{"id":83,"date":"2023-03-13T15:11:17","date_gmt":"2023-03-13T15:11:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/chapter\/module-2-3\/"},"modified":"2023-04-27T19:33:13","modified_gmt":"2023-04-27T19:33:13","slug":"module-2-3","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/chapter\/module-2-3\/","title":{"raw":"2.3 Western Economic Expansion","rendered":"2.3 Western Economic Expansion"},"content":{"raw":"<div><span style=\"text-align: initial;font-size: 1em\">As Native peoples were pushed out, American settlers poured in. Aside from agriculture and the extraction of natural resources\u2014such as timber and precious metals\u2014two major industries fueled the new western economy: ranching and railroads. Both developed in connection with each other and both shaped the collective American memory of the post\u2013Civil War \u201cWild West.\u201d<\/span><\/div>\r\n<div class=\"container\">\r\n\r\nAs one booster put it, \u201cthe West is purely a railroad enterprise.\u201d No economic enterprise rivaled the railroads in scale, scope, or sheer impact. No other businesses had attracted such enormous sums of capital, and no other ventures ever received such lavish government subsidies (business historian Alfred Chandler called the railroads the \u201cfirst modern business enterprise\u201d).<a href=\"#Sup1\"><sup id=\"1\">1<\/sup><\/a> By \u201cannihilating time and space\u201d\u2014by connecting the vastness of the continent\u2014the railroads transformed the United States and made the American West.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"700\"]<img class=\"responsive\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/29-chicago-burlington--quincy-rail-road-circa-1880.jpg#fixme\" alt=\"Photograph of late 19th century map of railroad routes from Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad company. \" width=\"700\" height=\"488\" \/> Railroads made the settlement and growth of the West possible. By the late nineteenth century, maps of the Midwest were filled with advertisements touting how quickly a traveler could traverse the country. \u202fThe <a href=\"http:\/\/www.environmentandsociety.org\/sites\/default\/files\/29-chicago-burlington--quincy-rail-road-circa-1880.jpg\">Environment and Society Portal,<\/a> a digital project from the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, a joint initiative of LMU Munich and the Deutsches Museum.[\/caption]\r\n\r\nNo railroad enterprise so captured the American imagination\u2014or federal support\u2014as the transcontinental railroad. The transcontinental railroad crossed western plains and mountains and linked the West Coast with the rail networks of the eastern United States. Constructed from the west by the Central Pacific and from the east by the Union Pacific, the two roads were linked in Utah in 1869 to great national fanfare. But such a herculean task was not easy, and national legislators threw enormous subsidies at railroad companies, a part of the Republican Party platform since 1856. The 1862 Pacific Railroad Act gave bonds of between $16,000 and $48,000 for each mile of construction and provided vast land grants to railroad companies. Between 1850 and 1871 alone, railroad companies received more than 175,000,000 acres of public land, an area larger than the state of Texas. Investors reaped enormous profits. As one congressional opponent put it in the 1870s, \u201cIf there be profit, the corporations may take it; if there be loss, the Government must bear it.\u201d<a href=\"#Sup2\"><sup id=\"2\">2<\/sup><\/a>\r\n\r\nIf railroads attracted unparalleled subsidies and investments, they also created enormous labor demands. By 1880, approximately four hundred thousand men\u2014or nearly 2.5 percent of the nation\u2019s entire workforce\u2014labored in the railroad industry. Much of the work was dangerous and low-paying, and companies relied heavily on immigrant labor to build tracks. Companies employed Irish workers in the early nineteenth century and Chinese workers in the late nineteenth century. By 1880, over two hundred thousand Chinese migrants lived in the United States. Once the rails were laid, companies still needed a large workforce to keep the trains running. Much railroad work was dangerous, but perhaps the most hazardous work was done by brakemen. Before the advent of automatic braking, an engineer would blow the \u201cdown brake\u201d whistle and brakemen would scramble to the top of the moving train, regardless of the weather conditions, and run from car to car manually turning brakes. Speed was necessary, and any slip could be fatal. Brakemen were also responsible for coupling the cars, attaching them together with a large pin. It was easy to lose a hand or finger and even a slight mistake could cause cars to collide.<a href=\"#Sup3\"><sup id=\"3\">3<\/sup><\/a>\r\n\r\nThe railroads boomed. In 1850, there were 9,000 miles of railroads in the United States. In 1900 there were 190,000, including several transcontinental lines.