History of settlement efforts The first
westward migrations occurred as members of the
Thirteen Colonies sought to expand their respective colonies westward. Those whose original
royal charters did not specify a western limit simply extended their lands westward indefinitely. After the
United States was officially formed upon the ratification of the
U.S. Constitution, federal coordination and legislation began to give settlement a more unified approach. The
Land Ordinance of 1785 was the first official action by the federal government in deciding how political organization of new territories would be handled. Then in 1787 the
Northwest Ordinance declared that states could not individually claim new lands, and that westward expansion would be handled by the federal government. In implementing the
Land Act of 1804, the government took its first steps towards legislating the manner in which land would be individually claimed by and distributed to settlers. One federal effort to encourage western travel and settlement was the publication of
The Prairie Traveler in 1859, three years before the Homestead Act was passed.
Randolph B. Marcy, Captain of the U.S. Army, was commissioned by the War Department to provide a guide for those moving west. It provided not only mileage and stopping points during travel, but also gave advice about what to take on the journey, how to interact with Native Americans and also how to respond to threatening situations such as encounters with bears. There were many other forms of this process, such as
land runs including the
Land Run of 1889, when parts of the territory of
Oklahoma were first made available to settlers on a first-come, first-serve basis.
Details of pioneer efforts and actions As western settlement grew, certain trends began to emerge. Most pioneers traveled in
wagon trains with their families and other settlers, banding together for defense and to spread the workload. Pioneers in the East often had to clear the land, owing to lush forests there. In the Midwest, the task was to bring agricultural fertility to the
Great Plains. Some pioneers moved westward with the intent of claiming land for their families. Others, such as
trappers, moved west for commercial reasons, and then remained there when their businesses proved to be profitable. ==Popular culture and folklore==