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Chapter 13 Westward Expansion

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Chapter 13 Westward Expansion

(1820-1860)
(American Nation Textbook Pages 378-405)

Powerpoint by Mr. Zindman

1. Oregon Country In the spring of 1846 many people were on their way to the western frontier. As the nation grew many people moved west on the Oregon Trail. In doing this, the United States enlarged its borders.

I think Im lost on the Oregon Trail!

The Lure of Oregon By the 1820s, families were in search of good farmland, so they headed westward. They were drawn to the lands far west. Americans went to Oregon Country, a huge area beyond the Rocky Mountains. Today this land includes Oregon, Washington, Idaho and much of Wyoming. White settlers found fine farmland and good temperatures in the Oregon Country. Animal trappers flocked to the Oregon Country because for beaver and other fur bearing animals.

I like hunting in Oregon!

Competing Claims
Great Britain, Russia, Spain and the United States all claimed the land of the Oregon Country. Even though the land rightfully belonged to the Native Americans, the United States and other countries claimed the land in Oregon. In 1818, the United States and Britain agreed to occupy the land jointly.
As an early settler, I love hunting!

Fur Trappers in the Far West


I love living off the land.

In Oregons vast forests a group of men called, Mountain Men trapped animals and lived off the land. They were viewed as rugged individualists, or people who followed their own independent course of life.

Their lives were filled with great danger. They lived their life trying to make their fortune in trapping beavers in the Rocky Mountain Streams. However, bears wildcats and other wild animals often attacked these fur trappers, making their life very dangerous. Mountain men lived off the land. In bad times they would eat almost anything to stay alive. In good times, they would gorge themselves with food. They learned many of their survival skills from the Native American Indians.
Mountain Men beware of me!

During the fall and spring, they would tend to their traps. Then in July, they would meet other traders in a place chosen the year before, called the rendezvous. This was a fun time for trappers to laugh and exchange stories. By the 1830s the fur trade was dying out because they killed too many beavers. Some Mountain Men took jobs leading settlers across the rugged trails of Oregon.
I cant wait to meet the other fur traders

Mountain Men Explore New Lands In their search for furs, the Mountain Men show the settlers the wilderness trails of the west. At least one Mountain Man was a woman. Marie Dorion, an Lowan Indian, first went to Oregon with fur traders in 1811. She won fame for her survival skills.

I will survive!

Missionaries in Oregon The first white Americans to build homes in the Oregon country were the missionaries. Among them were Marcus and Narcissi Whitman. They built their mission near the Columbia River. Soon they took over the Indian lands for their housed and their farms.
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Wagon Train West


Throughout the 1840s the settlement in Oregon grew. Farmers bragged about the great crops they harvested. Word got to the east and started Oregon Fever. Soon everyone was flocking to Oregon to start their own farm. Wagon trains left every spring for Oregon following the Oregon Trail.

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Life on the trail was hard, most families set out with heavy gear. They traveled from dawn to about 7:00 p.m. daily. The long trek held many dangers. In the spring travelers risked their lives traveling through the heavy rains. Snow storms often blocked traveling through the mountains. The biggest threat was sickness. Cholera and other diseases could wipe out a whole wagon train. Because travelers live so close together, diseases and germs spread quickly.

I feel sick!

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As pioneers moved west, they often passed Native Americans. The Indians seldom attacked the whites trespassing on their land. The Native Americans often traded with the settlers. Hungry Americans were grateful for the food they the Indians sold. Despite their hardships, 50,000 people reached Oregon between the years 1840-1860. By the 1840s the American people greatly out numbered the British people in Oregon.
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2. The Republic of Texas Americans in Mexican Texas Since the early 1800s American farmers had looked eagerly at the vast region called Texas. At the time, Texas was part of the Spanish colony of Mexico. In 1821, Stephen Austin was given a land grant by Spain so he was able to set up a colony.
Texas

Hooray for Steve Austin!


