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What caused westward expansion in the United States?
University of Southern California ^ | February 28, 2008 | Unknown

Posted on 02/28/2008 3:21:48 PM PST by decimon

Study reveals that the price of land was less important than technological innovation

Western Expansion during the nineteenth century was an important determinant of geographic distribution and economic activity in the United States today. However, while explanations abound for why the migration occurred– from the low price of land to a pioneering spirit – little empirical work has been done to determine which specific market forces were the most important drivers.

Applying quantitative analysis to historical explanations, a new study by economist Guillaume Vandenbroucke of the University of Southern California finds that the price of land was significantly less important to Westward Expansion than population growth and technological innovation leading to a decrease in transportation costs.

From 1800 to 1900, the United States tripled in size, from less than one million square miles to more than three million square miles. The geographic distribution of population also shifted, from about seven percent living in the West to roughly 60 percent. To examine what forces were most directly responsible for the magnitude of this movement and land accumulation, Vandenbroucke takes into account such factors as the amount of land available in the Eastern United States, wage and productivity growth in the East, and improvements in technologies and transportation infrastructures.

To account for the range of variables and possible factors, Vandenbroucke determined a model in which each factor was held at a constant level while the others shifted at historical rates.

“The most important forces are population growth and the decrease in transportation costs,” Vandenbroucke said. “Population growth is mostly responsible for the investment in productive land – without it less than half of the land accumulated in 1900 would have been accumulated.”

Surprisingly, Vandenbroucke found that changes in productivity in the East had little effect on the Westward Expansion, relative to population growth and a decrease in transportation costs – as he explains, rising wages and productivity makes it easier to move, but it also makes it less pressing to move.

Instead, he finds that population growth and technological innovation worked in concert as the main driving factors of Western Expansion. Specifically, the decrease in transportation costs induced Western migration and the redistribution of the American population – without it only 30 percent of the population would have been in the West in 1900, compared to an actual historical figure of 60 percent. Land improvement technology, such as the use of barbed wire to cut down on the time needed to build a fence, had a small effect on the accumulation of land in the West.

Vandenbroucke’s findings, appearing in the current issue of International Economic Review, have important implications for how to understand current population patterns and international immigration to the United States.

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About the University of Southern California: Established in 1880, the University of Southern California is one of the world’s leading private research universities and the oldest private research university in the western United States. USC enrolls more international students than any other U.S. university and offers extensive opportunities for internships and study abroad. With a strong tradition of integrating liberal and professional education, USC fosters a vibrant culture of public service and encourages students to cross academic as well as geographic boundaries in their pursuit of knowledge.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: americanhistory
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To: decimon

This has got to be one of the more understated analysis I’ve seen in a long time. For example, East of the Mississippi, movement by water had long be the fastest practical means of transport. West of the Mississippi, forget it, you have to go overland.

To further complicate things, westward expansion might have been through wilderness, but it often had a destination: the West Coast. Between the British and the Spanish, what is now Texas, the southwest, California and the Pacific northwest were places, destinations, to travel to.

A lot more people wanted to go there than stop in the Great Plains. The degree of difficulty for starting fresh was very high, evidenced by the Mormon settlement of Utah—they almost starved. They probably survived by being able to provide supplies, at a price, to settlers passing through, eventually being able to support themselves.

Only technology such as the railroads and the windmill allowed for much of the Great Plains to be occupied at all. The windmill to get water to grow crops, and the railroads to transport those crops once grown.

While certainly life by today’s standards was utterly awful on the eastern seaboard, by the standards of the day it was luxurious compared to setting out on your own across the frontier.

Much of the West only opened up after the post-Civil War, Indian Wars forced the deployment of much of the Union Army West. Once the Army was there, settlers finally had an interior place to go.

Texas was an “odd man out” for much of this, as were the Oklahoma Indian territories. They had their own paradigms of expansion and growth. The great rush to occupy them as home stakes, granted by the US government, could only happen in due course.

Texas, especially, for a while was carved up by enormous ranches like the XIT (for “Ten (Counties) in Texas”), who engaged in shameless land grabbing and exploitation. But the great cattle drives to Kansas City only lasted a short while before being ended by barbed wire fences.

As more infill happened, the primary concern of the settlers was creating a civilized town for themselves and their children. This ended many of the antics surrounding frontier settlement, culminating in the Census of 1890, which was no longer able to determine a “line” of settlement. This meant that westward expansion and the frontier were finished. It all was settled. From there it was just a matter of growth.


21 posted on 02/28/2008 3:50:38 PM PST by yefragetuwrabrumuy
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To: Lee'sGhost
Because going east was pretty much a non-starter.

That's a good point. If you must expand then it's best to do so over land.

22 posted on 02/28/2008 3:51:21 PM PST by decimon
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To: decimon
From 1800 to 1900, the United States tripled in size, from less than one million square miles to more than three million square miles.

