Page 1
(iv) Tractors and machines that had
ploughed the earth and harvested the
wheat in the 1920s were now clogged
with dust, damaged beyond repair.
Q7. What was opium primarily known for?
How were the Chinese made addicted
to it?
Ans. Opium was primarily known for its
medicinal properties and was used in
miniscule quantities for certain types
of medicines. The Chinese were well
aware of the dangers of its addiction,
and the Emperor had, therefore,
forbidden its production and sale
except for medicinal purposes. But
western merchants in the mid-18th
century began an illegal trade in
opium. It was unloaded in a number
of seaports of south-eastern China
and carried by local agents to the
interiors. By the early 1820s, about
1,000 crates were being annually
smuggled into China. Fifteen years
later, over 35,000 crates were being
unloaded every year. This meant
that the Chinese became addicted
to opium. People of all classes took
to the drug — shopkeepers and
peddlers, officials and army men,
aristocrats and paupers. In 1839, it
was estimated that 4 million Chinese
had become opium smokers. Thus,
China became a country of opium
addicts.
Q8. How did the British government
persuade the unwilling cultivators to
grow opium? [HOTS]
Or
How were the unwilling cultivators
made to produce opium?
Ans.(i) Indian cultivators were not ready
to grow opium because it was an
unprofitable business for them.
Seeing their unwillingness, the British
government started a system of
advances.
(ii) In the normal areas of Bengal and
Bihar, there were a large numbers of
poor peasants. They never had enough
to survive. From the 1780s, such
peasants found their village headmen
giving them money advances to grow
opium.
(iii) The innocent peasants did not
understand that it was the government
opium agents who were advancing the
money to the headmen, who in turn
gave to them.
(iv) When offered a loan, the cultivators
were tempted to accept, hoping to
meet their immediate needs and pay
back the loan at a later stage. Thus, it
was the system of advances that made
the unwilling cultivators grow opium.
Q9. How did the system of advances tie the
peasants to the British government?
Or
“After accepting money advances, the
cultivators had no option but to grow
opium.” Explain. [HOTS]
Ans.(i) When the British government
started the system of advances, many
cultivators became ready to grow
opium. They thought that they would
fulfil their immediate needs with the
loan and would pay back it at a later
stage.
(ii) But the loan tied the peasants to
the government. By taking the loan,
they were forced to grow opium on a
specified area of land and hand over
the produce to the agents once crop
had been harvested.
(iii) They had no option of planting the
field with a crop of his choice or of
selling their produce to anyone but
the government agent. And they were
bound to accept the low price offered
for the produce.
Q10. What is meant by ‘Triangular Trade’?
What led to its development? [HOTS]
Ans. The triangular trade refers to the trade
between England, India and China in
the eighteenth century.
(i) The British East India Company was
buying tea and silk from China for
Page 2
(iv) Tractors and machines that had
ploughed the earth and harvested the
wheat in the 1920s were now clogged
with dust, damaged beyond repair.
Q7. What was opium primarily known for?
How were the Chinese made addicted
to it?
Ans. Opium was primarily known for its
medicinal properties and was used in
miniscule quantities for certain types
of medicines. The Chinese were well
aware of the dangers of its addiction,
and the Emperor had, therefore,
forbidden its production and sale
except for medicinal purposes. But
western merchants in the mid-18th
century began an illegal trade in
opium. It was unloaded in a number
of seaports of south-eastern China
and carried by local agents to the
interiors. By the early 1820s, about
1,000 crates were being annually
smuggled into China. Fifteen years
later, over 35,000 crates were being
unloaded every year. This meant
that the Chinese became addicted
to opium. People of all classes took
to the drug — shopkeepers and
peddlers, officials and army men,
aristocrats and paupers. In 1839, it
was estimated that 4 million Chinese
had become opium smokers. Thus,
China became a country of opium
addicts.
Q8. How did the British government
persuade the unwilling cultivators to
grow opium? [HOTS]
Or
How were the unwilling cultivators
made to produce opium?
Ans.(i) Indian cultivators were not ready
to grow opium because it was an
unprofitable business for them.