<a href=\"#Sup4\"><sup id=\"4\">4<\/sup><\/a> To manage these vast networks of freight and passenger lines, companies converged rails at hub cities. Of all the Midwestern and western cities that blossomed from the bridging of western resources and eastern capital in the late nineteenth century, Chicago was the most spectacular. It grew from two hundred inhabitants in 1833 to over a million by 1890. By 1893 it and the region from which it drew were completely transformed. The World\u2019s Columbian Exposition that year trumpeted the city\u2019s progress and broader technological progress, with typical Gilded Age ostentation. A huge, gleaming (but temporary) \u201cWhite City\u201d was built in neoclassical style to house all the features of the fair and cater to the needs of the visitors who arrived from all over the world. Highlighted in the title of this world\u2019s fair were the changes that had overtaken North America since Columbus made landfall four centuries earlier. Chicago became the most important western hub and served as the gateway between the farm and ranch country of the Great Plains and eastern markets. Railroads brought cattle from Texas to Chicago for slaughter, where they were then processed into packaged meats and shipped by refrigerated rail to New York City and other eastern cities. Such hubs became the central nodes in a rapid-transit economy that increasingly spread across the entire continent linking goods and people together in a new national network.\r\n\r\nThis national network created the fabled cattle drives of the 1860s and 1870s. The first cattle drives across the central Plains began soon after the Civil War. Railroads created the market for ranching, and for the few years after the war that railroads connected eastern markets with important market hubs such as Chicago, but had yet to reach Texas ranchlands, ranchers began driving cattle north, out of the Lone Star state, to major railroad terminuses in Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska. Ranchers used well-worn trails, such as the Chisholm Trail, for drives, but conflicts arose with Native Americans in the Indian Territory and farmers in Kansas who disliked the intrusion of large and environmentally destructive herds onto their own hunting, ranching, and farming lands. Other trails, such as the Western Trail, the Goodnight-Loving Trail, and the Shawnee Trail, were therefore blazed.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"700\"]<img class=\"responsive\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/17998v.jpg#fixme\" alt=\"Color photogchrom photograph depicting a cattle round up in Cimarron, Colorado c. 1898\" width=\"700\" height=\"527\" \/> This photochrom print (a new technology in the late nineteenth century that colorized images from a black-and-white negative) depicts a cattle round up in Cimarron, a crossroads of the late-nineteenth-century cattle drives. Detroit Photographic Co., \u201cColorado. \u2018Round up\u2019 on the Cimarron,\u201d c. 1898.\u202f<a href=\"http:\/\/www.loc.gov\/pictures\/item\/2008678198\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Library of Congress<\/a>.[\/caption]\r\n<p id=\"KC2\">Cattle drives were difficult tasks for the crews of men who managed the herds. Historians estimate the number of men who worked as cowboys in the late-nineteenth century to be between twelve thousand and forty thousand. Perhaps a fourth were African American, and more were likely Mexican or Mexican American. Much about the American cowboys evolved from Mexican vaqueros: cowboys adopted Mexican practices, gear, and terms such as rodeo, bronco, and lasso.<\/p>\r\nWhile most cattle drivers were men, there are at least sixteen verifiable accounts of women participating in the drives. Some, like Molly Dyer Goodnight, accompanied their husbands. Others, like Lizzie Johnson Williams, helped drive their own herds. Williams made at least three known trips with her herds up the Chisholm Trail.\r\n\r\nMany cowboys hoped one day to become ranch owners themselves, but employment was insecure and wages were low. Beginners could expect to earn around $20\u2013$25 per month, and those with years of experience might earn $40\u2013$45. Trail bosses could earn over $50 per month. And it was tough work. On a cattle drive, cowboys worked long hours and faced extremes of heat and cold and intense blowing dust. They subsisted on limited diets with irregular supplies.<a href=\"#Sup5\"><sup id=\"5\">5<\/sup><\/a>\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"700\"]<img class=\"responsive\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/02638v.jpg#fixme\" alt=\"Photograph titled &quot;The Cow Boy&quot; c. 1988 shows a cowboy on a horse in an open field.\" width=\"700\" height=\"493\" \/> Cowboys like the one pictured here worked the drives that supplied Chicago and other mid-western cities with the necessary cattle to supply and help grow the meat-packing industry. Their work was obsolete by the turn of the century, yet their image lived on through vaudeville shows and films that romanticized life in the West. John C.H. Grabill, \u201cThe Cow Boy,\u201d c. 1888. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.loc.gov\/pictures\/item\/99613920\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Library of Congress<\/a>.