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THE USA
Alison Baxter
Oxford Bookworms
Factfiles
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS


Page 3

1 America
Think of a big, beautiful, empty land
with mountains, forests, lakes,
animals and fish, but no people. This
was America 30,000 years ago.
Around that time, the first people
probably arrived in Alaska from
Asia. They travelled south and
became the North American Indians,
and the Aztecs, Mayas and Incas and
other peoples of Central and South
America. Later came the Inuit
(Eskimos) of Canada and the Arctic.
But there are only a few of these early
peoples in America today.
In the sixteenth century Europeans
started to come to America, and soon
after that, they brought workers -
slaves - from Africa. Large numbers
of immigrants continued to arrive
from all over the world until the
middle of the twentieth century.
The empty land was now full of
people, speaking different languages
and with different ideas. There are
just three countries now in North
America: Canada, Mexico and the
USA. But there
were nearly several
more. The 'United
States of America'
was not always
united. The 252
million people who
live in its fifty states
are not all the
same. So how was
the USA born?
How did it grow?
And what sort of
country is it now?


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2 The Pilgrim Fathers
For thousands of years, America and
its peoples were unknown to the rest
of the world. The Vikings visited
Canada from Scandinavia around
AD 1000, but did not stay. Then, in
1492, a brave Italian sailor called
Christopher Columbus reached the
Caribbean, while he was looking for
a sea route from Europe to India.
Columbus did not stay either. It was
only in the sixteenth century that the
French, the Spanish, and the
British all started to come and
live in North America.
In the early seventeenth
century, two very different
groups of English people
made the dangerous
journey across the Atlantic.
In 1607, a group of farmers
began the colony of
Jamestown, in Virginia. They
fought with the Indians, and
many died because they were ill and
did not have enough to eat. But
Pocahontas, the daughter of an
Indian chief, became a friend of
Captain John Smith and helped him
and the other English people. She
later married a man called John Rolfe
Pocahontas
Slaves working in the tobacco fields
and went to England, where she died.
The farmers discovered that it
was easy to grow tobacco in
Virginia, so they brought
African people to work
in the fields as their slaves.
Smoking was becoming
very fashionable, and
the Americans found a big
market for their tobacco
in Europe.
In 1620, another group of
101 English men, women and
children arrived in Plymouth,
Massachusetts. We know these
people, who had very strong ideas
about religion, as the 'Pilgrims', or
'Pilgrim Fathers'. They did not want
to live in England because they did
not agree with the Church of


Page 5

England, so they sailed to America in
a ship called the Mayflower. They
became not only farmers, but also
businessmen who bought and sold
animal skins. They thought that all
men were equal and so they did not
have slaves.
The Pilgrims too were often ill and
hungry, and nearly half of them died
in the first year. But they were helped
by friendly Indians, who showed
them how to grow corn. In the
autumn of 1621, the Pilgrims had a
big dinner to give thanks for the first
food that they had grown themselves.
This day became known as
Thanksgiving, and Americans still
celebrate it every year, on the fourth
Thursday of November. It is one of
the most important holidays in the
year, and people often travel many
hundreds of kilometres to be with
their family.
USA facts
'America' was named after an
Italian businessman called Amerigo
Vespucci, who sailed to South
America between 1499 and 1502.
Columbus called the Native
Americans 'Indians' because he
thought that he had reached India.
The Pilgrim Fathers landing at Plymouth


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3 The War of Independence
The Boston
Tea Party
By 1770, there were
thirteen colonies
along the east coast
of North America,
all governed by
Britain. But Britain
was a long way
away, and the
people of the
colonies became
angry at the high
taxes that the
government made
them pay.
In December
1773 a group of men threw
342 boxes of tea into the sea
at Boston because they did
not want to pay the British
tax on it. This was the
'Boston Tea Party'.
The British government was
now angry too, and in April
1775 some Americans fought a
group of British soldiers at
Lexington and Concord, in
Massachusetts. A few months later,
after the Battle of Bunker Hill, near
Boston, it was clear that Britain was
at war with its American colonies.
George
Washington
A farmer from Virginia, George
Washington, became the leader of
the American army.
But the colonies did not say that
they wanted to be fully independent
until the summer of 1776. Thomas
Jefferson wrote the famous
'Declaration of Independence',
where he said that the king, George
III, had broken his agreement with
his people, because he had not let
them have their rights: rights to life,
freedom and happiness. The day of
the Declaration of Independence is
another important American
oliday, celebrated each year
on July 4.
The Americans finally
won the war five years
later, in October 1781, and
two years after that, they
were free to govern
themselves. In 1788 they
made George Washington
their first president.
The thirteen colonies, which
became known as 'states', grew by
adding land to the south and west.
In 1803, Jefferson, the third
president, bought a piece of rich


