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American Democracy in Word and Deed
                                        MDUSD/UCB H-SSP
                                    4 Grade Lesson: “Railroads”
                                     th




Developed by: Carol Wallis, Christi Hadley, Kimberly Leyden, Laura Ferguson, and Lauren Weaver

Teaching American History Grant Focus Question:
      How have the words and deeds of people and institutions shaped democracy in the U.S.?

California History Standards: 4.4, 4.4.1

Unit Focus: Unit 4
       Growth and Development: Transportation, Communication, and a Growing Economy.

Lesson Focus Question:
       How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s?

Lesson Working Thesis:
      The growth of railroads in the late 1800s affected California’s economy in both positive and
      negative ways.

Reading and Writing Strategies:
   • READING Strategy:
            Analyzing a Political Cartoon
         o Cause and Effect
   • WRITING Strategy:
         o Cause and Effect paragraph, scaffolded outline

Suggested Amount of Time:
      One to two class periods

Textbook:
      California: A Changing State. Orlando, Florida: Reflection Series, Harcourt
      School Publishers, 2007, Chapter 7, pp287-288 and 295-297

Primary Source Citations:
      G. F. Keller. The Curse of California. Illustration. The Wasp. 19 August 1882.
      [Optional] Hart, Alfred A. “Traveler’s Own Map of the Central Pacific Railroad of California,”
             The Travelers Own Book: A Panorama of Overland Travel, from Chicago to San
             Francisco, Chicago, Horton & Leonard, 1870. For reference only, can be viewed at:
             http://cprr.org/Museum/Maps/_hart_1870_travelers_map.html
      [Optional]Southern Pacific Company. Map of California. Color Lithographed Map.8th edition,1901


Context of the lesson in the unit (and its connection to American Democracy in Word and Deed):
      Students will be analyzing a political cartoon and connecting it to the section in the textbook
      about the affect of the railroads on California’s economy in the 1800s.



                                                                                                        1
Teacher Lesson Procedure:
1. Introduction
    • Review CH 7, Lesson 2, “Building the Transcontinental Railroad” [p.4]. Review the “Big Four”
        and teach vocabulary as needed.
            o Primary Source Option: To show students the extent of the Central Pacific’s railroad lines
                (especially the railroad lines east of Sacramento through the Sierra Nevada), visit the
                following copyrighted map:
                http://cprr.org/Museum/Maps/_hart_1870_travelers_map.html
    • Pass out Analyzing a Political Cartoon worksheet [p.5, teacher reference/key p6, full page copy
        for the elmo or overhead projector p7]
    • Explain the purpose of political cartoons
    • Students work in pairs to describe what they see and complete DAY 1 Questions box [p.5, cartoon
        key with additional info. p6, extra copy to project on overhead or Elmo p7]
    • Save DAY 2 Analyzing a Political Cartoon Question to revisit later

2. Reading Strategy
    • Pass out “Rails Across California” reading from textbook [p9] and Cause and Effect chart [p10,
       teacher key p11, student sample p14]
    • Teacher guided choral reading of “Rails Across California”
           o Primary Source Option, Map of California [p8]: Teacher may choose to project this map to
               visually illustrate the Southern Pacific Railroad as the “octopus” that spread out across
               California
    • Review/explain cause and effect
    • Teacher completes the cause and effect chart with the students
    • When the chart is complete, teacher guides students in a discussion of how the railroads affected
       California’s economy
    • Return to political cartoon and have students complete DAY 2: Analyzing a Political Cartoon [p5]
    • Teacher leads a discussion linking the reading with the cartoon
    • Students work in pairs to complete the analysis question
    • Teacher guides a discussion about the meaning of the cartoon

3. Writing Strategy
    • Pass out Paragraph Outline with Writing Prompt [p12, teacher key p13, student sample p15]
    • Teacher scaffolds the writing assignment to show students how they will be using the Cause and
        Effect chart [p10] to aid them as they complete the outline
    • Paragraph can be written as a class, with partners or individually




