Title: Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy
1Chapter 18
- Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy
2William Henry Harrison
- He was the first president to die in office.
- He served one month, the shortest term of any
president. - He gave the longest inauguration speech of any
president. - He was the first candidate to have a campaign
slogan---"Tippecanoe and Tyler, Too."
3John Tyler
- Became president after the death of Harrison
- Former Democrat turned Whig due to dislike of the
dictatorial tactics of Jackson. - He was against almost everything Whigs were for.
- National Bank
- Protective Tariff
- Internal Improvements
- His entire cabinet resigned, except for Webster.
- Tyler had 15 children, the most of any president.
4Tyler receiving the news of Harrison's death,
April 5, 1841. CREDIT "Tyler receiving the
news of Harrison's death, April 5, 1841." Wood
engraving. No artist listed. Library of Congress,
General Collections. Reproduction Number
LC-USZ62-5997 (bw film copy neg.)
5Caroline Affair
- The Caroline was an American steamship that had
been aiding rebels in Canada. Canadian militia,
on orders of the British, seized the Caroline in
American waters. They set the ship on fire, and
sent it hurling over the Niagara Falls. These
actions strained US relations with Great Britain
almost to the point of war.
6Aroostook War
- Feb.May, 1839, border conflict between the
United States and Canada. In 1838, Maine and New
Brunswick both claimed territory left
undetermined on the U.S.-Canadian border,
including the valley of the Aroostook River.
Maine farmers were interested in the valley's
farmlands, and when New Brunswick sent Canadian
lumbermen to do logging there, Maine authorities
raised a force to eject them. New Brunswick asked
for British regular troops and full-scale
fighting seemed imminent, but Gen. Winfield
Scott, who had been sent to the area with a small
U.S. force, managed to reach an agreement (Mar.,
1839) that prevented trouble. The boundary was
later settled by the Webster-Ashburton Treaty
(1842).
www.state.me.us/.../ history/fortkent/war.gif
7Webster-Ashburton Treaty
- The Webster-Ashburton Treaty, signed August 9,
1842, settled the dispute over the location of
the Maine-New Brunswick border between the United
States and Canada as well as the location of the
border (at the 49th parallel) in the westward
frontier up to the Rocky Mountains and the shared
use of the Great Lakes. It also called for a
final end to the slave trade on the high seas, to
be enforced by both signatories.
8The Lone Star Republic
- After Texas won their independence from Mexico it
remained an independent country. (Lone Star
Republic) - Texas asked the United States to grant them
statehood but the U.S. refused because of fear of
war with Mexico and fear of inflaming the slave
issue. - Due to fear of an attack by Mexico Texas made
treaties with France, Holland, and Belgium. - When Texas began negotiations with Great Britain
the U.S. was forced to act.
9- James Polk responded by becoming the candidate in
favor of national territorial expansion. Polk
avoided trouble over his desire to annex Texas
(which would become a slave state) by proposing
to add Oregon as a free state.
New Yorkers opposed the annexation of Texas in
this petition.
10Election of 1844
- Whigs Henry Clay
- Third run at the presidency
- Leading spokesman for the Whig Party
- Desperate to become president
- Democrats James K. Polk
- A dark-horse candidate who had been picked
because the Democrats couldnt agree on anyone
else. - Called Young Hickory
- He and the Democrats advocated Manifest
Destiny. - Plan Annex Texas and annex the Oregon Territory
and whenever a slave state was added from the
south a free state would be added from the north. - Clay desperately tried to promote the same plan
and he contradicted himself and lost the
election thus becoming a three time loser for
the presidency.
11Annexation of Texas
- After the landslide victory of James Polk, who
ran on a ticket supporting annexation of Texas,
Congress approved the annexation by joint
resolution. In years past, Congress had blocked
the Tylers' treaties for these annexations.