Seeing their unwillingness, the British
government started a system of
advances.
(ii) In the normal areas of Bengal and
Bihar, there were a large numbers of
poor peasants. They never had enough
to survive. From the 1780s, such
peasants found their village headmen
giving them money advances to grow
opium.
(iii) The innocent peasants did not
understand that it was the government
opium agents who were advancing the
money to the headmen, who in turn
gave to them.
(iv) When offered a loan, the cultivators
were tempted to accept, hoping to
meet their immediate needs and pay
back the loan at a later stage. Thus, it
was the system of advances that made
the unwilling cultivators grow opium.
Q9. How did the system of advances tie the
peasants to the British government?
Or
“After accepting money advances, the
cultivators had no option but to grow
opium.” Explain. [HOTS]
Ans.(i) When the British government
started the system of advances, many
cultivators became ready to grow
opium. They thought that they would
fulfil their immediate needs with the
loan and would pay back it at a later
stage.
(ii) But the loan tied the peasants to
the government. By taking the loan,
they were forced to grow opium on a
specified area of land and hand over
the produce to the agents once crop
had been harvested.
(iii) They had no option of planting the
field with a crop of his choice or of
selling their produce to anyone but
the government agent. And they were
bound to accept the low price offered
for the produce.
Q10. What is meant by ‘Triangular Trade’?
What led to its development? [HOTS]
Ans. The triangular trade refers to the trade
between England, India and China in
the eighteenth century.
(i) The British East India Company was
buying tea and silk from China for
sale in England. As tea became a
popular English drink, the tea trade
became more and more important.
(ii) England at this time produced nothing
that could be easily sold in China. The
western merchants did not have a way
to finance the tea trade.
They could buy tea only by paying in
silver coins or bullion. This meant an
outflow of treasure from England.
At last it was decided that opium would
be grown in India and transported to
China in exchange of tea.
Q11. How did the westward expansion of
settlers in the USA lead to a total
destruction of American Indians?
[HOTS]
Ans.(i) In 1800, Thomas Jefferson became
President of the USA. The American
War of Independence had been fought
from 1775 to 1783 and the formation
of the United States of America made
it seem like a land of promise from the
East Coast.
(ii) It was during this time that the
700,000 White settlers began to move
westward on to the Appalachian
Plateau through the passes. The
westward expansion of settlers in the
USA led to a complete destruction of
American Indians who were pushed
westwards, down the Mississippi
river, and then further west.
(iii) They fought back, but were defeated.
Numerous wars were waged in which
Indians were massacred. Their villages
were burnt and cattle destroyed.
Q12. What led to a dramatic expansion of
wheat-production in the USA?
Ans.(i) From the late nineteenth century,
there was a dramatic expansion of
wheat-production in the USA and the
export market became bigger.
(ii) During the First World War, the world
market boomed. Russian supplies of
wheat were cut off and the USA had
to feed Europe.
(iii) US President Wilson encouraged
American farmers to produce more
wheat. In 1910, about 45 million acres
of land in the USA was under wheat
and nine years later it expanded to 74
million acres, an increase of about 65
per cent.
Q13. When did the British government in
Bengal establish a monopoly to trade
in opium? How did people react to
it and what steps were taken by the
British government to control it?
Ans.(i) By 1773, the British government
in Bengal established a monopoly to
trade in opium. No one else was legally
permitted to trade in the product.
(ii) The government wanted to produce
opium at a cheap rate and sell it at a
high price to opium agents in Calcutta
(now Kolkata), who then shipped it
to China. But the prices given to the
peasants were so low that by the early
eighteenth century, angry peasants
began agitating for higher prices and
refused to take advances. In regions
around Benaras, cultivators began
giving up opium cultivation.
(iii) To control the situation, the British
instructed its agents posted in the
princely states to take away all opium
and destroy the crops. This conflict
between the British government,
peasants and local traders continued
as long as opium production lasted.
Q14. Why did the whole region of the Great
Plains become a dust bowl?
Ans.(i) When wheat cultivation had
expanded dramatically in the early
19th century, zealous farmers had
recklessly uprooted all vegetation and
tractors had turned the soil over and
broken the sod into dust.