[\/caption]\r\n\r\nBut if workers of cattle earned low wages, owners and investors could receive riches. At the end of the Civil War, a steer worth $4 in Texas could fetch $40 in Kansas. Although profits slowly leveled off, large profits could still be made. And yet, by the 1880s, the great cattle drives were largely done. The railroads had created them, and the railroads ended them: railroad lines pushed into Texas and made the great drives obsolete. But ranching still brought profits and the Plains were better suited for grazing than for agriculture, and western ranchers continued supplying beef for national markets.\r\n\r\nRanching was just one of many western industries that depended on the railroads. By linking the Plains with national markets and rapidly moving people and goods, the railroads made the modern American West.\r\n<h4>Notes<\/h4>\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li id=\"Sup1\">Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., <em>The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business<\/em> (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1977). <a href=\"#1\"><img src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\r\n \t<li id=\"Sup2\">Richard White, <em>Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America<\/em> (New York: Norton, 2011), 107. <a href=\"#2\"><img src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\r\n \t<li id=\"Sup3\">Walter Licht, <em>Working on the Railroad: The Organization of Work in the Nineteenth Century<\/em> (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2014), chap. 5. <a href=\"#3\"><img src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\r\n \t<li id=\"Sup4\">John F. Stover, <em>The Routledge Historical Atlas of the American Railroads<\/em> (New York: Routledge, 1999), 15, 17, 39, 49. <a href=\"#4\"><img src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\r\n \t<li id=\"Sup5\">Richard W. Slatta, <em>Cowboys of the Americas<\/em> (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1994).<a href=\"#5\"><img src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\r\n<\/ol>\r\n<\/div>","rendered":"<div><span style=\"text-align: initial;font-size: 1em\">As Native peoples were pushed out, American settlers poured in. Aside from agriculture and the extraction of natural resources\u2014such as timber and precious metals\u2014two major industries fueled the new western economy: ranching and railroads. Both developed in connection with each other and both shaped the collective American memory of the post\u2013Civil War \u201cWild West.\u201d<\/span><\/div>\n<div class=\"container\">\n<p>As one booster put it, \u201cthe West is purely a railroad enterprise.\u201d No economic enterprise rivaled the railroads in scale, scope, or sheer impact. No other businesses had attracted such enormous sums of capital, and no other ventures ever received such lavish government subsidies (business historian Alfred Chandler called the railroads the \u201cfirst modern business enterprise\u201d).<a href=\"#Sup1\"><sup id=\"1\">1<\/sup><\/a> By \u201cannihilating time and space\u201d\u2014by connecting the vastness of the continent\u2014the railroads transformed the United States and made the American West.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 700px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"responsive\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/29-chicago-burlington--quincy-rail-road-circa-1880.jpg#fixme\" alt=\"Photograph of late 19th century map of railroad routes from Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad company.\" width=\"700\" height=\"488\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Railroads made the settlement and growth of the West possible. By the late nineteenth century, maps of the Midwest were filled with advertisements touting how quickly a traveler could traverse the country. \u202fThe <a href=\"http:\/\/www.environmentandsociety.org\/sites\/default\/files\/29-chicago-burlington--quincy-rail-road-circa-1880.jpg\">Environment and Society Portal,<\/a> a digital project from the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, a joint initiative of LMU Munich and the Deutsches Museum.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>No railroad enterprise so captured the American imagination\u2014or federal support\u2014as the transcontinental railroad. The transcontinental railroad crossed western plains and mountains and linked the West Coast with the rail networks of the eastern United States. Constructed from the west by the Central Pacific and from the east by the Union Pacific, the two roads were linked in Utah in 1869 to great national fanfare. But such a herculean task was not easy, and national legislators threw enormous subsidies at railroad companies, a part of the Republican Party platform since 1856. The 1862 Pacific Railroad Act gave bonds of between $16,000 and $48,000 for each mile of construction and provided vast land grants to railroad companies. Between 1850 and 1871 alone, railroad companies received more than 175,000,000 acres of public land, an area larger than the state of Texas. Investors reaped enormous profits. As one congressional opponent put it in the 1870s, \u201cIf there be profit, the corporations may take it; if there be loss, the Government must bear it.