Page 7

Signing the Declaration of Independence
farmland in the mid-west from
France; it was five times as big as
France itself, and it only cost $15
million. In 1819, the USA bought
Florida from Spain. The United States
was now twice as big as it had been
in 1781. And by 1848, after winning
Texas and the West from Mexico, it
had grown again so that it reached all
the way from the Atlantic to the
Pacific, over 5,000 kilometres.
USA facts
• The names 'United States of
America' and 'American' were first
used at the time of the War of
Independence.
• The American flag, the Stars and
Stripes, also first appeared at that
time. It has a stripe for each of the
first thirteen states and a star is
added when a new state joins, so
there are now fifty stars.


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4 The Civil War
This great country of 31
million people was known
as the Union, but in fact
there were deep differences
between the North and the
South. And in 1861 war
broke out - the most
terrible war that the world
had ever seen. At least
600,000 people died in the
fighting or from illness.
The war was fought to
keep the United States
united. It began because the
southern states kept slaves
to work in the cotton fields. Slaves
were not allowed in the North, and
the two sides argued about whether
they should allow them in the new
lands of the West. In 1860, Abraham
Lincoln, who belonged to the
Republican party, which was against
keeping slaves, was elected president.
On December 24, South Carolina
said that it wanted to be independent
and the other southern states soon
followed; they called themselves the
'Confederate States of America'. The
fighting began on April 12 1861, at
Fort Sumter.
Slaves working in the cotton fields
The South had some of the best
soldiers - one was the great Robert E.
Lee - and they had plenty of money
from selling their cotton to England.
But the North had more men and
more factories. They also had
Lincoln, one of the best presidents
that the USA has ever had.
Two famous soldiers helped the
North to win the war: General
Sherman is remembered in a famous
song about how he took 60,000 of
his soldiers on a journey from
Atlanta, in Georgia, to the Atlantic
coast, breaking the Confederate


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The Battle of Gettysburg Abraham Lincoln
states in two; after the war, he
became head of the American army.
General Ulysses S. Grant was the
man who represented the North at
Appomattox in 1865, when the
South, under Lee, accepted that they
had lost the war. Grant was very fair
to Lee's soldiers, who did not have to
go to prison. Some years later, in
1868, he became president.
Sadly, in April 1865, just after the
end of the war, Lincoln was shot at
the theatre by a man called John
Wilkes Booth. After Lincoln's death,
the new president was not strong
enough to bring the North and the
South together. Anger and arguments,
mostly about the rights of black
people, continued.
USA fact
• A very important battle was won
by the North at Gettysburg in
Pennsylvania in 1863. Lincoln spoke
there afterwards about the brave
soldiers who had died. This became
known as the Gettysburg Address
and contains the famous words,
'. . . government of the people,
by the people, for the people.'


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5 The Wild West
During the nineteenth century, more
and more people went to live in the
West. Most of us have seen the 'Wild
West' in films and on television, and
so we think that it was full of
cowboys and fighting. But in fact
there were very few cowboys - no
more than 40,000 - and real
cowboys did not shoot each other
very often. They were hard-working
men, and at least a quarter of them
were black or Mexican. They took
cows from Texas up to the railway
towns in Kansas and Missouri to be
killed for meat. From there, the meat
was sent to the East and sold.
The cowboys almost disappeared
after about thirty years because the
land was given by the government to
farmers and their families. From
1862 to 1900, more than half a
million farmers came to live in the
West, where they grew corn and
Indians hunting buffalo
A cowboy
other crops instead of keeping cows.
The farms were very lonely, but
soon the railways helped to bring
people together. In 1869, the railway
line from the East met the line from
the West in Utah, so it was possible
for Americans to travel right across
the USA by train.
There were about two million
Native Americans (or 'Indians') in
America in the fifteenth century,
when the Europeans started to
colonize the country. They lived by
hunting and farming, and when they
got horses from the
Europeans, they used them
to hunt buffalo. There were
about 60 million buffalo
and the Indians needed them


