value
of grain.
c. the scarcity of water.
d. overcrowding.
e.
the opposition of miners.
C
19. A Century of Dishonor (1881), which chronicled the dismal history
of Native American-white relations, was
authored by
a.
Harriet Beecher Stowe.
b. Helen Hunt Jackson.
c. Chief
Joseph.
d. Joseph F. Glidden.
e. Chief Black Elk of the
Oglala Sioux.
B
20. All of the following are true statements about the Homestead Act
EXCEPT
a. it was consistent with previous government public land
policy designed primarily to raise revenue
for
government.
b. about a half million families carved out
new homes in the 40 years after its passage.
c. ten times more of
the public land ended up in the hands of land speculators than
farmers.
d. thousands of people didn't last the five years
required by the Homestead Act.
A
21. Western cities like Denver and San Francisco did serve as a major
safety valve by providing
a. a home for new immigrants from
Europe.
b. recreational activities for its inhabitants.
c. a
home for economically struggling farmers, miners, and
easterners.
d. subsidized and low-cost housing for immigrants
from China and Japan.
e. None of these choices are correct.
C
22. Large numbers of Europeans were persuaded to come to America to
farm on the Northern frontier by
a. railroad agents who offered
to sell them cheap land.
b. churches and other nonprofit
organizations.
c. the offer of free homestead land by the U.S.
government.
d. European governments.
e. All of these choices
are correct.
A
23. What was the first national park established by the federal
government?
a. Yellowstone
b. Carlsbad
c. Great
Plains
d. Adirondack
e. Grand Canyon
A
24. As a result of the Battle of Little Bighorn
a. the
government sent extensive military reinforcements to the Dakotas and
Montana.
b. the government signed another Treaty of Fort Laramie
in 1868, abandoning the Bozeman Trail and
guaranteeing the Sioux
their lands.
c. the government adopted a policy of
"civilizing" Native Americans rather than trying to conquer
them.
d. white settlers agreed to halt their expansion beyond the
100th meridian.
e. the conflict between the U.S. Army and the
Sioux came to a peaceful end.
B
25. After exploring much of the West, geologist John Wesley Powell
advised in 1874 that
a. the rush of settlers was devastating the
western environment.
b. land west of the 100th meridian could not
be farmed without extensive irrigation.
c. damming western rivers
for irrigation purposes would damage mountains and forests.
d.
mining was the only industry that could sustain the western
economy.
e. irrigation was not necessary for farming west of the
100th meridian because of adequate rainfall and
fertile lands in
this region.
B
26. One major problem with the Homestead Act was that
a. the
government continued to try to maximize its revenue from public
lands.
b. 160 acres were inadequate for productive farming on the
rain-scarce Great Plains.
c. Midwestern farmers had to give up
raising livestock because of stiff competition with the West.
d.
most homesteaders knew little or nothing about farming in the
West.
e. it took several years to earn a profit from farming a homestead.
B
27. The Buffalo Soldiers were
a. U.S. Army units who survived on
the plains by killing buffalo.
b. African American cavalry and
soldiers who served in the frontier wars.
c. soldiers who sought
to defeat the Native Americans by depriving them of their primary food
supply.
d. soldiers who were killed in the Fetterman
massacre.
e. soldiers who were court-martialed for assisting
Native Americans with food and other provisions.
B
28. The United States government's outlawing of the Indian Sun
(Ghost) Dance in 1890 resulted in the
a. Battle of Wounded
Knee.
b. Sand Creek massacre.
c. Battle of Little
Bighorn.
d. Dawes Severalty Act.
e. Indian Reorganization Act.
A
29. Why did Western Kansas lose half of its population between 1888
and 1892?
a. as a result of a six-year drought
b. the repeal
of the Homestead Act
c. residents left for gold mines in
Nevada
d. the railroad lured people to larger cities in the
east
e. the return of aggressive Native American tribes
A
30. To assimilate indigenous peoples into American society, the Dawes
Act did all of the following EXCEPT
a. dissolve many tribes as
legal entities.
b. try to make rugged individualists of the
Native Americans.
c. wipe out tribal ownership of land.
d.
promise Native Americans U.S. citizenship in twenty-five
years.
e. expand recognized tribes' collective land ownership holdings.
E
31. How did some settlers and corporations commit fraud under the
Homestead Act?
a. by hiring employees and immigrants to serve as
“dummy” homesteaders
b. by posing as government agents and
seizing the land
c. bribing civil service workers in the Land
Grant Office
d. bribing members of the United States Senate
A
32. Which of these is NOT a true statement about women on the
frontier?
a. Women worked as prostitutes on the frontier.
b.
Some women made money running boarding houses.
c. Women were
voluntary participants in the saloon drinking and culture of the
frontier West.
d. Frontier women got the right to vote much later
than women in the East.
e. Women found a variety of opportunities
in the West.
D
33. Native Americans battled whites for all the following reasons
EXCEPT to
a. rescue their families who had been exiled to
Oklahoma.
b. avenge savage massacres of their people by
whites.
c. punish whites for breaking treaties.
d. defend
their lands against white invaders.
e. preserve their nomadic way
of life against forced settlement.
A
34. In the warfare that raged between the Native Americans and the
U.S. military after the Civil War,
a. the Native Americans were
never as well armed as the soldiers.
b. the U.S. Army was able to
dominate with its superior technology.
c. there was often great
cruelty and massacres on both sides.
d. Native Americans proved
to be no match for the soldiers.
e. Native Americans and soldiers
seldom came into face-to-face combat.
C
35. In 1890, when the superintendent of the census announced that a
stable frontier line was no longer discernible,
Americans were
disturbed because
a. they knew that the Homestead Act would no
longer do them much good.
b. they thought that there would be
renewed warfare between Native Americans and settlers.
c. the
idea of an endlessly open West had been an element of America's
history from the beginning.
d. many of them hoped eventually to
migrate to the West.
e. they feared that an influx of new western
states would strengthen the Populists and other radicals.
C
36. Which Scottish author wrote a travel journey across the American
West?
a. Robert Louis Stevenson
b. Jules Verne
c.
Irvine Welsh
d. Kate Chopin
e. Helen Hunt Jackson
A
37. The Dawes Severalty Act was designed to promote Native
American
a. prosperity.
b. annihilation.
c.
assimilation.
d. culture.
e. education.
C
38. In post-Civil War America, Native Americans of the Plains
surrendered their lands ONLY when they
a. chose to migrate
farther west.
b. received solemn promises from the government
that they would be left alone and provided with supplies
on the
remaining land.
c. lost their mobility as the whites killed their
horses.
d. were allowed to control the supply of food and other
staples to the reservations.
e. were defeated militarily by the
U.S. Army in various Indian wars.
B
39. The decline of the long drive and the cattle boom resulted
from
a. the settlement of homesteading farmers on range
land.
b. a series of extraordinarily severe winters.
c.
overgrazing and overproduction.
d. the inability to recruit
enough veteran cowboys.
e. barbed-wire fencing.
A, B, C, E
40. Frontier towns where cattle were shipped east after being driven
north on the "Long Drive" from Texas
included
a.
Dodge City, Kansas.
b. Deadwood, South Dakota.
c. Abilene,
Kansas.
d. Abilene, Texas.
e. Cheyenne, Wyoming.
A, C, E
41. Factors eventually leading to the defeat of the Native Americans
of the Plains included
a. the arrival of the railroads in the
West.
b. disease.
c. near-extermination of the
buffalo.
d. warfare with the U.S. Army.
e. extinction of
Native American religious beliefs.
A, B, C, D