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Edward S. Curtis, Navajo Riders in Canyon de Chelly , c Library of Congress. Please click here to improve this chapter. Native Americans long dominated the vastness of the American West. Linked culturally and geographically by trade, travel, and warfare, various Indigenous groups controlled most of the continent west of the Mississippi River deep into the nineteenth century.
Spanish, French, British, and later American traders had integrated themselves into many regional economies, and American emigrants pushed ever westward, but no imperial power had yet achieved anything approximating political or military control over the great bulk of the continent. But then the Civil War came and went and decoupled the West from the question of slavery just as the United States industrialized and laid down rails and pushed its ever-expanding population ever farther west.
Indigenous Americans have lived in North America for over ten millennia and, into the late nineteenth century, perhaps as many as , Native people still inhabited the American West. Often in violation of its own treaties, the United States removed Native groups to ever-shrinking reservations, incorporated the West first as territories and then as states, and, for the first time in its history, controlled the enormity of land between the two oceans.
The history of the late-nineteenth-century West is not a simple story. What some touted as a triumphโthe westward expansion of American authorityโwas for others a tragedy. The West contained many peoples and many places, and their intertwined histories marked a pivotal transformation in the history of the United States. In the decades after the Civil War, American settlers poured across the Mississippi River in record numbers.
No longer simply crossing over the continent for new imagined Edens in California or Oregon, they settled now in the vast heart of the continent. Many of the first American migrants had come to the West in search of quick profits during the midcentury gold and silver rushes. As in the California rush of โ, droves of prospectors poured in after precious-metal strikes in Colorado in , Nevada in , Idaho in , Montana in , and the Black Hills in While women often performed housework that allowed mining families to subsist in often difficult conditions, a significant portion of the mining workforce were single men without families dependent on service industries in nearby towns and cities.