                                                                                                       2
LESSON STANDARDS
History-Social Science Content Standards:
   4.4 Students explain how California became an agricultural and industrial power, tracing the
   transformation of the California economy and its political and cultural development since the 1850s.
           1. Understand the story and lasting influence of the Pony Express, Overland Mail Service,
              Western Union, and the building of the transcontinental railroad, including the
              contributions of Chinese workers to its construction.
Historical and Social Sciences Analysis Skills:
   Research, Evidence, and Point of View
       • Students pose relevant questions about events they encounter in historical documents,
           eyewitness accounts, oral histories, letters, diaries, artifacts, photographs, maps, artworks, and
           architecture.
   Historical Interpretation
       • Students identify and interpret the multiple causes and effects of historical events.
Common Core English Language Arts Standards:
 Reading Informational Text, Grade 4
      Key Ideas and Details
      RI.4.3. Explain events, procedures, ideas, or concepts in a historical, scientific, or technical text,
      including what happened and why, based on specific information in the text.
              -Textbook excerpts, pp287-88 and 295-97
       Craft and Structure
       RI.4.5. Describe the overall structure (e.g., chronology, comparison, cause/effect,
       problem/solution) of events, ideas, concepts, or information in a text or part of a text.
               -Cause and Effect Textbook Reading, pp295-97

       Integration of Knowledge and Ideas
       RI.4.7. Interpret information presented visually, orally, or quantitatively (e.g., in charts, graphs,
       diagrams, time lines, animations, or interactive elements on Web pages) and explain how the
       information contributes to an understanding of the text in which it appears.
               -Political Cartoon

 Writing, Grade 4
       Text Types and Purposes
       W.4.2. Write informative/explanatory texts to examine a topic and convey ideas and information
       clearly.
       • Introduce a topic clearly and group related information in paragraphs and sections; include
           formatting (e.g., headings), illustrations, and multimedia when useful to aiding
           comprehension.
       • Develop the topic with facts, definitions, concrete details, quotations, or other information and
           examples related to the topic.


                                                                                                               3
•   Link ideas within categories of information using words and phrases (e.g., another, for
          example, also, because).
      •   Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to inform about or explain the topic.
      •   Provide a concluding statement or section related to the information or explanation presented
             -Cause and Effect scaffolded paragraph outline
             Building the Transcontinental Railroad
                       Chapter 7 Lesson 2, excerpt from pages 287-88


                                  Hoping for a Railroad

      Many people supported the idea of a transcontinental railroad (a railroad that would
cross the continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific.) In addition to improving travel,
many thought a transcontinental railroad would increase trade. Goods from California and
goods brought to California from Asia could be carried by train to the East Coast.
      A young man named Theodore Judah took a special interest in the idea of a
transcontinental railroad. Judah was an engineer, someone who plans and builds railroads
and other structures. He knew the hardest part of the building a railroad to California
would be crossing the Sierra Nevada.



                                  Building the Railroad
      Building a transcontinental railroad would cost millions of dollars. Judah began to
look for people willing to invest in the railroad. Judah found four men who wanted to
invest—Leland Stanford, Collis P. Huntington, Mark Hopkins, and Charles Crocker. They
became known as the Big Four.


      In 1861, Judah and the Big Four formed the Central Pacific Railroad Company . . .
In 1862, Congress passed the Pacific Railroad Act. The United States would provide
money and land for the Central Pacific Railroad Company to build a railroad east from



                                                                                                          4
Sacramento. Another railroad company, the Union Pacific, would lay tracks west from
Council Bluffs, Iowa. The two railroad lines would meet in between.
              From textbook: California: A Changing State. Orlando, Florida: Reflection Series, Harcourt School Publishers, 2007, pages 287-88




  Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s?




                                                                                                                                            5
Analyzing a Political Cartoon                                NAME_____________________________


                                                                          DAY 1 Questions:
                                                                          1. What is the name of the
                                                                             cartoon?




                                                                          2. What is the name of the
                                                                             octopus?




                                                                          3. What is the octopus holding in
                                                                             his tentacles?




                                                                          4. Describe the eyes.




                                           G. F. Keller. The Curse of California. Illustration. The Wasp. 19 August 1882.

 DAY 2 Questions: Analyzing the Political Cartoon
    1. According to the cartoonist, how did the Big Four affect California’s economy?




