Examples of Crazy Horse in the following topics:
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The American Indian Wars
- Led by resolute, militant leaders such as Red Cloud and Crazy Horse, the Sioux excelled at high-speed mounted warfare.
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Changes in American Indian Life
- Sheep, pigs, horses, and cattle were all Old World animals that were introduced to contemporary American Indians.
- In the 16th century, Spaniards and other Europeans brought horses to the Americas.
- The reintroduction of the horse to North America had a profound impact on the American Indian culture of the Great Plains.
- The tribes trained and used horses to ride, carry goods for exchange with neighboring tribes, hunt game, and conduct wars and raids.
- The people fully incorporated the use of horses into their societies and expanded their territories.
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Hooverville
- A "Hoover wagon" was an automobile with horses hitched to it because the owner could not afford fuel.
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American Technology
- In the early 1830s, Cyrus McCormick's horse-drawn mechanical reaper allowed farmers in the West to harvest great quantities of wheat, leading for the first time to great crop surpluses.
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The Revolutionary Army at Valley Forge
- General Henry Knox, Washington’s Chief of Artillery, wrote that hundreds of horses either starved to death or perished as a result of exhaustion.
- By the end of winter, approximately 700 horses had died.
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The Industrial Revolution
- In the early 1830s, Cyrus McCormick's horse-drawn mechanical reaper allowed farmers in the West to harvest great quantities of wheat, leading to great crop surpluses.
- Reliance on horse power for machinery in the United States soon gave way to water power; this resulted in a concentration of industrialization developing in New England and the rest of the northeastern United States, where fast-moving rivers were located.
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Commercial Farmers
- John Deere's horse-drawn steel plow also led to more efficient farming practices, replacing the difficult oxen-driven wooden plows that farmers had employed for centuries.
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Elements of Reform
- Their willingness to work 18 hours obnoxiously was crazy compared to Americans who worked (part-time).
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Opposition from the Courts
- After the decisions came down, Roosevelt remarked at a May 31 press conference that the Schechter decision had "relegated [the nation] to a horse and buggy definition of interstate commerce".
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The Wilderness Road
- Horses, cattle, sheep, and hogs found a waiting market in the Carolinas, Maryland, and Virginia.