Topic 4

|
The
Migration, Settlement, & Development of
Texas
|
Goals | Outcomes
| Notes
to1860, Notes
to 1900, Notes
to Present |
Notes
on Chapter 9
Goals:
- describe the patterns of migration,
settlement, and economic and social development of
Texas
- understand the evolving character and
nature of different regions
- trace the processes and relationships which
create the patterns
the what, when, and
where of Texas
Outcomes
For this material there are three distinct sets
of outcomes based on chronological periods of Texas
development:
Texas
to 1860 (outline
notes)
- the settlement history of early
Spanish Tejas (three points, two regions)
- the settlement history of Mexican
Tejas (patterns, processes, regional characteristics)
- cultural geography of early
Tejas
- changes in Texas after the
Revolution, shifts in the political and cultural
geography
- migration into Texas, types,
pathways, barriers and funnels
- the four regions of Texas as they
existed in 1860 (patterns, processes, regional
characteristics)
- Transportation and urban
settlements in Texas before the Civil War
- characteristics of the Texas
population before the Civil War (who? where? why?)
1861
to 1900 (outline
notes)
1900
to the Present (outline
notes)
- events which drove the processes
of change at the beginning of this century: Spindle top and the
introduction of meat packing in Fort Worth
- consequences on economic and
geographic development of Texas
- characteristics of boom
towns
- changes in agriculuture in Texas:
High Plains, Lower Valley, Winter Garden
- regions of Texas in mid-century:
East Texas, Gulf Coast, South
Texas, Southwest Texas,
Hill Country, West Texas, The Panhandle, North Texas, Central
Texas
- assimilation, acculturation,
agglomeration: models of culture development in Texas
-
Good websites to help you
learn more about the geohistory of Texas are...
Lone
Star Junction
Daughters
of the Republic of Texas
The
Webb Site
Geography of
Texas Home Page
Copyright, 1997, Sarah W. Bednarz
Revised 1/11/01