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13Oregon Territory
- The Oregon territory stretched from the northern
tip of California to the 54 40 line. - Once claimed by Russia, Spain, England, and the
U.S. - England had good reasons for its claims north of
the Columbia River, since it was populated by
British and by the Hudsons Bay Company. - Americans had strong claims south of the Columbia
River due to the voyage of Robert Grey and the
population explosion as a result of the Oregon
trail.
14Oregon Trail
By the middle of the 19th century, the Oregon
Trail had become the main route to the American
Northwest. Thousands traveled the route, which
took six months by covered wagon. Deeply rutted
roads cut by wagon wheels can still be seen today
in many places along the trail.
15A Man and Woman With a Covered Wagon, Prospect,
Oregon, George E. Nichols, photographer,1913.
1654º40' or Fight!
17Compromise
- The 1844 Democratic presidential candidate James
K. Polk ran on a platform of taking control over
the entire Oregon Territory and used the famous
campaign slogan, "Fifty-four Forty or Fight!" - Through negotiations with the British after James
K. Polk's inauguration, the boundary between the
U.S. and British Canada was established at 49
18James K. Polk
- Polk promised to lower the tariff and he
delivered by reducing the tariff from 32 to 25
despite complaints by the industrialists. - He also restored the independent treasury in 1846
and wanted to acquire California and settle the
Oregon dispute. - President Polk was the first president in office
to have his photo taken (1849). - Polk had ruined his health from overwork while in
office. He died of exhaustion only 3 months after
his term ended.
19Polks Desire for California
- Polk had a strong desire for California but
Mexico refused to negotiate due to the annexation
of Texas. - The U.S. then sent John Slidell to Mexico City
with instructions to buy California for 25
million, however, once he arrived, the Mexican
government refused to see him. - This angered Polk to the point of war.
20American Blood on American (?) Soil
- A frustrated Polk now forced a showdown, and on
Jan. 13, 1846, he ordered 4000 men under Zachary
Taylor to march from the Nueces River to the Rio
Grande, provocatively near Mexican troops. - Congress refused to give Polk a declaration of
war unless Mexico fired the first shot. As
events would have it, on April 25, 1846, news of
Mexican troops crossing the Rio Grande and
killing of wounding 16 Americans came to
Washington. - Polk received his declaration of war
21Spot Resolution
- Congressman Abraham Lincolns demand to know the
exact spot where American blood had been shed on
American soil. - Lincoln insisted that Polk instigated the war.
- Northerners questioned Polks motives because
Mexican territory would be slave territory.
22Mexican-American War
- In the Southwest, U.S. operations led by Stephen
W. Kearny and John C. Fremont (leader of the Bear
Flag Revolt in California) were successful. - Old Rough and Ready Zachary Taylor, fought into
Mexico, reaching Buena Vista, and repelled 20,000
Mexicans with only 5000 men, instantly becoming a
hero. - General Winfield Scott led American troops into
Mexico City.
23Bear Flag Republic
- The first "stars and Stripes were raised over
Monterey, California by Commodore John C. Sloat
commander of U.S. Naval Forces on July 9, 1846.
At that time the flag had 28 stars. California
became a state on September 9, 1850. It was
represented on the flag by the 31st star.
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25Treaty of Guadalupe Hildalgo
- Called for Mexico to cede 55 of its territory
(present-day Arizona, California, New Mexico, and
parts of Colorado, Nevada and Utah) in exchange
for fifteen million dollars in compensation for
war-related damage to Mexican property. - Mexico was forced to recognize Texas as part of
the U.S. - The southern border of Texas was set at the Rio
Grande River. - Seeds planted for Civil War
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27Wilmot Proviso
- The Wilmot Proviso, first suggested on August 8,
1846 in the House of Representatives and attached
to many bills in the United States Congress,
would have outlawed slavery in any territory
acquired from Mexico by the United States as a
result of the recently begun Mexican-American
War. - The proviso, which was never passed, was named
for Congressman David Wilmot, a Democrat from
Pennsylvania.