                                                                                                                       6
TEACHER REFERENCE




ADDITIONAL TEACHER INFORMATION
          Nob Hill is a wealthy area in San Francisco and one of the owners of the Southern Pacific Railroad (SPRR) owned a
home there. The railroad also owned their own telegraph lines and ships, and they only used their telegraph lines and would
only transport items using their own ships. Not only that, but the railroad lines only went to their own ports. This took nearly
all the business away from the other telegraph lines and shipping companies. They were also the only railroad around, so any
farmers or others who wanted to transport goods were forced to pay whatever prices the railroad wanted. Another industry
that suffered was the stagecoach industry. The railroad was a much faster and much more reliable source of transportation.
          Mussel Slough was a town in the central valley where squatters were living on the land owned by SPRR. The
railroad owners sent the Federal Marshals into Mussel Slough to get the squatters off the land. In the struggle that ensued, 7
people were killed by the Marshals.
                                                                                                                              7
G. F. Keller. The Curse of California. Illustration. The Wasp. 19 August 1882.

                                                                                 8
Southern Pacific Company: Map of California, 1901




http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~22098~780011:Map-of-California-compiled-from-lat
Map of California compiled from latest official & authentic information, by the Southern Pacific Company. (8th. edn. 1901)

Collection: David Rumsey Historical Map, Author: Southern Pacific Company, Title: Map of California, Date: 1901, Publisher:
Southern Pacific Company, San Francisco [Note: Col. lithographed map. Relief shown by hachures. Shows drainage, settlements,
railroads, counties, etc. Includes indexes, and tables of temperature and county populations. David Rumsey Collection copy has
annotations in red ink. "No. 74. 8-2-01-50M".



                                                                                                                                 9
Rails Across California
                                         Effects of the Railroad
      When the transcontinental railroad was completed, Californians were thrilled.
People in Sacramento hoped that the railroad would help the city grow. In San Francisco,
business owners were eager to send goods from Asia by rail to the East coast.
      The railroad did lead to growth. However, it also caused problems for some
businesses. It brought new products into the state that sometimes cost less that goods
made and sold in California. Many businesses in the state suffered and closed.


                                                 More Railroads
      Before the transcontinental railroad was finished, the Big Four had begun building
other railroads in California. One of these was the Southern Pacific Railroad. Part of this
railroad ran through the Central Valley from Stockton to Los Angeles. Towns along the
railroad’s route –such as Bakersfield, Modesto, Fresno, and Merced—grew quickly.
      In return for building tracks, the Southern Pacific Railroad had gained more than
11million acres of land. This was a result of the Pacific Railroad Act of 1862. The act
granted large areas of land surrounding railroad tracks to the railroad company that laid
the tracks.
      The Big Four gained more and more land with every new railroad track that they
laid in California. As they grew wealthier, they bought or started other railroads,
including the Western Pacific and the California Southern. The railroads owned by the
Big Four stretched in so many directions that they were nicknamed “the Octopus.”
      For almost 20 years, the Big Four’s railroads had little competition in California. In
business, competition is a contest among companies to get the most customers or to sell
the most products. Because the railroads owned by the Big Four had little competition,
they could charge high prices for train tickets. At one time, a round-trip ticket from the
East to California cost more than $200. This is equal to about $3578 in today’s money.
              From textbook: California: A Changing State. Orlando, Florida: Reflection Series, Harcourt School Publishers, 2007, pages 295-297

                                                                                                                                           10
Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s?




                                                                                    11
NAME_____________________________________
               Cause and Effect Chart: The Railroads in California
                  Cause                                             Effect
[Because]
… the transcontinental railroad was completed   The railroad did lead to growth.
[Because]
 It brought new products into the state that    ________________________________
sometimes cost less that goods made and sold
                                                ________________________________
in California.
[Because]                                        Towns along the railroad’s route –such as
Part of the Southern Pacific Railroad ran       Bakersfield, Modesto, Fresno, and Merced—
through the Central Valley from Stockton to     _______________________
Los Angeles.
[Because]
________________________________                The act granted large areas of land
                                                surrounding railroad tracks to the railroad
________________________________                company that laid the tracks.