Page 11

for food, clothes, houses, knives, etc.
Sadly, the Europeans also brought
diseases which killed the Indians.
They fought and killed the Indians
too, because they wanted to take
their land for farms or railways. They
shot millions of buffalo, so that it is
said that by 1900 there were less than
a thousand animals left in all of the
USA - and less than 250,000 Native
Americans.
The Indian wars ended in 1890
with the Battle of Wounded Knee,
when many Sioux men, women
and children were killed by
American soldiers. After this,
Indians had to live in special
places called 'reservations'.
Even today, many of the
two million Native
Americans live on
reservations; they
are often very poor
and a lot of them do
not have jobs.
USA facts
• From 1860 to 1861, the
mail was carried from East
to West and back again by
the famous Pony Express.
Horses were kept at
An early American railroad
different places; one man rode
with a bag of letters for about
120 kilometres and then gave
it to another man. In this way,
letters only took about ten
days to cross the country.
• One very well-known
rider was Buffalo Bill
Cody. He later became
a soldier and a hunter;
they say that he shot 4,280
buffalo in one year! In the
1880s, Buffalo Bill started
his Wild West Show, a kind
of travelling theatre, with the
famous cowgirl Annie Oakley.
Buffalo Bill


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6 New Americans
At the beginning of the nineteenth
century most American families had
come from Britain, Germany and
Scandinavia, and they were farmers
or businesspeople. But soon that
began to change.
Factories were built and cities
grew; poor people arrived from other
countries, hoping to find work.
Between 1840 and the end of the
century, about five million people
Chinatown, San Francisco
came from Ireland alone. Another
five million immigrants came from
Italy, and millions more from Russia,
Poland and other countries of Eastern
Europe, hoping to find jobs and
freedom. America kept an 'open
door' until 1924 and about 27
million people arrived between 1880
and 1930. They were often poor, had
different religions, and had not been
to school for very long; there was a
lot of prejudice against them.
The Chinese immigrants in the
West also met with prejudice. Many
people came to live in California after
gold was found there in 1848, and
among them were 300,000 Chinese.
Many of the Chinese stayed to work


Page 13

building the new railways. Like black
people and Native Americans, the
Chinese had no civil rights and after
1882, they were no longer allowed to
enter the USA.
The Irish, Italians and Eastern
Europeans usually stayed in the big
cities of the East or the Mid-West,
like New York, Boston or Chicago,
and worked in the factories.
Although most of them learned
English and became Americans, they
also wanted to keep their own way of
life. So in many cities you can find
places known as Little Italy or
Chinatown, where the restaurants
have Italian or Chinese food. This is
all part of what makes America an
interesting and exciting country.
USA facts
• Immigrants from Europe arrived
at Ellis Island in New York,
where they were checked for
illness and other problems.
They were welcomed by the
Statue of Liberty, which was
given by France to America in
1886. On it are written these
words:
'Give me your tired, your poor .. .'
• Today, the biggest number of
immigrants to the USA come
from Spanish-speaking countries
such as Mexico and Puerto Rico.
More than six million have arrived
since 1980 and Spanish has
become the second language of
the United States.
The Statue of Liberty
Immigrants arriving at Ellis Island


Page 14

7 Black Americans
Today about 30 million of the 252
million people in the USA are black.
They used to live mostly in the South,
working in the cotton and tobacco
fields. After the Civil War, white
Southerners were angry that they had
lost the war and angry that slaves
were now free. They showed a lot of
prejudice against black people. Some
whites joined the Ku Klux Klan,
groups of men who dressed in white,
covered their heads so that no one
knew them, and went out to beat and
murder black people. Black men
could not vote until 1870, and even
when they got the right to vote, they
often did not use it because they
were frightened.
In the
twentieth century,
black people
began to travel
to the cities of
the North and
later, to
California, to
look for work,
A Civil Rights
march
so there are now more black people
in the North than in the South.
But even in the North, they lived
separately, and in the South they
had to sit separately on buses and
eat in separate parts of restaurants.
Until 1954, they also had to go to
separate schools.
Then in the 1950s, a churchman
called Dr Martin Luther King began
to fight for the civil rights of black
people. Groups of black people
started to break the law, but not in a
violent way; they refused to use
buses, so that the bus companies lost
money. They also went into 'whites
only' restaurants. In August 1963,
200,000 people met in Washington
and heard Dr King speak about the


