The mesmerizing images of cowboys, Indians, and saloons conjures a pictorial view of, as we all know, the "Wild West". The Industrial Age changed the West in many ways. In times before the West, there had always been farmers. Farming, mining, and cattle were the life of the West. A great variety of Native American cultures ruled most parts of the area. By the end of the era, the West became filled with new immigrants of all kinds of ethnicities. In doing so, it become a place of diversity and complexity because of the variant differences of cultures. In the emergence of the Wild West, two distinct groups of people were warranted as outcasts by white settlers. According to white settlers, the Native Americans and Chinese did not fit into the image of what they upheld as daily living growing in the West. To get a better understanding of that time, personal accounts and factual evidence during the historical events of the Wild West will give readers a well-detailed experience through the advantages …show more content…
Primary Sources explore history through the lends of old letters, diaries, government documents, audio or video recordings. Original documents or objects were created at the time historical events happened. Therefore, primary sources, as raw materials, are a key way to preserve what historians use to interpret the past. They allow us to build interpretations because they are examples of what people did and most likely felt at that time. In addition, primary sources can help an individual, such as a student, to present an argument in order to defend their thesis by using information unfiltered by another individual's point of view and able to critique in original work using their own ideas. Without these primary sources, history would leave us to wonder about the unknown or be fabricators of made up