[Because]
The act granted large areas of land             In return for building tracks, the Southern
surrounding railroad tracks to the railroad     Pacific Railroad (the Big Four) had gained
company that laid the tracks.                   more than 11 million acres of land.
[Because]
The Big Four gained more and more land with
every new railroad track that they laid in      ________________________________
California.
[Because]                                       they bought or started other railroads,
As they grew wealthier,                         including the Western Pacific and the
                                                California Southern.
[Because]
The railroads owned by the Big Four stretched that they were nicknamed ___________
in so many directions                         _____________________. For almost 20
                                              years, the Big Four’s railroads had little
                                              competition in California.
[Because]
Because the railroads owned by the Big Four   ________________________________
had little competition,                       ________________________________


  Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s?

                                                                                              12
TEACHER KEY
                                  Cause and Effect KEY
                   Cause                                            Effect
[Because]
… the transcontinental railroad was completed     The railroad did lead to growth.
[Because]
 It brought new products into the state that      Many businesses in the state suffered
sometimes cost less than goods made and sold      and closed.
in California.
[Because]
Part of the Southern Pacific Railroad ran         Towns along the railroad’s route –such as
through the Central Valley from Stockton to       Bakersfield, Modesto, Fresno, and Merced
Los Angeles.                                      —grew quickly.
[Because]                                         The act granted large areas of land
The Pacific Railroad Act of 1862.                 surrounding railroad tracks to the railroad
                                                  company that laid the tracks.
[Because]                                         In return for building tracks, the Southern
The act granted large areas of land surrounding Pacific Railroad (the Big Four) had gained
railroad tracks to the railroad company that laid more than 11 million acres of land.
the tracks.
[Because]
The Big Four gained more and more land with       They grew wealthier.
every new railroad track that they laid in
California.
[Because]                                         they bought or started other railroads,
As they grew wealthier,                           including the Western Pacific and the
                                                  California Southern.
[Because]                                         that they were nicknamed “the Octopus.”
The railroads owned by the Big Four stretched
                                                  For almost 20 years, the Big Four’s
in so many directions
                                                  railroads had little competition in California.
[Because]
                                                  they could charge high prices for
Because the railroads owned by the Big Four
had little competition,
                                                  train tickets.

  Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s?
                                                NAME____________________________
                                                                                             13
Railroad Cause and Effect Paragraph
 Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s?
                     California’s economy changed in many ways as result of
 Thesis statement:
the completion of the railroad.
         It brought _____________________________________________
 Cause:
_________________________________________________
_________________________________________________.
           Therefore, many businesses in the state _____________________
 Effect:
_________________________________________________.
           The Southern Pacific Railroad ran __________________________
 Cause:
_________________________________________________
           and this led to the growth of towns _______________________
 Effect:
_______________________________________________________.
           The Railroad Act of 1862 ________________________________
 Cause:
_________________________________________________.
                 As a result, _______________________________________
 Cause/Effect:
_______________________________________________________.
                 The Big Four, who owned ___________________________
 Cause/Effect:
__________________________, became _________________.
           With this money, the Big Four were able to ___________________
 Effect:
_______________________________________________________.
           Because their railroads ___________________________________,
 Cause:


                                                                                     14
they were nicknamed “____________________________.”
 Effect:
             The railroads owned by the Big Four _______________________
 Cause:
_________________________________________________,
             so ___________________________________________________.
 Effect:


TEACHER KEY: Words in red denote Cause/Effect relationship words
                       Railroad paragraph

Thesis statement: California’s economy changed in many ways as result of the completion of the
railroad.

Cause: It brought new products into the state that often cost less than goods made and
sold in California.

Effect: Therefore, many businesses in the state suffered and closed because they lost money.

Cause: The Southern Pacific Railroad ran through the Central Valley from Stockton to Los
Angeles.

Effect: This led to the growth of towns along the railroad’s route.

Cause: The Railroad Act of 1862 granted land to the railroad companies that built the
railroads.

Cause/Effect: As a result, the Southern Pacific Railroad gained more than 11 million
acres of land.

Cause/Effect: The Big Four, who owned the Southern Pacific Railroad, became richer.

Effect: With this money, the Big Four were able to buy or start other railroads.

Cause: Because their railroads stretched in so many directions,

Effect: they were nicknamed “the Octopus.”

Cause: The railroads owned by the Big Four had very little competition,

Effect: so they could charge high prices for train tickets.