Page 15

need for black people to be equal. He
began with these words, which have
become famous: 'I have a dream . . .'
In 1964, a law was passed
giving black people their
civil rights and Dr King was
given the Nobel Peace Prize.
But in 1968, Dr King was
murdered in Memphis, and
fighting broke out in more than a
hundred cities.
During the 1970s and 1980s,
prejudice against black people slowly
began to become less important,
and many black
people now have
good jobs in
business and
government.
However, there are still problems, as
was shown by the fighting in Los
Angeles in 1992, after a black car
driver was beaten by white policemen.
USA facts
• A story about the hard life of
slaves called Uncle Tom's Cabin,
by Harriet Beecher Stowe, was one
of the most popular books of the
mid-nineteenth century and made a
lot of people see that it was wrong
to keep slaves.
• Harriet Tubman and Frederick
Douglass were famous slaves who
helped many other slaves escape
from the South to the North using
a route called the 'underground
railroad'.
Martin Luther King


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8 The government of the USA
The government of the USA has three
separate but equal branches:
Congress, the President, and the
Supreme Court. Women were given
the vote in 1920 and all Americans
can now vote when they are eighteen
years old.
Congress makes the laws.
There are two 'houses' of Congress:
the Senate and the House of
Representatives. There are a hundred
people in the Senate (two from each
state) and they are elected for six
years. There are 435 people in the
House of Representatives, and they
are elected for two years only. States
with more people, like California,
Washington DC
have more Representatives. Some
states, like Wyoming or Delaware,
which do not have many people, only
have one Representative.
The President is head of the
departments of government which
carry out the laws. He (until now the
president has always been a man) is
the leader of the country (like a king
or queen) and head of the army. He is
elected for four years, and can only be
elected twice. He can say 'no' to laws
passed by Congress (but Congress
can also say 'no' to him), and he
chooses the judges for the Supreme
Court. He lives and works in the
White House in Washington DC.
The Supreme Court is the most
important court in the country and
has nine judges; their job is to decide
what the laws mean. They can also
say that Congress has made a law
which is wrong, or that the President
has done something wrong.
The USA is a union of fifty states,
and as well as the national
government in Washington, each
state has its own government. Laws
can be very different from one state
to the next. They say very different


Page 17

Inside Congress
things about, for example, how old
you must be to vote, get married,
leave school or drive a car. Different
states punish criminals differently
too; in some states, you can be killed
for murdering someone, in others you
only go to prison.
The White House
USA fact
• There are only two important
political parties: the Republicans
and the Democrats. The Republicans
want people to work to help
themselves, and so they think that
taxes should be low.
The Democrats think that the
government should help the poor
and so it needs taxes. But the
difference between the two is not
always clear and it is not always easy
to say that one party is on the 'left'
or on the 'right' of the other.


Page 18

9 Living in the USA
Most Americans who have jobs live
more comfortably than people in any
other country in the world. They
usually work a forty-hour week and
they have two weeks' holiday a year
as well as the official holidays like
Thanksgiving and Christmas. In 60%
of families, both the husband and the
wife go out to work. Although more
than 40% of the land is farmed, not
many people work as farmers, and
fewer Americans work in factories
than in the past. Most jobs are now
in hospitals, banks, hotels, shops, etc.
How do Americans spend their
money? Two thirds of them own
their homes, often a house with a
garden in a nice suburb. And at least
85% of families have a car. They can
use it to go to 'drive-in' restaurants,
cinemas, banks, and even churches -
A suburban street
A 'drive-in' bank
the USA has no official religion, but
over 60% of Americans belong to a
Christian church.
If they don't want to go out,
Americans can always stay at home,
and watch television. Nearly all
families have a TV and it is said that
an ordinary family watches seven
hours a day! They have over 10,000
TV stations to choose from, most of
which are owned by private
companies, not by the government.
American TV programmes are sold
all over the world, and in many