(ii) The whole region had become a
dust bowl. In the 1930s, terrifying
dust-storms began to blow over the
southern plains of America.
(iii) Black blizzard rolled in, very often
7,000 to 8,000 feet high, rising like
Page 3
(iv) Tractors and machines that had
ploughed the earth and harvested the
wheat in the 1920s were now clogged
with dust, damaged beyond repair.
Q7. What was opium primarily known for?
How were the Chinese made addicted
to it?
Ans. Opium was primarily known for its
medicinal properties and was used in
miniscule quantities for certain types
of medicines. The Chinese were well
aware of the dangers of its addiction,
and the Emperor had, therefore,
forbidden its production and sale
except for medicinal purposes. But
western merchants in the mid-18th
century began an illegal trade in
opium. It was unloaded in a number
of seaports of south-eastern China
and carried by local agents to the
interiors. By the early 1820s, about
1,000 crates were being annually
smuggled into China. Fifteen years
later, over 35,000 crates were being
unloaded every year. This meant
that the Chinese became addicted
to opium. People of all classes took
to the drug — shopkeepers and
peddlers, officials and army men,
aristocrats and paupers. In 1839, it
was estimated that 4 million Chinese
had become opium smokers. Thus,
China became a country of opium
addicts.
Q8. How did the British government
persuade the unwilling cultivators to
grow opium? [HOTS]
Or
How were the unwilling cultivators
made to produce opium?
Ans.(i) Indian cultivators were not ready
to grow opium because it was an
unprofitable business for them.
Seeing their unwillingness, the British
government started a system of
advances.
(ii) In the normal areas of Bengal and
Bihar, there were a large numbers of
poor peasants. They never had enough
to survive. From the 1780s, such
peasants found their village headmen
giving them money advances to grow
opium.
(iii) The innocent peasants did not
understand that it was the government
opium agents who were advancing the
money to the headmen, who in turn
gave to them.
(iv) When offered a loan, the cultivators
were tempted to accept, hoping to
meet their immediate needs and pay
back the loan at a later stage. Thus, it
was the system of advances that made
the unwilling cultivators grow opium.
Q9. How did the system of advances tie the
peasants to the British government?
Or
“After accepting money advances, the
cultivators had no option but to grow
opium.” Explain. [HOTS]
Ans.(i) When the British government
started the system of advances, many
cultivators became ready to grow
opium. They thought that they would
fulfil their immediate needs with the
loan and would pay back it at a later
stage.
(ii) But the loan tied the peasants to
the government. By taking the loan,
they were forced to grow opium on a
specified area of land and hand over
the produce to the agents once crop
had been harvested.
(iii) They had no option of planting the
field with a crop of his choice or of
selling their produce to anyone but
the government agent. And they were
bound to accept the low price offered
for the produce.
Q10. What is meant by ‘Triangular Trade’?
What led to its development? [HOTS]
Ans. The triangular trade refers to the trade
between England, India and China in
the eighteenth century.
(i) The British East India Company was
buying tea and silk from China for
sale in England. As tea became a
popular English drink, the tea trade
became more and more important.
(ii) England at this time produced nothing
that could be easily sold in China. The
western merchants did not have a way
to finance the tea trade.
They could buy tea only by paying in
silver coins or bullion. This meant an
outflow of treasure from England.
At last it was decided that opium would
be grown in India and transported to
China in exchange of tea.
Q11. How did the westward expansion of
settlers in the USA lead to a total
destruction of American Indians?
[HOTS]
Ans.(i) In 1800, Thomas Jefferson became
President of the USA. The American
War of Independence had been fought
from 1775 to 1783 and the formation
of the United States of America made
it seem like a land of promise from the
East Coast.
(ii) It was during this time that the
700,000 White settlers began to move
westward on to the Appalachian
Plateau through the passes. The
westward expansion of settlers in the
USA led to a complete destruction of
American Indians who were pushed
westwards, down the Mississippi
river, and then further west.
(iii) They fought back, but were defeated.
Numerous wars were waged in which
Indians were massacred. Their villages
were burnt and cattle destroyed.