                                                                                                 15
California’s economy changed in many ways as result of the completion of the railroad. It
brought new products into the state that often cost less than goods made and sold in California.
Therefore, many businesses in the state suffered and closed because they lost money. The Southern
Pacific Railroad ran through the Central Valley from Stockton to Los Angeles. This led to the growth
of towns along the railroad’s route. The Railroad Act of 1862 gave land to the railroad companies that
built the railroads. As a result, the Southern Pacific Railroad gained more than 11 million acres of land.
The Big Four who owned the Southern Pacific Railroad became richer. With this money, the Big Four
were able to buy or start other railroads. Because their railroads stretched in so many directions, they
were nicknamed “the Octopus.” The railroads owned by the Big Four had very little competition, so they
could charge high prices for train tickets.

         Student Sample, page 1 of 2:




                                                                                                       16
Student Sample, page 2 of 2:
                               17
18

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Standard 4.4.1 Railroads Lesson

  • 1. American Democracy in Word and Deed MDUSD/UCB H-SSP 4 Grade Lesson: “Railroads” th Developed by: Carol Wallis, Christi Hadley, Kimberly Leyden, Laura Ferguson, and Lauren Weaver Teaching American History Grant Focus Question: How have the words and deeds of people and institutions shaped democracy in the U.S.? California History Standards: 4.4, 4.4.1 Unit Focus: Unit 4 Growth and Development: Transportation, Communication, and a Growing Economy. Lesson Focus Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s? Lesson Working Thesis: The growth of railroads in the late 1800s affected California’s economy in both positive and negative ways. Reading and Writing Strategies: • READING Strategy: Analyzing a Political Cartoon o Cause and Effect • WRITING Strategy: o Cause and Effect paragraph, scaffolded outline Suggested Amount of Time: One to two class periods Textbook: California: A Changing State. Orlando, Florida: Reflection Series, Harcourt School Publishers, 2007, Chapter 7, pp287-288 and 295-297 Primary Source Citations: G. F. Keller. The Curse of California. Illustration. The Wasp. 19 August 1882. [Optional] Hart, Alfred A. “Traveler’s Own Map of the Central Pacific Railroad of California,” The Travelers Own Book: A Panorama of Overland Travel, from Chicago to San Francisco, Chicago, Horton & Leonard, 1870. For reference only, can be viewed at: http://cprr.org/Museum/Maps/_hart_1870_travelers_map.html [Optional]Southern Pacific Company. Map of California. Color Lithographed Map.8th edition,1901 Context of the lesson in the unit (and its connection to American Democracy in Word and Deed): Students will be analyzing a political cartoon and connecting it to the section in the textbook about the affect of the railroads on California’s economy in the 1800s. 1
  • 2. Teacher Lesson Procedure: 1. Introduction • Review CH 7, Lesson 2, “Building the Transcontinental Railroad” [p.4]. Review the “Big Four” and teach vocabulary as needed. o Primary Source Option: To show students the extent of the Central Pacific’s railroad lines (especially the railroad lines east of Sacramento through the Sierra Nevada), visit the following copyrighted map: http://cprr.org/Museum/Maps/_hart_1870_travelers_map.html • Pass out Analyzing a Political Cartoon worksheet [p.5, teacher reference/key p6, full page copy for the elmo or overhead projector p7] • Explain the purpose of political cartoons • Students work in pairs to describe what they see and complete DAY 1 Questions box [p.5, cartoon key with additional info. p6, extra copy to project on overhead or Elmo p7] • Save DAY 2 Analyzing a Political Cartoon Question to revisit later 2. Reading Strategy • Pass out “Rails Across California” reading from textbook [p9] and Cause and Effect chart [p10, teacher key p11, student sample p14] • Teacher guided choral reading of “Rails Across California” o Primary Source Option, Map of California [p8]: Teacher may choose to project this map to visually illustrate the Southern Pacific Railroad as the “octopus” that spread out across California • Review/explain cause and effect • Teacher completes the cause and effect chart with the students • When the chart is complete, teacher guides students in a discussion of how the railroads affected California’s economy • Return to political cartoon and have students complete DAY 2: Analyzing a Political Cartoon [p5] • Teacher leads a discussion linking the reading with the cartoon • Students work in pairs to complete the analysis question • Teacher guides a discussion about the meaning of the cartoon 3. Writing Strategy • Pass out Paragraph Outline with Writing Prompt [p12, teacher key p13, student sample p15] • Teacher scaffolds the writing assignment to show students how they will be using the Cause and Effect chart [p10] to aid them as they complete the outline • Paragraph can be written as a class, with partners or individually 2