Page 19

countries people watch the news on
CNN. Few newspapers cover all the
USA, but you can buy papers like the
New York Times and the Washington
Post everywhere, as well as the
magazines Time and Newsweek.
Most Americans enjoy sports,
which helps to keep them healthy.
Their favourites are baseball,
basketball, football and ice hockey.
American football is very different
from European football; players run
and carry the ball more than they use
their feet.
A shopping mall
And, of course, Americans love to
shop; the supermarket first appeared
in America, and now many shops are
open twenty-four hours a day. In the
1990s, Americans were spending
twelve hours a month in indoor
shopping centres; some of the biggest
shopping centres in the world are
in the USA - Mall of America in
Minneapolis covers half a
million square metres!
Americans have
to pay if they are
1 Baseball
2 Ice hockey
3 Basketball
4 American
football


Page 20

ill and visit a doctor or
go to hospital, but they
do not usually pay to
go to school. Schools,
like the laws, are
different from state to
state, but in most
places, everyone goes to school for
about twelve years. And about a
third of school students go on to
university.
What do Americans eat? In the
past, America gave a number of
different foods to the rest of the
world: potatoes, tomatoes, chocolate
and corn, for example. Today,
American 'fast' food is sold in
restaurants in almost every country
of the world. The most famous
examples are probably hamburgers
and hot dogs, eaten with
french fries.
But if you visit the
USA you can also eat
all kinds of tasty
food from different
countries: Chinese,
Mexican, Italian . . .
the immigrants who
came to the USA
brought their
own favourite
foods with them. And
more and more people
are interested in healthy
eating, so they choose
'low-fat' foods, or they
refuse to eat meat.
USA facts
• The money in the USA is the dollar,
which contains a hundred cents.
Some coins have special names: 50
is a nickel, 100 is a dime, and 250
a quarter.
• Coca-Cola was first made in 1886
by an American called John
Pemberton. Today it is sold in 195
countries and Coke is one of the
best-known words in the world.
• From 1920 to 1933, during
Prohibition, it was against the law
to drink alcohol in the USA,
but many people still
wanted to drink it.
So criminals like Al
Capone became rich
by bringing alcohol
into the country.
Fast food


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10 Cities, lakes and rivers
Boston, where the fight for
independence began in the eighteenth
century, is one of the oldest cities in
the USA. In neighbouring Cambridge
is the oldest university in the USA,
Harvard, which was opened in 1636,
as well as the famous Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT).
Perhaps the most well-known
family in twentieth-century Boston
was the Kennedy family. Like many
other Boston families, they came
from Ireland. They became very rich,
and John F Kennedy, a Democrat,
became President of
the United States in
1960. At that time
he said '. . . ask not
what your country
can do for you, but
what you can do for
Harvard University
your country' He and his beautiful
wife Jacqueline were young and
popular, but sadly, in 1963,
'JFK' was shot and killed
in Dallas, Texas.
Everyone knows New
York, the biggest city in the
USA. It is a great place for
theatre, shopping and
Skyscrapers in New York


Page 22

The Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans
restaurants. It is also the home of the
United Nations, whose offices are in
a beautiful glass skyscraper. In fact,
when you think of New York, you
probably think that the skyscraper
was born here.
But in fact the first really tall
buildings were built in Chicago after
the great fire of 1871. Today, the
Sears Tower in Chicago (more than
400 metres high) is the tallest
building in the USA.
Chicago and the other cities
around the Great Lakes of the Mid-
West have more factories than
anywhere else in the USA. Detroit, on
Lake Erie, is where cars are made and
The
Model T
Ford
Satellite picture showing the Great Lakes
it is also known as one of the homes
of black popular music.
Henry Ford, who made the famous
Ford cars, was born in Michigan,
near Detroit. His 'Model T' (1908)
was the first car cheap enough for
ordinary people to buy. 'Anyone can
drive a Ford,' they said.
Lying between Canada and the
USA, the five Great Lakes are an
important route for ships travelling
from the Atlantic, along the St
Lawrence Seaway, to the Mid-West.
Together, Lakes Erie, Ontario,
Huron, Michigan, and Superior cover
244,108 square kilometres - more
than any other group of lakes in the
world. If you go there in the summer,
it is almost like going to the sea; you