Q12. What led to a dramatic expansion of
wheat-production in the USA?
Ans.(i) From the late nineteenth century,
there was a dramatic expansion of
wheat-production in the USA and the
export market became bigger.
(ii) During the First World War, the world
market boomed. Russian supplies of
wheat were cut off and the USA had
to feed Europe.
(iii) US President Wilson encouraged
American farmers to produce more
wheat. In 1910, about 45 million acres
of land in the USA was under wheat
and nine years later it expanded to 74
million acres, an increase of about 65
per cent.
Q13. When did the British government in
Bengal establish a monopoly to trade
in opium? How did people react to
it and what steps were taken by the
British government to control it?
Ans.(i) By 1773, the British government
in Bengal established a monopoly to
trade in opium. No one else was legally
permitted to trade in the product.
(ii) The government wanted to produce
opium at a cheap rate and sell it at a
high price to opium agents in Calcutta
(now Kolkata), who then shipped it
to China. But the prices given to the
peasants were so low that by the early
eighteenth century, angry peasants
began agitating for higher prices and
refused to take advances. In regions
around Benaras, cultivators began
giving up opium cultivation.
(iii) To control the situation, the British
instructed its agents posted in the
princely states to take away all opium
and destroy the crops. This conflict
between the British government,
peasants and local traders continued
as long as opium production lasted.
Q14. Why did the whole region of the Great
Plains become a dust bowl?
Ans.(i) When wheat cultivation had
expanded dramatically in the early
19th century, zealous farmers had
recklessly uprooted all vegetation and
tractors had turned the soil over and
broken the sod into dust.
(ii) The whole region had become a
dust bowl. In the 1930s, terrifying
dust-storms began to blow over the
southern plains of America.
(iii) Black blizzard rolled in, very often
7,000 to 8,000 feet high, rising like
monstrous waves of muddy water.
The American dream of a land of
plenty had turned into a nightmare.
IV. Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. “The coming of new technology
proved to be a boon for the expansion
of wheat cultivation in the USA.”
Explain. [HOTS]
Or
What role did the new technology play
in the expansion of wheat cultivation
in USA?
Ans.(i) The expansion of wheat cultivation
in the USA was made possible by
new technology. Through the 19th
century, as the White settlers moved
into new habitats and new lands, they
modified their implements to meet
their requirements.
(ii) When they entered the mid-western
prairie, the simple ploughs the farmers
had used in the eastern coastal areas
of the USA proved ineffective. The
prairie was covered with a thick mat
of grass with tough roots. To break the
sod and turn the soil over, a variety of
new ploughs were devised locally.
(iii) By the early 20th century, farmers
in the great plains were breaking
the ground with tractors and disc
ploughs, clearing vast stretches for
wheat cultivation.
(iv) Before the 1830s, the grain used to
be harvested with a cradle or sickle.
At harvest time, hundreds of men and
women could be seen cutting the crop.
In 1831, Cyrus McCormic invented
the first mechanical reaper which
could cut in one day as much as five
men could cut with cradles and 16
men with sickles.
(v) By the early 20th century, most
farmers were using combined
harvestors to cut grain. With one of
these machines, 500 acres of wheat
could be harvested in two weeks.
(vi) Thus, the new machines enabled
the farmers to rapidly clear large
tracts, break up the soil, remove
the grass and prepare the ground
for cultivation. With power-driven
machinery, four men could plough,
seed and harvest 2,000 to 4,000 acres
of wheat in a season.
Q2. How did the USA become the bread
basket of the world? How did it turn
into a dust bowl? [HOTS]
Or
“The American dream of a land of
plenty had pushed into a nightmare.”
Explain.
Ans.(i) The USA became the bread basket
of the world by developing modern
agriculture. After the American Cars
of Independence from 1775 to 1783
and the formation of the United States
of America, the White Americans
began to move westward.
(ii) By the time Thomas Jefferson became
President of the USA in 1800, over
700,000 White settlers had moved
on to Appalachian Plateau through
the passes. Seen from the east coast,
America seemed to be a land of
promise.