\u201d<a href=\"#Sup2\"><sup id=\"2\">2<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>If railroads attracted unparalleled subsidies and investments, they also created enormous labor demands. By 1880, approximately four hundred thousand men\u2014or nearly 2.5 percent of the nation\u2019s entire workforce\u2014labored in the railroad industry. Much of the work was dangerous and low-paying, and companies relied heavily on immigrant labor to build tracks. Companies employed Irish workers in the early nineteenth century and Chinese workers in the late nineteenth century. By 1880, over two hundred thousand Chinese migrants lived in the United States. Once the rails were laid, companies still needed a large workforce to keep the trains running. Much railroad work was dangerous, but perhaps the most hazardous work was done by brakemen. Before the advent of automatic braking, an engineer would blow the \u201cdown brake\u201d whistle and brakemen would scramble to the top of the moving train, regardless of the weather conditions, and run from car to car manually turning brakes. Speed was necessary, and any slip could be fatal. Brakemen were also responsible for coupling the cars, attaching them together with a large pin. It was easy to lose a hand or finger and even a slight mistake could cause cars to collide.<a href=\"#Sup3\"><sup id=\"3\">3<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The railroads boomed. In 1850, there were 9,000 miles of railroads in the United States. In 1900 there were 190,000, including several transcontinental lines.<a href=\"#Sup4\"><sup id=\"4\">4<\/sup><\/a> To manage these vast networks of freight and passenger lines, companies converged rails at hub cities. Of all the Midwestern and western cities that blossomed from the bridging of western resources and eastern capital in the late nineteenth century, Chicago was the most spectacular. It grew from two hundred inhabitants in 1833 to over a million by 1890. By 1893 it and the region from which it drew were completely transformed. The World\u2019s Columbian Exposition that year trumpeted the city\u2019s progress and broader technological progress, with typical Gilded Age ostentation. A huge, gleaming (but temporary) \u201cWhite City\u201d was built in neoclassical style to house all the features of the fair and cater to the needs of the visitors who arrived from all over the world. Highlighted in the title of this world\u2019s fair were the changes that had overtaken North America since Columbus made landfall four centuries earlier. Chicago became the most important western hub and served as the gateway between the farm and ranch country of the Great Plains and eastern markets. Railroads brought cattle from Texas to Chicago for slaughter, where they were then processed into packaged meats and shipped by refrigerated rail to New York City and other eastern cities. Such hubs became the central nodes in a rapid-transit economy that increasingly spread across the entire continent linking goods and people together in a new national network.<\/p>\n<p>This national network created the fabled cattle drives of the 1860s and 1870s. The first cattle drives across the central Plains began soon after the Civil War. Railroads created the market for ranching, and for the few years after the war that railroads connected eastern markets with important market hubs such as Chicago, but had yet to reach Texas ranchlands, ranchers began driving cattle north, out of the Lone Star state, to major railroad terminuses in Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska. Ranchers used well-worn trails, such as the Chisholm Trail, for drives, but conflicts arose with Native Americans in the Indian Territory and farmers in Kansas who disliked the intrusion of large and environmentally destructive herds onto their own hunting, ranching, and farming lands. Other trails, such as the Western Trail, the Goodnight-Loving Trail, and the Shawnee Trail, were therefore blazed.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 700px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"responsive\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/17998v.jpg#fixme\" alt=\"Color photogchrom photograph depicting a cattle round up in Cimarron, Colorado c. 1898\" width=\"700\" height=\"527\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">This photochrom print (a new technology in the late nineteenth century that colorized images from a black-and-white negative) depicts a cattle round up in Cimarron, a crossroads of the late-nineteenth-century cattle drives. Detroit Photographic Co., \u201cColorado. \u2018Round up\u2019 on the Cimarron,\u201d c. 1898.\u202f<a href=\"http:\/\/www.loc.gov\/pictures\/item\/2008678198\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Library of Congress<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p id=\"KC2\">Cattle drives were difficult tasks for the crews of men who managed the herds. Historians estimate the number of men who worked as cowboys in the late-nineteenth century to be between twelve thousand and forty thousand. Perhaps a fourth were African American, and more were likely Mexican or Mexican American. Much about the American cowboys evolved from Mexican vaqueros: cowboys adopted Mexican practices, gear, and terms such as rodeo, bronco, and lasso.