Page 23

can lie on the beach or sail a boat.
But in winter it is very cold. Chicago
is sometimes known as the 'windy
city' because of the cold winds that
blow in from Lake Michigan.
Thousands of kilometres south of
the Great Lakes is the state of
Louisiana, which used to be French.
The city of New Orleans, on the
great Mississippi river, is famous for
its food, which is like French and
African food together, and for Mardi
Gras, when people celebrate by
dressing in colourful clothes and
walking or dancing through the
streets, playing music. New Orleans
is also the home of jazz, which was
first played by black musicians like
Louis Armstrong in the 1920s.
The Mississippi river is 3,778
kilometres long and in the nineteenth
century was an important way of
travelling from north to south. Mark
Twain wrote wonderful stories about
life on and around the river: The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876),
and Huckleberry Finn (1884).
The Mississippi river
USA facts
• If you drive all the way down the
Atlantic coast from New York past
Philadelphia to Washington DC,
you pass from city to suburb and
back again; it almost seems to be
one big city: a 'megalopolis'.
• Niagara Falls, between Lakes
Ontario and Erie, is 51 metres high.
• Mark Twain's real name was
Samuel Clemens and he took the
name 'Mark Twain' from special
words used by sailors on the
Mississippi. 'Mark twain' means
that the water is about two
fathoms, or four metres, deep.
Niagara Falls


Page 24

The Arizona desert
11 Mountains and deserts
The USA has some of the biggest
cities in the world, and more than
three quarters of its people live in
cities or towns. This means that there
are also some very empty places,
which have not changed much since
the first Europeans arrived. The
government has kept some of them as
National Parks, where people are not
allowed to build houses or factories.
The wonderful Rocky Mountains,
Skiing in the Rockies
for example, in the states of
Wyoming, Montana, Colorado,
Idaho and Utah, are great for
holidays. Visitors like to go there for
walking, climbing, fishing, hunting,
or horseriding. You can also go skiing
in winter at towns like Aspen. The
only big city in the Rockies is Denver,
which is one mile (1.6 kilometres)
above the sea. The air is so thin there
that it can make your head hurt when
you first arrive.
South of the Rockies lies the desert
state of Arizona, where the land has
fantastic colours: not just brown and
green, but red, pink, orange and blue.
The most famous place in Arizona is
the Grand Canyon. This deep river
valley was made by the Colorado
river cutting through the rock many
thousands of years ago. Today it is


Page 25

2,000 metres deep, 349 kilometres
long, and between six and twenty-
nine kilometres wide. You can walk
down to the river, but it will take you
two days to get there and
back, and you must take
plenty of water to drink.
You can also fly over it,
and see the
extraordinary shapes
of the rocks.
Next to Arizona, New
Mexico is another dry, desert state,
where farming is difficult and the
people are poor. Many Native
Americans live there on big
reservations. The Navajo, Hopi,
Pueblo and Zuni are known for the
beautiful things that they make from
silver, for their colourful blankets,
their pots and for their dancing.
Many artists have also come from
other parts of America to live in and
around Santa Fe and Taos.
Native American women making blankets
Mount Rushmore
A hot water geyser
USA facts
Las Vegas, in the desert
state of Nevada, is a centre for
gambling. People make and lose
thousands of dollars there, playing
cards or other games.
The Black Hills of Dakota are
famous for Mount Rushmore,
where the faces of four American
presidents: Washington, Jefferson,
Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt
were cut in the rock. It took
fourteen years, from 1927 to 1941.
Yellowstone Park in Wyoming and
Montana is famous for the hot
water geyser that shoots up into
the air, up to 115 metres high.
Salt Lake City, the chief city of
Utah, is next to a lake that is much
saltier than the sea. Even if you
haven't learned to swim, you could
probably swim in this lake!