(iii) By the first decade of the 18th century,
they settled on the Appalachian
Plateau and then moved into the
Mississippi valley between 1820
and 1850. They made the land for
cultivation and sowed corn and
wheat.
(iv) In the early years, the fertile soil
produced good crops. When the soil
became impoverished in one place,
the migrants would move further west
to raise new crops.
(v) It was, however, only after the 1860s
that settlers swept into the Great
Plains across the river Mississippi.
In subsequent decades, the region
became a major wheat-producing area
of America.
(vi) From the late 19th century, there
was a dramatic expansion of wheat-
production in the USA. The urban
population in the USA was growing
Page 4
(iv) Tractors and machines that had
ploughed the earth and harvested the
wheat in the 1920s were now clogged
with dust, damaged beyond repair.
Q7. What was opium primarily known for?
How were the Chinese made addicted
to it?
Ans. Opium was primarily known for its
medicinal properties and was used in
miniscule quantities for certain types
of medicines. The Chinese were well
aware of the dangers of its addiction,
and the Emperor had, therefore,
forbidden its production and sale
except for medicinal purposes. But
western merchants in the mid-18th
century began an illegal trade in
opium. It was unloaded in a number
of seaports of south-eastern China
and carried by local agents to the
interiors. By the early 1820s, about
1,000 crates were being annually
smuggled into China. Fifteen years
later, over 35,000 crates were being
unloaded every year. This meant
that the Chinese became addicted
to opium. People of all classes took
to the drug — shopkeepers and
peddlers, officials and army men,
aristocrats and paupers. In 1839, it
was estimated that 4 million Chinese
had become opium smokers. Thus,
China became a country of opium
addicts.
Q8. How did the British government
persuade the unwilling cultivators to
grow opium? [HOTS]
Or
How were the unwilling cultivators
made to produce opium?
Ans.(i) Indian cultivators were not ready
to grow opium because it was an
unprofitable business for them.
Seeing their unwillingness, the British
government started a system of
advances.
(ii) In the normal areas of Bengal and
Bihar, there were a large numbers of
poor peasants. They never had enough
to survive. From the 1780s, such
peasants found their village headmen
giving them money advances to grow
opium.
(iii) The innocent peasants did not
understand that it was the government
opium agents who were advancing the
money to the headmen, who in turn
gave to them.
(iv) When offered a loan, the cultivators
were tempted to accept, hoping to
meet their immediate needs and pay
back the loan at a later stage. Thus, it
was the system of advances that made
the unwilling cultivators grow opium.
Q9. How did the system of advances tie the
peasants to the British government?
Or
“After accepting money advances, the
cultivators had no option but to grow
opium.” Explain. [HOTS]
Ans.(i) When the British government
started the system of advances, many
cultivators became ready to grow
opium. They thought that they would
fulfil their immediate needs with the
loan and would pay back it at a later
stage.
(ii) But the loan tied the peasants to
the government. By taking the loan,
they were forced to grow opium on a
specified area of land and hand over
the produce to the agents once crop
had been harvested.
(iii) They had no option of planting the
field with a crop of his choice or of
selling their produce to anyone but
the government agent. And they were
bound to accept the low price offered
for the produce.
Q10. What is meant by ‘Triangular Trade’?
What led to its development? [HOTS]
Ans. The triangular trade refers to the trade
between England, India and China in
the eighteenth century.
(i) The British East India Company was
buying tea and silk from China for
sale in England. As tea became a
popular English drink, the tea trade
became more and more important.
(ii) England at this time produced nothing
that could be easily sold in China. The
western merchants did not have a way
to finance the tea trade.
They could buy tea only by paying in
silver coins or bullion. This meant an
outflow of treasure from England.
At last it was decided that opium would
be grown in India and transported to
China in exchange of tea.
Q11. How did the westward expansion of
settlers in the USA lead to a total
destruction of American Indians?
[HOTS]
Ans.(i) In 1800, Thomas Jefferson became
President of the USA. The American
War of Independence had been fought
from 1775 to 1783 and the formation
of the United States of America made
it seem like a land of promise from the
East Coast.
