Turner's Evaluation Of Glamorization And Settling Of The American West

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6700 Engwr 300 Essay 4 Dr. Jordan WC: The Ramifications of Romanticisation History and historians are some of society's most powerful tools for interpreting out past, framing our present, and planning for our future. Frederick Jackson Turner’s evaluation of the colonization and settling of the American West in his essay, The Significance of the Frontier in American History, is a biased and romanticized account of the land plundered by European settlers. The glamorized version of history Turner lays out, leaves behind large groups of people that heavily influenced the settling of the West, such as women, the chinese, and Latin Americans. The few marginalized groups he does mention are often used more as footnotes and the hardships they faced …show more content…

The Natives who had been living there for years had a very different idea of property; many believed that the land was gifted to everyone and no one person could own any part of that land. However, the Europeans refused this idea and saw this as an opportunity to take whatever they wanted. The idea of becoming rich by settling the West was highly appealing to many Europeans and led to a rise in indentured servitude. As people served a master in America for seven to ten years, they would dream that the money they would receive would be enough to make their fortune. However, most people did not survive this hard labor and if they did were rarely ever given enough money to truly achieve their dream rendering the American Dream little more than a legend. Part of the problem with Western expansion, was the land people were expanding onto was far bigger than imagined. Newly formed countries are difficult to keep together in their infancy and as citizens of this new country travelled outward farther from the East coast, resources from the government became scarce and self reliance and individualism became imperative to survive. Turner himself quotes The Home Missionary, “we cannot forget that with all these remote dispersions into remote and still remoter corners of the land the supply of the means of grace is becoming relatively less and less,” expressing the deepening divide in the country (549). This growing independence of the West created a steep division in the country between the governed and the lawless, which only added to the romance of the West. Additionally, Turner spoke of the abundance of America and the infinite resources gifted to the Europeans by god saying that these must be properly exploited (539). However, nothing on the planet is infinite and some resources of America did not survive this exploitation, like bison. Even more recently the

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