The Significance of the Frontier in American History

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    Throughout history rules and regulations have been a part of life in America for over 120 years. It has evolved into an extremely important part of life and it affects millions of Americans. America has gone through several changes since the late 1800’s. Turner gives his opinion on The Significance of the Frontier in American History at the meeting of the American Historical Association in Chicago, 12 July 1893, during the World Columbian Exposition. He states that “Up to our own day American history has

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    along the American frontier? What Turner wants to point out here is that the American West is the most important feature of American history, and of the development of its society. He refers several times to a process of “Americanization” and we will see that the definition he gives of it is a very peculiar one. He gives a definition of the frontier: “it lies at the hither edge of free land”, meaning that he considers the Indian territory to be free land. According to him the frontier is the “meeting

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    around him, Turner chose to become a history professor, devoting his entire life to studying American culture/society while teaching at the University of Wisconsin and Harvard. Constantly having the opportunity to study and observe the development of the “American”, Turner wrote extensively, about which attributes composed and influenced American democracy, societal values, and image. He published an essay, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History” about these topics in 1893, and presented

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    Response to Turner's Essay on The Significance of the Frontier in American History Turner's "The Significance of the Frontier in American History" essay presents the primary model for comprehending American history. Turner developed his notions on the uncovering of the 1890 census that the frontier was coming to an end, that the nation had occupied its continental borders. As Turner discusses in his essay, an extensive era of American development approached an ending, but

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    Frederick Jackson Turner’s, The Significance of the Frontier in American History, written in 1893, is arguably one of the most influential interpretations of the American past ever published. Turner’s thesis, Frontier Thesis, stated that Europeans were changed by the settlement of North America, creating a new society based on the skills and knowledge they learned, while settling the land, not by the European society they left behind. Turner believed the frontier was the driving power, influencing

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    book, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History,” by Frederick Jackson Turner expresses many of the important concepts of the American western frontier. “… but at present the unsettled area has been so broken into by isolated bodies of settlement that there can hardly be said to be a frontier line,” said the superintendent of the census for 1890. Showing the overwhelming American influence in the shaping of the frontier, this quote captures the general structure of the frontier, at the time

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    The Frontier Thesis Introduction The emergence of western history as an important field of scholarship started with Frederick Jackson Turner’s (1861-1932) famous essay “The Significance of the Frontier in American history.”[1] This thesis shaped both popular and scholarly views of the West for the next two generations. In his thesis, Turner argued that the West had to be taken seriously. He felt that up to his time there had not been enough research of what he in his essay call “the fundamental

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    The American Frontier consisted of a vibrant and expansive land made for the opportunity ofAmerican settlement until the late 19th century. Unfortunately, the age of exploration of the Frontier officially ended in 1890 with the U.S Census Bureau declaring that “here can hardly be said to be a frontier line." A historian, Frederick Jackson Turner, claimed that the Frontier shaped American culture and the attitude of Americans. By evaluating U.S Census Bureau statistics, he famously wrote the Frontier

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    Frederick Jackson Turner 's “The Significance of the Frontier” is, in his eyes, an accurate depiction of America 's development since the Colonial Period. However, Turner 's Frontier Thesis fails to discuss the involvement of two very specific groups of people, groups that certainly had too much of an effect on the progression of the country for him to safely leave out. Native Americans have a pivotal role in America 's history, yet Turner 's mentions of them in his thesis are extremely limited.

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    The Frontier Thesis may play a heavy part in U.S. history, but there are implications for truly understanding the outlines of this thesis. Fredrick Jackson Tuner during a great meeting of American Historical Association on July 12th, 1893 in Chicago, a paper named “The Significance of the Frontier in American History.” This paper introduced an innovative way of astonishment to understanding the construction of America. Turner envisioned that the history of America was not focused one the prominence

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