the curious case of texas

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The Curious Case of Texas HUSH - Libertyville HS

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The Curious Case of Texas. HUSH - Libertyville HS. First Mexican Republic declared, 1821 Mexican Republic knew about manifest destiny idea of Americans. Texas Annexation. Texas Annexation. Mexican colonization offer 177 acres farmland or 13000 acres pasturage for FREE, per family! - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Curious Case of Texas

The Curious Case of Texas

HUSH - Libertyville HS

Page 2: The Curious Case of Texas

Texas Annexation• First Mexican

Republic declared, 1821

• Mexican Republic knew about manifest destiny idea of Americans

Page 3: The Curious Case of Texas

Texas Annexation• Mexican colonization offer

– 177 acres farmland or 13000 acres pasturage for FREE, per family!

– Promised republican gov’t, liberty

– Purpose? Deflection (empresario)

• Mexico demands of colonists– Learn Spanish– Become Mexican citizens– Adopt Catholicism– Offer Mexico goods for sale

first– No slaves!

• By 1830: 20,000 Americans in TX with 5000 slaves

1833 map showing land grants to empresarios

Page 4: The Curious Case of Texas

Texas Annexation: Santa Anna• Santa Anna take over

government, 1824• Dissolves Mexican

Republic, established federal system and military dictatorship

• 1830: Santa Anna prohibits further Anglo settlers into TX

• Texas – many Anglo settlers want to break away

Page 5: The Curious Case of Texas

Texas Annexation: Revolution• March 2, 1836:

Texans declare independence from Mexico– 1824 Mexican

Constitution changed– Colonization

guarantees had not been honored

• US style constitution, protecting slavery

Page 6: The Curious Case of Texas

Texas Annexation: War!• Santa Anna leads army into

Texas• March 6, 1836 - Alamo falls

(US – Travis, Jim Bowie, Davy Crockett)

• Massacre at Goliad• April 21 - Battle of San

Jacinto– Texan Army under Sam

Houston defeats Santa Anna; Santa Anna captured

– Treaty of Velasco signed, ending hostilities

“Last Stand at the Alamo”

Page 7: The Curious Case of Texas

Texas Annexation: “Lone Star Republic”

• Treaty est. Rio Grande as border

• Guaranteed TX independence

• Mexico refused to recognize treaty (duress)

• Sam Houston elected President of the “Lone Star Republic”Sam Houston

Page 8: The Curious Case of Texas

Texas Annexation: The Debate

• Supporters– Texans– Southerners– Slave States– Expansionists (pro

Manifest Destiny)– Potential southern

advantage in Congress

• Opponents– Northerners– Fear of South’s

power in Congress

– TX revolution as Southerner conspiracy

– Concern over war with Mexico

Texas asked to join the Union in 1836. . .

Page 9: The Curious Case of Texas

Annexation: Jackson’s Position• Houston a friend of

Jackson• Fellow slave owner• Pro-expansion

Westerner• BUT Jackson’s

primary concern was his successor: Election of Van Buren

• No action

Page 10: The Curious Case of Texas

Annexation: Van Buren’s Position

• Anti-Slave (from NY)

• Presidency occupied by Panic of 1837

• No action

• Texas dropped its annexation request in 1838

Page 11: The Curious Case of Texas

Annexation: Harrison and Tyler• Harrison: no action due

to his death• Tyler– Southern slave owner– Pro Texas annexation– Treaty for annexation

signed, 1844 BUT rejected by Senate

– Called for annexation by a joint resolution: passed March 1845 (Mexico reaction)

– TX formally joined Union December 29, 1845

– FL became state on March 3, 1845, Tyler’s last day of Pres.

Page 12: The Curious Case of Texas

Mexican-American War (1846-48)• Mexico refused to

recognize US’ 1845 annexation of TX

• Claimed TX as breakaway province

• Texas claimed its southern border with Mexico = Rio Grande; Mexico said border was Nueces R (150 miles N)

Page 13: The Curious Case of Texas

Mexican –American War (1846-48)

• Polk provoked war – Placed Gen. Taylor,

3,500 troops at Nueces R.

– Told Pacific naval squadron to seize CA ports, if war

– Sent John Fremont (explorer) into CA in 1845-46 to lead revolt against Mexico (“playing the TX game”)

– November 1845 – offered $25 million to buy land from Mexico (refused)

Page 14: The Curious Case of Texas

Mexican American War• Polk ordered Taylor

to Rio Grande– 63 US troops

attacked by 2000 Mexican troops between Rio Grande and Nueces R

• Polk: Mexico “shed American blood on American soil”

• Congress declared war

Page 15: The Curious Case of Texas

Opposition to War• Sectional divisions

explained opposition– Northerners feared

growing “Slave Power”– Also wanted to deepen

economy w/ industrialization, not broaden it w/ new land

– Southerners wanted expansion of slavery• North population growing

faster, feared losing edge in House

Slave auction, c. 1840

Page 16: The Curious Case of Texas

Opposition to War: “Spot Resolutions”

• Abraham Lincoln (W) introduced “Spot Resolution”– Questioned where

the spot was that US blood was shed

– Anti-war resolution; never acted upon by Congress

– Gained him notoriety

Page 17: The Curious Case of Texas

Mexican Cession

Area of Mexican Cession (yellow part

= Gadsen Purchase of 1853)

• Mexican cession gained for US territory to Pacific– CA– NV– UT– AZ

• With 1853 Gadsen Purchase, Mexico lost 2/3 of its territory, but only 8000 Mexican families