Lets rephrase that question. "What was life like for a settler in the midwest?"
Ah, now we have an actual question.
Answer: For those that settled in large cities, life was not so good. They faced growing crime and suffered tremendously from self-inflicted pollution. Those in the 'burbs fared better, while those that remained rural had a simple, productive, and enjoyable life.
Much different than those 1800's first midwestern settlers experience, no?
Life vary greatly across the United States in 1948. The North Eastern United States was booming with manufacturing. The South and Midwest was dominated by agriculture.
The Northeast and the Midwest
The Northeast and the Midwest.
dutch
Midwest
The life of a New England settler was difficult and filled with hardships. The Homestead Act encouraged him to become a settler on the plains.
It WASN'T easy for a a settler
There are skinks in the Midwest. They look kind of like a Geko.
Landmarks of the Midwest are a famous place like the Grand Canyon
wool and cloth
Settler Rule is when a certain area is colinised (like Europeans in Africa) and is ruled by the settlers. They often twisted rules to suit themselves.
a settler
MA
It is cold and warm
* settler * migrant * colonist* settler * migrant * colonist* settler * migrant * colonist* settler * migrant * colonist* settler * migrant * colonist* settler * migrant * colonist
Life vary greatly across the United States in 1948. The North Eastern United States was booming with manufacturing. The South and Midwest was dominated by agriculture.
The settler revolution is a very long and complicated subject. The settler revolution was a quickening of the migration of settlers across the US and the world looking for a better life. The biggest and fastest movement occurred in the North-West America. You can find more detailed information in 'Replenishing the Earth. The Settler Revolution and the Rise of the Anglo-World, 1783-1939' by James Belich.