And from 1836 on, it was all done without a Federal Reserve - remember that, the next time some bankers' shill claims that the ecomomy would fall apart without a central bank.
23 posted on 02/28/2008 3:52:38 PM PST by canuck_conservative
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To: Ditter
I read a story on a genealogy site which said 2 brothers of my direct ancestor were leaders on the first wagon train to go through Donner Pass after that disaster. I only found it one place years ago and have not been able to find it since. What a dummy I was for not documenting where I found information in my FTM. It seems that siblings of my direct ancestors went west but mine stayed east of the MS River in NC, GA, SC, AL, TN and MS. Most lines were here in the 1600’s and 1700’s.
24 posted on 02/28/2008 3:52:47 PM PST by MamaB
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To: decimon

The Gores are from Tennessee. Alabama considers that the North : )


25 posted on 02/28/2008 3:53:43 PM PST by Conspiracy Guy (I voted Republican because no Conservatives were running.)
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To: decimon

Settlement of “the West” was much faster than popularly imagined. Indiana University (oldest university West of the Alleghenies) was founded, for the most part, by a crew from Harvard, who also founded what’s now called Bloomington Normal University (in Illinois), several others on the way, and when they were done some of them were still youthful enough to be professors at Stanford.


26 posted on 02/28/2008 3:54:11 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: decimon
What caused westward expansion in the United States?

Neo Conservatives

27 posted on 02/28/2008 3:54:48 PM PST by NoLibZone (If the Clinton years were so great for the libs why is Obama doing so well?)
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To: Peanut Gallery

Ping


28 posted on 02/28/2008 3:55:40 PM PST by Professional Engineer (www.pinupsforvets.com)
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To: decimon
I thought it was Gold in Kalifawnia that had the biggest influence in the 1850s then word got back east that the land was so fertile and the climate was made for growing crops you could drop a seed in the ground today and pick corn tomorrow...
29 posted on 02/28/2008 3:56:36 PM PST by tubebender
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To: Conspiracy Guy
The Gores are from Tennessee. Alabama considers that the North : )

Alabamans consider everything the North.

30 posted on 02/28/2008 3:57:16 PM PST by decimon
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To: decimon

It was Benjamin Franklin and his Ohio Company.


31 posted on 02/28/2008 3:59:02 PM PST by RightWhale (Clam down! avoid ataque de nervosa)
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To: decimon

Even south Florida is the north.


32 posted on 02/28/2008 3:59:36 PM PST by Conspiracy Guy (I voted Republican because no Conservatives were running.)
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To: MamaB

I have never found out when my ancestors arrived in America, I said it was before the Revolution because the first entry into the family Bible belonging to them was the birth of my great great great ? grandfather in Virginia in 1776. Maybe they were here before then and could be that was just when they got the Bible.


33 posted on 02/28/2008 4:02:20 PM PST by Ditter
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To: passionfruit

My G Grandfather got off the boat from Hamburg and enlisted with an Uncle in the Union Army. He went to Washington Territory and built a sawmill. Over the years fortunes went up and down until 1898 and the Gold Rush. That tough old German came back with a tidy fortune and kept it.
That was the dream that brought them to America and then to the West.


34 posted on 02/28/2008 4:04:58 PM PST by Klondike
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To: decimon

The Society of Cincinnati had a hand in westward expansion.


35 posted on 02/28/2008 4:05:40 PM PST by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: decimon

Under the Homestead Act, the price of land was free. How is that “not important”?


36 posted on 02/28/2008 4:06:14 PM PST by PzLdr ("The Emperor is not as forgiving as I am" - Darth Vader)
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To: Conspiracy Guy
You have all missed the boat, it was GOLD that caused the westward migration. GOLD on federal land that no one was doing anything with. Look at the population figures for California 1840 less than 20,000 people in all of California. 1950 over 100,000 and all because of GOLD. Then when the placer Gold was worked out they discovered the Comstock in 1859, and the rest is history...GOLD was the big mover...
37 posted on 02/28/2008 4:07:17 PM PST by BooBoo1000 (Some times I wake up grumpy, other times I let her sleep/)
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To: Conspiracy Guy
You have all missed the boat, it was GOLD that caused the westward migration. GOLD on federal land that no one was doing anything with. Look at the population figures for California 1840 less than 20,000 people in all of California. 1950 over 100,000 and all because of GOLD. Then when the placer Gold was worked out they discovered the Comstock in 1859, and the rest is history...GOLD was the big mover...
38 posted on 02/28/2008 4:07:26 PM PST by BooBoo1000 (Some times I wake up grumpy, other times I let her sleep/)
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To: decimon

Read (not watch) James Mitchner’s “Centennial”

There ware lots of reasons


39 posted on 02/28/2008 4:07:46 PM PST by bert (K.E. N.P. +12 . Never say never (there'll be a VP you'll like))
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To: decimon

What caused westward expansion? Television viewers in California during the late 1960’s learned the answer from advertisements for MJB coffee. The ads featured people using every mode of transportation imaginable to travel westward to get the coffee, since there was “only enough for the West.”


40 posted on 02/28/2008 4:08:48 PM PST by Fiji Hill
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