Page 26

12 California
California is a state of differences. It
has the lowest, driest place in the
USA: Death Valley, which is 86
metres below sea level. It is very hot
there (56.7°C on the hottest day, in
1913) and in some years it does not
rain at all. But the north of the state
is quite cold and wet. This is where
the great redwood trees grow - the
biggest trees in the world. California
grows more fruit and vegetables than
any other state in the USA, and it is
famous for its wine. But it is also a
centre for computers and business. It
has more people than any other state.
San Francisco is, many people
think, one of the most beautiful cities
in the world. It was nearly destroyed
by an earthquake and the fire which
followed it in 1906. There was a big
earthquake in 1989 and everyone
knows that one day, perhaps very
soon, there will be another, but they
continue living in San Francisco
because life there is fun.
Los Angeles is the second biggest
city in the USA. It can take hours to
drive from one side to the other - and
people almost always drive! The
number of cars means that the city
has a problem with dirty air; it also
has a lot of violence. But visitors still
come to see Disneyland, Hollywood,
where films are made, and Beverley
Hills, where you can look at the
houses of famous film stars.
A Californian redwood tree San Francisco


Page 27

13 North and South, East and West
Travelling north
from California,
you come to
Oregon and then
Washington.
These states are
cool and wet,
but very
beautiful, with
big forests and
high mountains.
Since the 1980s,
Seattle has
become one of
the most
popular cities in
America; it is
the home of
new music and
of coffee bars
selling lots of different types of
coffee; films and TV programmes
are made about people who live in
Seattle. A city that was once quiet is
becoming crowded and expensive.
Away across the country is another
city which has changed a lot in the
last twenty years: Atlanta, Georgia.
It is big and modern, with one of the
busiest airports in the world; the
Charleston
Seattle
Olympic Games
were held there
in 1996. There
are plenty of
jobs, and people
think that, like
Seattle, it is a
comfortable city
to live in. It is
very different
from the old
cities of the
south:
Savannah,
Georgia, and
Charleston,
South Carolina,
for example,
where there
are still many
beautiful old houses which look
the same as they did 150 or more
years ago.
There are so many interesting and
exciting places to visit in the USA
that we cannot show you them all.
Use the map on the next two pages
to plan your own journey across
America, by car, by train, by bus,
or just in your dreams!


Page 28

Cold, lonely
Alaska is the
largest state in
the USA and is
separated from
the other states
by Canada. The
American
government
bought it from
Russia in 1867
for $7.2 million
and it became a
state in 1959.
People used to
make money
from fishing and
hunting, and
gold was found
there too. But
today, it is
important for its
oil. North
America's
highest
mountain,
Mount McKinley
(6,194 metres),
is in Alaska.
Nearly 4,000 kilometres
west of California lies Hawaii.
This group of beautiful islands
became the fiftieth state of
the USA in 1959. Today,
people visit Hawaii for beach
holidays in the sun.
Texas is the
second biggest
state after Alaska.
There are still
cowboys who work with cattle, but
the modern state of Texas, like
Alaska, is rich because of its oil.


Page 29

Florida is known as the 'Sunshine State'
because it is so warm and sunny. Many
Americans choose to live in Florida when
they retire. Oranges grow there, and visitors
come to enjoy beach holidays. They can
also visit Disneyworld and the Kennedy
Space Center.
The states of
Maine, New
Hampshire,
Vermont,
Massachusetts,
Connecticut
and Rhode
Island are
known as New
England.
Visitors go
there to see the
beautiful
colours of the
trees, which
turn red, yellow
and gold in the
autumn.


Page 30

Exercises
A Checking your understanding
Pages 1-5 Write answers to these questions.
1 When did Europeans start to come to America?
2 Who arrived in Massachusetts in 1620?
3 Why were the American people angry with the British government?
4 Who was the first president of the USA?
Pages 6-11 Are these sentences true (T) or false (F)?
1 The northern states kept slaves.
2 Abraham Lincoln was president during the Civil War.
3 Buffalo were very important to the Native Americans.
4 The immigrants who arrived in the nineteenth century were usually rich.
Pages 12-18 How much can you remember? Check your answers.
1 How many black people are there in the USA today?
2 Who used the famous words, 'I have a dream . . .'?
3 What are the names of the two big political parties in the USA?
4 What are Americans' four favourite sports?
Pages 19-23 How much can you remember? Where . . .
1 ... is the oldest university in the USA?
2 ... were the first skyscrapers built?
3 ... are Niagara Falls?
4 ... is the Grand Canyon?
Pages 24-27 Find answers to these questions.
1 Which city was nearly destroyed by an earthquake in 1906?
2 Where were the Olympic Games held in 1996?
3 Which state did the Americans buy from Russia in 1867?
4 Which was the fiftieth state to join the USA?


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