westward expansion 1783 – 1853 overview for “ordeal by fire” (causes of the civil war)
TRANSCRIPT
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Westward Expansion1783 – 1853
Overview for “Ordeal by Fire”
(Causes of the Civil War)
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1783-1853: Continental U.S. Obtained
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The Two (or three) Biggest Acquisitions:
Louisiana Purchase (1803) and Mexican Cession (1848) Texas Annexed in 1845
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Other Acquisitions
• 1783: Treaty of Paris grants U.S. territory westward to Mississippi River
• 1803: Louisiana Purchase
• 1810-1820: From Spain we obtain . . . – Florida – Parts of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana
• 1820s and 1840s: From Great Britain border with p.d. Canada is fixed (affecting Maine, Minnesota, and Dakotas)
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Other Acquisitions (cont’d)
• 1845: Annexation of Texas
• 1846: Treaty establishes p.d. Washington and Oregon as U.S. Territory
• 1848: Mexican Cession
• 1853: Gadsden Purchase brings in southern portions of Arizona and New Mexico
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Persistent Theme #1: Expansion Accomplished through
Diplomacy
• Most American acquisition of land came through negotiated treaties, not through warfare (or threat thereof)
• Often land was purchased: for example, from France, from Spain, from Mexico
• Notable exception: Mexican War (1848)• Another exception: failed conquest of Canada in War of 1812• One of the most pressing issues facing Articles of
Confederation Congress
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Persistent Theme #2: America’s Population Expands
Westward Relentlessly
• Issue of expansion a cause for rebellion (remember, Quebec Act)
• Facts speaking to the rapidity. By 1840 . . . – All land east of Miss. River occupied and
organized – Nine states west of Appalachians admitted– Majority of population lived west of original 13
states
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Persistent Theme #3: West’s Economic Value
Often Overestimated
• Fur trade the original draw to the West (French, then British, then Americans)
• By mid-19th century: “Great American Desert”
• Mechanization and Homestead boom – trying to farm the marginally farmable
• 100th degree longitude heuristic
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Persistent Theme #4: Federal Government Guides Exploration
and Development of West• Organization and territory-statehood process
determined early (1780s)– Precedent: federal gov’t and cheap(?) sale of land
• Several government-financed, quasi-military expeditions– Lewis and Clark (1803-06)– Zebulon Pike (1806-07)– Stephen Long (1819-20)– John C. Fremont (1843-44)
• Transcontinental railroad: first difficulties federal government encounters in development of West
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Figuring Out What’s Out
There
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Persistent Theme #5:Policies toward Native Americans Narrow Scope of Indians’ Domain
• Treaties and military conflict squeezes Indians from original 13 states, old northwest, and old southwest
• Lands west of Miss. R. intended to be Indians’ domain, but . . .
• Settlement pressures force government to renegotiate: Indians forced to cede claims in p.d. KS and NB in 1854 (civilized tribes)
• Nomadic tribes on Great Plains and further west pose a dilemma for middle decades of 19th century
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By 1835
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The Westward Expansion Dilemma for the Mid Nineteenth Century
• Relentless Surge of Settlers continues
• Slavery’s destiny and west linked in American consciousness and in politics
• South frightened by expansion westward