Jarrett Notes: Manifest Destiny, pp. 228-232
America Expands Westward
- Treaty of Paris, 1783 signed to end American Revolution against Britain.
 - Borders: Mississippi River to the west, Canada to the north, and Florida to the south
 - Northwest Ordinance (1787): law that established orderly procedures for the admission of new states
 
Louisiana Purchase, 1803 – The beginning of westward expansion
- Purchased from France
 - doubled the size of the US
 - gave US control of the port of New Orleans
 
The Purchase of Florida, 1819
- Adams-Onis Treaty
 - US purchased Florida from Spain for $ 5 million.
 
“Manifest Destiny”
- Believed that Americans were a “chosen people” with a divine mission to spread democracy, Christianity, and western culture to the Pacific
 - would also strengthen security and provide economic opportunities
 
Chart: Political, Economic and Social Roots of “Manifest Destiny”
- Expanding Democracy: their democratic republic would serve as an example to the world
 - Security: would discourage threats from rival powers
 - Pioneering spirit: individualism admired by Americans
 - Romanticizing the West: paintings, popular prints and literature showed the West as an idea of nature
 - Future Prosperity: farmers in Texas and gold in California
 
Oregon Territory (1846)
- Pioneers moved along the Oregon Trail
 - to fertile Willamette Valley in Oregon
 - covered wagons
 - treacherous – 20,000 died
 
The Mormons in Utah
- Founded by Joseph Smith during the Second Great Awakening
 - Driven out of several states due to their religious beliefs
 - Brigham Young led them to the Great Salt Lake, Utah
 - Cultivated area through irrigation
 
The Annexation of Texas (1845)
- Increasing numbers of Anglo-AmericansMexican fear of losing control
 - Fighting erupted at Gonzalez over a cannon
 - Mexican Dictator Santa Anna slaughtered Texans at the Alamo and Goliad
 - Texans declared independence from Mexico
 - Sam Houston led Texans to victory in the Texas Revolution
 - Texas’ annexation to the US was delayed because the new state would be a slave state and the US feared war with Mexico
 - President James K. Polk promised to annex Texas and get the Oregon Territory - extended the existing border with Canada (the 49th Parallel, 49°N latitude) to the Pacific Ocean
 
US-Mexican War (1846-1848)
- Over a border dispute: US – Rio Grande; Mexico – Nueces River
 - US troops marched to Mexico City and defeated Mexico
 - Mexican Cession: Mexico gave up the lands of California, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Arizona, New Mexico Colorado and Wyoming in the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo for $15 million
 
Gadsden Purchase (1853)
- Completed the US’s expansion in the 1853
 - Pres. Franklin Pierce Purchased from Mexico for $10
 - to get land for southern route for a transcontinental railroad
 
The California Gold Rush
- Forty-niners: gold seekers who arrived in California during the Gold Rush
 - Effects of the Gold Rush in California:
 - California’s population increased statehood
 - California became a new destination for settlers moving westward
 
Westward Expansion Poses a New Challenge
- new issue: Should these newly acquired territories permit or prohibit slavery? (Mexico had already abolished slavery)
 - a new free state would upset the balance of free and slave states in Congress
 