  • 3. LESSON STANDARDS History-Social Science Content Standards: 4.4 Students explain how California became an agricultural and industrial power, tracing the transformation of the California economy and its political and cultural development since the 1850s. 1. Understand the story and lasting influence of the Pony Express, Overland Mail Service, Western Union, and the building of the transcontinental railroad, including the contributions of Chinese workers to its construction. Historical and Social Sciences Analysis Skills: Research, Evidence, and Point of View • Students pose relevant questions about events they encounter in historical documents, eyewitness accounts, oral histories, letters, diaries, artifacts, photographs, maps, artworks, and architecture. Historical Interpretation • Students identify and interpret the multiple causes and effects of historical events. Common Core English Language Arts Standards: Reading Informational Text, Grade 4 Key Ideas and Details RI.4.3. Explain events, procedures, ideas, or concepts in a historical, scientific, or technical text, including what happened and why, based on specific information in the text. -Textbook excerpts, pp287-88 and 295-97 Craft and Structure RI.4.5. Describe the overall structure (e.g., chronology, comparison, cause/effect, problem/solution) of events, ideas, concepts, or information in a text or part of a text. -Cause and Effect Textbook Reading, pp295-97 Integration of Knowledge and Ideas RI.4.7. Interpret information presented visually, orally, or quantitatively (e.g., in charts, graphs, diagrams, time lines, animations, or interactive elements on Web pages) and explain how the information contributes to an understanding of the text in which it appears. -Political Cartoon Writing, Grade 4 Text Types and Purposes W.4.2. Write informative/explanatory texts to examine a topic and convey ideas and information clearly. • Introduce a topic clearly and group related information in paragraphs and sections; include formatting (e.g., headings), illustrations, and multimedia when useful to aiding comprehension. • Develop the topic with facts, definitions, concrete details, quotations, or other information and examples related to the topic. 3
  • 4. Link ideas within categories of information using words and phrases (e.g., another, for example, also, because). • Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to inform about or explain the topic. • Provide a concluding statement or section related to the information or explanation presented -Cause and Effect scaffolded paragraph outline Building the Transcontinental Railroad Chapter 7 Lesson 2, excerpt from pages 287-88 Hoping for a Railroad Many people supported the idea of a transcontinental railroad (a railroad that would cross the continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific.) In addition to improving travel, many thought a transcontinental railroad would increase trade. Goods from California and goods brought to California from Asia could be carried by train to the East Coast. A young man named Theodore Judah took a special interest in the idea of a transcontinental railroad. Judah was an engineer, someone who plans and builds railroads and other structures. He knew the hardest part of the building a railroad to California would be crossing the Sierra Nevada. Building the Railroad Building a transcontinental railroad would cost millions of dollars. Judah began to look for people willing to invest in the railroad. Judah found four men who wanted to invest—Leland Stanford, Collis P. Huntington, Mark Hopkins, and Charles Crocker. They became known as the Big Four. In 1861, Judah and the Big Four formed the Central Pacific Railroad Company . . . In 1862, Congress passed the Pacific Railroad Act. The United States would provide money and land for the Central Pacific Railroad Company to build a railroad east from 4
  • 5. Sacramento. Another railroad company, the Union Pacific, would lay tracks west from Council Bluffs, Iowa. The two railroad lines would meet in between. From textbook: California: A Changing State. Orlando, Florida: Reflection Series, Harcourt School Publishers, 2007, pages 287-88 Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s? 5
  • 6. Analyzing a Political Cartoon NAME_____________________________ DAY 1 Questions: 1. What is the name of the cartoon? 2. What is the name of the octopus? 3. What is the octopus holding in his tentacles? 4. Describe the eyes. G. F. Keller. The Curse of California. Illustration. The Wasp. 19 August 1882. DAY 2 Questions: Analyzing the Political Cartoon 1. According to the cartoonist, how did the Big Four affect California’s economy? 6
  • 7. TEACHER REFERENCE ADDITIONAL TEACHER INFORMATION Nob Hill is a wealthy area in San Francisco and one of the owners of the Southern Pacific Railroad (SPRR) owned a home there. The railroad also owned their own telegraph lines and ships, and they only used their telegraph lines and would only transport items using their own ships. Not only that, but the railroad lines only went to their own ports. This took nearly all the business away from the other telegraph lines and shipping companies. They were also the only railroad around, so any farmers or others who wanted to transport goods were forced to pay whatever prices the railroad wanted. Another industry that suffered was the stagecoach industry. The railroad was a much faster and much more reliable source of transportation. Mussel Slough was a town in the central valley where squatters were living on the land owned by SPRR. The railroad owners sent the Federal Marshals into Mussel Slough to get the squatters off the land. In the struggle that ensued, 7 people were killed by the Marshals. 7