<\/p>\n<p>While most cattle drivers were men, there are at least sixteen verifiable accounts of women participating in the drives. Some, like Molly Dyer Goodnight, accompanied their husbands. Others, like Lizzie Johnson Williams, helped drive their own herds. Williams made at least three known trips with her herds up the Chisholm Trail.<\/p>\n<p>Many cowboys hoped one day to become ranch owners themselves, but employment was insecure and wages were low. Beginners could expect to earn around $20\u2013$25 per month, and those with years of experience might earn $40\u2013$45. Trail bosses could earn over $50 per month. And it was tough work. On a cattle drive, cowboys worked long hours and faced extremes of heat and cold and intense blowing dust. They subsisted on limited diets with irregular supplies.<a href=\"#Sup5\"><sup id=\"5\">5<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 700px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"responsive\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/02638v.jpg#fixme\" alt=\"Photograph titled &quot;The Cow Boy&quot; c. 1988 shows a cowboy on a horse in an open field.\" width=\"700\" height=\"493\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Cowboys like the one pictured here worked the drives that supplied Chicago and other mid-western cities with the necessary cattle to supply and help grow the meat-packing industry. Their work was obsolete by the turn of the century, yet their image lived on through vaudeville shows and films that romanticized life in the West. John C.H. Grabill, \u201cThe Cow Boy,\u201d c. 1888. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.loc.gov\/pictures\/item\/99613920\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Library of Congress<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>But if workers of cattle earned low wages, owners and investors could receive riches. At the end of the Civil War, a steer worth $4 in Texas could fetch $40 in Kansas. Although profits slowly leveled off, large profits could still be made. And yet, by the 1880s, the great cattle drives were largely done. The railroads had created them, and the railroads ended them: railroad lines pushed into Texas and made the great drives obsolete. But ranching still brought profits and the Plains were better suited for grazing than for agriculture, and western ranchers continued supplying beef for national markets.<\/p>\n<p>Ranching was just one of many western industries that depended on the railroads. By linking the Plains with national markets and rapidly moving people and goods, the railroads made the modern American West.<\/p>\n<h4>Notes<\/h4>\n<ol>\n<li id=\"Sup1\">Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., <em>The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business<\/em> (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1977). <a href=\"#1\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"Sup2\">Richard White, <em>Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America<\/em> (New York: Norton, 2011), 107. <a href=\"#2\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"Sup3\">Walter Licht, <em>Working on the Railroad: The Organization of Work in the Nineteenth Century<\/em> (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2014), chap. 5. <a href=\"#3\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"Sup4\">John F. Stover, <em>The Routledge Historical Atlas of the American Railroads<\/em> (New York: Routledge, 1999), 15, 17, 39, 49. <a href=\"#4\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"Sup5\">Richard W. Slatta, <em>Cowboys of the Americas<\/em> (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1994).<a href=\"#5\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.ccconline.org\/ccco\/2019Master\/HIS122\/eText\/Sections\/Section2\/..\/..\/Images\/redirect.png#fixme\" alt=\"image\" \/><\/a><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":101,"menu_order":15,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-83","chapter","type-chapter","status-publish","hentry"],"part":28,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/83","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/101"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/83\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":647,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/83\/revisions\/647"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/28"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/83\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=83"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=83"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=83"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/ppschis1220ushistsincecivilwar\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=83"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}