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Maine

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Title: CHAPTER 12 AN AGE OF EXPANSIONISM Author: CMU Last modified by: LCPS Created Date: 6/29/1998 8:07:00 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Maine


1
Maine
2
Territorial Expansion by Mid-19th Century
  • Canada
  • In 1839, fighting broke out between Maine
    Canada over the disputed Maine border
  • Webster-Ashburton Treaty (1842) settled the
    issue
  • The U.S. received ½ the disputed land
  • Established a clear border in Maine

3
War With Mexico
4
Tyler and Texas
  • In 1844, President Tyler called for the
    annexation of Texas
  • Tyler Calhoun created a propaganda campaign
    that England wanted Texas would end to slavery
    there
  • Northern Senators did not fall for it refused
    to ratify the treaty to annex Texas
  • Tyler was not nominated by either party in the
    1844 election

Tyler needed to make Texas a campaign issue in
the election of 1844 because he had been kicked
out of the Whig Party hoped to appeal to the
common man
5
Polk Texas Annexation
Dark Horse candidate
  • In 1844, the Whigs nominated Henry Clay the
    Democrats nominated James Polk
  • Polk won on expansionist platform
  • Called for Texas annexation
  • Called for an end to the joint U.S.-British
    control of Oregon
  • Polk Congress interpreted the election as
    mandate for expansion Texas was quickly made a
    state

Appealed to the South
Appealed to the North
6
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7
Oregon
8
Territorial Expansion by Mid-19th Century
  • Oregon
  • U.S. Britain jointly occupied Oregon (Spain
    relinquished its claims to Oregon in the
    Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819)
  • Britain claimed a greater stake of Oregon via
    Hudson Bay Co. (fur trade)

9
Polk and the Oregon Question
Oregon residents wanted the entire
territory54º40 or fight!
  • In 1846, President Polk notified Britain that the
    U.S. wanted full control of Oregon
  • England proposed the Senate approved the
    division of Oregon along 49o parallel in 1846
  • Benefits the U.S. gained its 1st deep-water port
    in the Pacific Northern abolitionists saw
    Oregon as a balance to slave-state Texas

10
Northwest Boundary Dispute
England the U.S. agreed to divide Oregon at the
49o parallel
54 40º or Fight!
11
Mexican-American War
  • Mexico recognized Texas independence U.S.
    annexation, but disagreed over Texas northern
    border
  • In May 1846, Polk sent U.S. General Zachary
    Taylor beyond the Rio Grande River which led to
    the Mexican-American War

12
The Mexican-American War
John C Fremont won in California
Zachary Taylor won in northern Mexico
Stephen Kearney captured New Mexico
Winfield Scott captured Mexico City
13
Settling the Mexican-American War
  • In 1848, U.S. Mexico agreed to the Treaty of
    Guadalupe Hidalgo
  • Rio Grande became the U.S. southern border
  • The U.S. grew 20 by adding the Mexican
    Cessionpresent-day NM, AZ, CA, Utah, NV, parts
    of CO WY
  • Added territory in NM AZ with the Gadsden
    Purchase in 1853

14
The Mexican Cession
Not everyone supported the Mexican-American War
Northerners saw it as a Southern slave-power
plot to extend slavery
Whigs opposed it
15
Wilmot Proviso
  • The 1846 Wilmot Proviso was a bold attempt by
    opponents of slavery to prevent its introduction
    in the territories purchased from Mexico
    following the Mexican War. Named after its
    sponsor, Democratic representative DAVID WILMOT
    of Pennsylvania, the proviso never passed both
    houses of Congress, but it did ignite an intense
    national debate over slavery that led to the
    creation of the antislavery REPUBLICAN PARTY in
    1854.

16
California
17
Territorial Expansion by Mid-19th Century
  • California
  • In 1833, the new Mexican govt awarded land
    grants to rancheros who quickly replaced the
    missionary padres
  • In 1830s, the U.S. was eager to enter the cowhide
    trade

18
The Bear Flag Republic
  • California settlers used John Fremonts
    occupation of California during the
    Mexican-American War as an opportunity to revolt
    from Mexico in 1846

Like Texas, California operated as an independent
nation the California Republic existed for one
month from June 1846 to July 1846 when it was
annexed by the United States
California became a U.S. state as part of the
Compromise of 1850
19
The California Gold Rush
  • The discovery of gold in 1848 led to a massive
    influx of prospectors in 1849 (the
    forty-niners)
  • Few miners struck it rich Real money was in
    supplying miners with food, booze, provisions
  • Led to a population boom, agriculture,
    multicultural society in California

20
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21
Where the 49ers Came From
22
  • San Francisco before the gold rush
  • San Francisco after the gold rush

23
Conclusions The Costs of Expansion
24
U.S. Territorial Expansion
25
The Costs of Expansion
  • The impact of territorial expansion
  • Historian Fredrick Jackson Turner noted in the
    1890s that expansion shaped Americans into an
    adventurous, optimistic, democratic people
  • But, expansion created sectional conflicts
    between the North South, especially over
    slavery
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