  • 8. G. F. Keller. The Curse of California. Illustration. The Wasp. 19 August 1882. 8
  • 9. Southern Pacific Company: Map of California, 1901 http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~22098~780011:Map-of-California-compiled-from-lat Map of California compiled from latest official & authentic information, by the Southern Pacific Company. (8th. edn. 1901) Collection: David Rumsey Historical Map, Author: Southern Pacific Company, Title: Map of California, Date: 1901, Publisher: Southern Pacific Company, San Francisco [Note: Col. lithographed map. Relief shown by hachures. Shows drainage, settlements, railroads, counties, etc. Includes indexes, and tables of temperature and county populations. David Rumsey Collection copy has annotations in red ink. "No. 74. 8-2-01-50M". 9
  • 10. Rails Across California Effects of the Railroad When the transcontinental railroad was completed, Californians were thrilled. People in Sacramento hoped that the railroad would help the city grow. In San Francisco, business owners were eager to send goods from Asia by rail to the East coast. The railroad did lead to growth. However, it also caused problems for some businesses. It brought new products into the state that sometimes cost less that goods made and sold in California. Many businesses in the state suffered and closed. More Railroads Before the transcontinental railroad was finished, the Big Four had begun building other railroads in California. One of these was the Southern Pacific Railroad. Part of this railroad ran through the Central Valley from Stockton to Los Angeles. Towns along the railroad’s route –such as Bakersfield, Modesto, Fresno, and Merced—grew quickly. In return for building tracks, the Southern Pacific Railroad had gained more than 11million acres of land. This was a result of the Pacific Railroad Act of 1862. The act granted large areas of land surrounding railroad tracks to the railroad company that laid the tracks. The Big Four gained more and more land with every new railroad track that they laid in California. As they grew wealthier, they bought or started other railroads, including the Western Pacific and the California Southern. The railroads owned by the Big Four stretched in so many directions that they were nicknamed “the Octopus.” For almost 20 years, the Big Four’s railroads had little competition in California. In business, competition is a contest among companies to get the most customers or to sell the most products. Because the railroads owned by the Big Four had little competition, they could charge high prices for train tickets. At one time, a round-trip ticket from the East to California cost more than $200. This is equal to about $3578 in today’s money. From textbook: California: A Changing State. Orlando, Florida: Reflection Series, Harcourt School Publishers, 2007, pages 295-297 10
  • 11. Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s? 11
  • 12. NAME_____________________________________ Cause and Effect Chart: The Railroads in California Cause Effect [Because] … the transcontinental railroad was completed The railroad did lead to growth. [Because] It brought new products into the state that ________________________________ sometimes cost less that goods made and sold ________________________________ in California. [Because] Towns along the railroad’s route –such as Part of the Southern Pacific Railroad ran Bakersfield, Modesto, Fresno, and Merced— through the Central Valley from Stockton to _______________________ Los Angeles. [Because] ________________________________ The act granted large areas of land surrounding railroad tracks to the railroad ________________________________ company that laid the tracks. [Because] The act granted large areas of land In return for building tracks, the Southern surrounding railroad tracks to the railroad Pacific Railroad (the Big Four) had gained company that laid the tracks. more than 11 million acres of land. [Because] The Big Four gained more and more land with every new railroad track that they laid in ________________________________ California. [Because] they bought or started other railroads, As they grew wealthier, including the Western Pacific and the California Southern. [Because] The railroads owned by the Big Four stretched that they were nicknamed ___________ in so many directions _____________________. For almost 20 years, the Big Four’s railroads had little competition in California. [Because] Because the railroads owned by the Big Four ________________________________ had little competition, ________________________________ Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s? 12