(ii) It was during this time that the
700,000 White settlers began to move
westward on to the Appalachian
Plateau through the passes. The
westward expansion of settlers in the
USA led to a complete destruction of
American Indians who were pushed
westwards, down the Mississippi
river, and then further west.
(iii) They fought back, but were defeated.
Numerous wars were waged in which
Indians were massacred. Their villages
were burnt and cattle destroyed.
Q12. What led to a dramatic expansion of
wheat-production in the USA?
Ans.(i) From the late nineteenth century,
there was a dramatic expansion of
wheat-production in the USA and the
export market became bigger.
(ii) During the First World War, the world
market boomed. Russian supplies of
wheat were cut off and the USA had
to feed Europe.
(iii) US President Wilson encouraged
American farmers to produce more
wheat. In 1910, about 45 million acres
of land in the USA was under wheat
and nine years later it expanded to 74
million acres, an increase of about 65
per cent.
Q13. When did the British government in
Bengal establish a monopoly to trade
in opium? How did people react to
it and what steps were taken by the
British government to control it?
Ans.(i) By 1773, the British government
in Bengal established a monopoly to
trade in opium. No one else was legally
permitted to trade in the product.
(ii) The government wanted to produce
opium at a cheap rate and sell it at a
high price to opium agents in Calcutta
(now Kolkata), who then shipped it
to China. But the prices given to the
peasants were so low that by the early
eighteenth century, angry peasants
began agitating for higher prices and
refused to take advances. In regions
around Benaras, cultivators began
giving up opium cultivation.
(iii) To control the situation, the British
instructed its agents posted in the
princely states to take away all opium
and destroy the crops. This conflict
between the British government,
peasants and local traders continued
as long as opium production lasted.
Q14. Why did the whole region of the Great
Plains become a dust bowl?
Ans.(i) When wheat cultivation had
expanded dramatically in the early
19th century, zealous farmers had
recklessly uprooted all vegetation and
tractors had turned the soil over and
broken the sod into dust.
(ii) The whole region had become a
dust bowl. In the 1930s, terrifying
dust-storms began to blow over the
southern plains of America.
(iii) Black blizzard rolled in, very often
7,000 to 8,000 feet high, rising like
monstrous waves of muddy water.
The American dream of a land of
plenty had turned into a nightmare.
IV. Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. “The coming of new technology
proved to be a boon for the expansion
of wheat cultivation in the USA.”
Explain. [HOTS]
Or
What role did the new technology play
in the expansion of wheat cultivation
in USA?
Ans.(i) The expansion of wheat cultivation
in the USA was made possible by
new technology. Through the 19th
century, as the White settlers moved
into new habitats and new lands, they
modified their implements to meet
their requirements.
(ii) When they entered the mid-western
prairie, the simple ploughs the farmers
had used in the eastern coastal areas
of the USA proved ineffective. The
prairie was covered with a thick mat
of grass with tough roots. To break the
sod and turn the soil over, a variety of
new ploughs were devised locally.
(iii) By the early 20th century, farmers
in the great plains were breaking
the ground with tractors and disc
ploughs, clearing vast stretches for
wheat cultivation.
(iv) Before the 1830s, the grain used to
be harvested with a cradle or sickle.
At harvest time, hundreds of men and
women could be seen cutting the crop.
In 1831, Cyrus McCormic invented
the first mechanical reaper which
could cut in one day as much as five
men could cut with cradles and 16
men with sickles.
(v) By the early 20th century, most
farmers were using combined
harvestors to cut grain. With one of
these machines, 500 acres of wheat
could be harvested in two weeks.
(vi) Thus, the new machines enabled
the farmers to rapidly clear large
tracts, break up the soil, remove
the grass and prepare the ground
for cultivation. With power-driven
machinery, four men could plough,
seed and harvest 2,000 to 4,000 acres
of wheat in a season.
Q2. How did the USA become the bread
basket of the world? How did it turn
into a dust bowl? [HOTS]
Or
“The American dream of a land of
plenty had pushed into a nightmare.”
Explain.
Ans.(i) The USA became the bread basket
of the world by developing modern
agriculture. After the American Cars
of Independence from 1775 to 1783
and the formation of the United States
of America, the White Americans
began to move westward.