  • 13. TEACHER KEY Cause and Effect KEY Cause Effect [Because] … the transcontinental railroad was completed The railroad did lead to growth. [Because] It brought new products into the state that Many businesses in the state suffered sometimes cost less than goods made and sold and closed. in California. [Because] Part of the Southern Pacific Railroad ran Towns along the railroad’s route –such as through the Central Valley from Stockton to Bakersfield, Modesto, Fresno, and Merced Los Angeles. —grew quickly. [Because] The act granted large areas of land The Pacific Railroad Act of 1862. surrounding railroad tracks to the railroad company that laid the tracks. [Because] In return for building tracks, the Southern The act granted large areas of land surrounding Pacific Railroad (the Big Four) had gained railroad tracks to the railroad company that laid more than 11 million acres of land. the tracks. [Because] The Big Four gained more and more land with They grew wealthier. every new railroad track that they laid in California. [Because] they bought or started other railroads, As they grew wealthier, including the Western Pacific and the California Southern. [Because] that they were nicknamed “the Octopus.” The railroads owned by the Big Four stretched For almost 20 years, the Big Four’s in so many directions railroads had little competition in California. [Because] they could charge high prices for Because the railroads owned by the Big Four had little competition, train tickets. Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s? NAME____________________________ 13
  • 14. Railroad Cause and Effect Paragraph Lesson Question: How did railroads affect California’s economy in the late 1800s? California’s economy changed in many ways as result of Thesis statement: the completion of the railroad. It brought _____________________________________________ Cause: _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________. Therefore, many businesses in the state _____________________ Effect: _________________________________________________. The Southern Pacific Railroad ran __________________________ Cause: _________________________________________________ and this led to the growth of towns _______________________ Effect: _______________________________________________________. The Railroad Act of 1862 ________________________________ Cause: _________________________________________________. As a result, _______________________________________ Cause/Effect: _______________________________________________________. The Big Four, who owned ___________________________ Cause/Effect: __________________________, became _________________. With this money, the Big Four were able to ___________________ Effect: _______________________________________________________. Because their railroads ___________________________________, Cause: 14
  • 15. they were nicknamed “____________________________.” Effect: The railroads owned by the Big Four _______________________ Cause: _________________________________________________, so ___________________________________________________. Effect: TEACHER KEY: Words in red denote Cause/Effect relationship words Railroad paragraph Thesis statement: California’s economy changed in many ways as result of the completion of the railroad. Cause: It brought new products into the state that often cost less than goods made and sold in California. Effect: Therefore, many businesses in the state suffered and closed because they lost money. Cause: The Southern Pacific Railroad ran through the Central Valley from Stockton to Los Angeles. Effect: This led to the growth of towns along the railroad’s route. Cause: The Railroad Act of 1862 granted land to the railroad companies that built the railroads. Cause/Effect: As a result, the Southern Pacific Railroad gained more than 11 million acres of land. Cause/Effect: The Big Four, who owned the Southern Pacific Railroad, became richer. Effect: With this money, the Big Four were able to buy or start other railroads. Cause: Because their railroads stretched in so many directions, Effect: they were nicknamed “the Octopus.” Cause: The railroads owned by the Big Four had very little competition, Effect: so they could charge high prices for train tickets. 15
  • 16. California’s economy changed in many ways as result of the completion of the railroad. It brought new products into the state that often cost less than goods made and sold in California. Therefore, many businesses in the state suffered and closed because they lost money. The Southern Pacific Railroad ran through the Central Valley from Stockton to Los Angeles. This led to the growth of towns along the railroad’s route. The Railroad Act of 1862 gave land to the railroad companies that built the railroads. As a result, the Southern Pacific Railroad gained more than 11 million acres of land. The Big Four who owned the Southern Pacific Railroad became richer. With this money, the Big Four were able to buy or start other railroads. Because their railroads stretched in so many directions, they were nicknamed “the Octopus.” The railroads owned by the Big Four had very little competition, so they could charge high prices for train tickets. Student Sample, page 1 of 2: 16
  • 17. Student Sample, page 2 of 2: 17
  • 18. 18