(ii) By the time Thomas Jefferson became
President of the USA in 1800, over
700,000 White settlers had moved
on to Appalachian Plateau through
the passes. Seen from the east coast,
America seemed to be a land of
promise.
(iii) By the first decade of the 18th century,
they settled on the Appalachian
Plateau and then moved into the
Mississippi valley between 1820
and 1850. They made the land for
cultivation and sowed corn and
wheat.
(iv) In the early years, the fertile soil
produced good crops. When the soil
became impoverished in one place,
the migrants would move further west
to raise new crops.
(v) It was, however, only after the 1860s
that settlers swept into the Great
Plains across the river Mississippi.
In subsequent decades, the region
became a major wheat-producing area
of America.
(vi) From the late 19th century, there
was a dramatic expansion of wheat-
production in the USA. The urban
population in the USA was growing
and the export market was becoming
ever bigger.
(vii) As the demand increased, wheat
prices rose encouraging farmers to
grow more and more wheat.
(viii) In 1910, about 45 million acre of land
in the USA was under wheat. Nine
years later, the area had expanded to
74 million acres. Now, the USA began
to be called the ‘bread basket of the
world’.
(ix) But it could not maintain this image
for a long period. The expansion of
wheat production in the Great Plains
created severe problems.
(x) In the 1930s, terrifying dust-storms
began to blow over the Southern
Plains. Black blizzards rolled in very
often 7,000 to 8,000 feet high, rising
like monstrous waves of muddy water.
(xi) They came day after day, year after
year, through the 1930s as the skies
darkened and the dust swept in,
people were blinded and choked.
(xii) Cattle were suffocated to death, their
lungs choked with dust and wind.
Dead bodies of birds and animals
were scattered all over the landscape.
(xiii) Tractors and machines, that had
ploughed the earth and harvested the
wheat in the 1920s, were now clogged
with dust, damaged beyond repair.
The whole region had become a dust
bowl. The American dream of a land
of plenty had turned into a nightmare.
Q3. Write an account on dramatic
expansion of wheat-production in
the USA and what were the results of
expansion of wheat agriculture in the
Great Plains? [HOTS]
Ans. From the late nineteenth century,
there was a dramatic expansion of
wheat-production in the USA and
the export market became bigger.
During the First World War, the world
market boomed. Russian supplies of
wheat were cut off and the USA had
to feed Europe. US President Wilson
encouraged American farmers to
produces more wheat. In 1910, about
45 million acres of land in the USA
was under wheat and nine years later
it expanded to 74 million acres, an
increase of about 65 per cent.
The expansion of wheat agriculture led
to terrifying dust-storms in the 1930s.
Terrifying dust-storms began to blow
over the southern plains of America. It
came to be known as ‘Black blizzards’.
The dust-storms rose 7,000 to 8,000
feet high. They appeared as monstrous
waves of muddy water. They came day
after day, year after year, through the
1930s.
As skies darkened, and the dust swept
in, people were blinded and choked.
Cattle were suffocated to death, their
lungs caked with dust and mud. Sand
buried fences, covered fields and
coated the surfaces of rivers till the
fish died. Dead bodies of birds and
animals were scattered all over the
landscape. Tractors and machines
clogged with dust and damaged
beyond repair.
Q4. Discuss the system of advances
introduced by the colonial state. How
did the system tie the poor farmers to
the government? [HOTS]
Ans. In the rural areas of Bengal and
Bihar, there were large numbers of
poor peasants. It was difficult for
them to pay rent to the landlord
or to buy food and clothing. From
1780s, such peasants found their
village headmen giving them money
advances to produce opium. When
offered a loan, the cultivators were
tempted to accept, hoping to meet
their immediate needs and pay back
the loan at a later stage.
Note: Also see the answer to Q9 (Short
Answer Type Questions)
Q5. What did the enclosure imply? Why
was the land enclosed in the 18th
century in England? [HOTS]
Ans.(i) The land enclosure in England
implied a big piece of land which was
enclosed from all sides and there were
hedges built around it to separate it
from the lands of others.
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