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Meanwhile Mexico won their independence from Spain. The Mexicans allowed Stephen Austin and the settlers to stay because they believed they would help fight off Indian attacks. Soon afterwards, the Mexicans gave the American colonist land if they agreed to become Mexican citizens and Catholics. Soon 20,000 Americans moved to Texas. They had the support of many Tejanos, or people of Mexican descent born in Texas.

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Conflicts soon erupted because most of the settlers were Protestants and they did not speak the Mexican language. In addition, the Mexicans feared that the United States wanted to make Texas part of their country. This led to fighting between the Texans and Mexicans. The Mexican leader, Santa Anna was a dictator. A dictator is a ruler with absolute power and authority. Santa Anna was determined to rid Texas of the Americans. Many Texans fled. Fewer than 200 Texans were held up in an old Spanish mission called the Alamo. At the final siege at the Alamo 183 Texans and almost 1,500 Mexicans died. The five Texan survivors, including Davy Crocket, were executed at Santa Annas orders. The men of the United States rushed to aid Sam Houston and the American Army. On April 21, 1836, Houston attacked Santa Annas army at the Battle of San Jacinto. The Texans won the battle and Texas declared their independence from Mexico. It did not become part of the United States because of differenced in antislavery feelings. Texans owned slaves.

Santa Anna

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Sam Houston

In battle the Texans had carried a flag with a single white star. After winning independence, they nicknamed their nation the Lone Star Republic. They wrote their own constitution using the United States Constitution as a model. People were divided on whether Texas should join, or annex the United States of America.

I love Texas!

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3. California and the Southwest The entire Southwest territory belonged to the Mexicans in the late 1840s. This region was called the New Mexico Territory. It included most of the present-day states of Arizona and New Mexico, all of Nevada and Utah, and parts of Colorado. On these lands the Pueblo, Zuni and Apache Indians lived.

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California belonged to the Mexicans. In the early 1840s Spain claimed the California territory. Spain had claimed the region 100 years before the English colonists built homes in Jamestown. Soldiers and priests built the first European settlements in California. California Indians lived in small, scattered groups. They were generally peaceful people. They did not offer much resistance to the soldiers who forced them to work for the missions.
We did not want to give up California.

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The Spanish Explorer Juan de Onate claimed the region for Spain in 1598. The Spanish built their city called Santa Fe. The town grew into a busy trading town. Americans were not allowed to settle in Santa Fe or anywhere in New Mexico. William Becknell was the first American to head for Santa Fe. He was the first to travel to Santa Fe. People who followed Becknells route called his route the Santa Fe Trail.

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California was ruled by Spain and then by Mexico. The Spanish soldiers and missionaries built the first European settlements in California. In 1769 Father Serra built the first mission in San Diego. Each mission included a church and surrounding land. Each mission became self-sufficient, producing enough for its own needs.

Father Serra

A statue of Father Junipero Serra and a Juaneno Indian boy, on display at the Mission San Juan Capistrano.

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In the 1820s, newly independent Mexico decided to speed up the economy by taking the land from the missions and giving it to wealthy individuals who set up large ranches in California. Native Americans did most of the work on the ranches. Vaqueros were Indian and Mexican cowhands that worked on the ranches.

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Vaqueros

After Mexico won its independence, conditions for Native Americans grew even worse. The New Mexican Government offered mission land to ranchers. Some other ranchers cruelly treated the Indians. These harsh conditions had a deadly effect. Between 1770 and 1850, the Native American population of California declined from 310,000 to 100,000.
Native Americans go home!

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Expansion: A Right and a Duty As late as the mid 1840s, many Americans saw a Democratic government of the United States as the best in the world. They believed that the United States had the right and the duty to spread its rule all the way to the Pacific Ocean. In the 1840s, a New York newspaper coined a phrase for the belief. The phrase was called Manifest Destiny. Manifest means clear or obvious. Destiny means something 28 that is sure to happen.

James Polk

Americans who believed in Manifest Destiny thought the United States was clearly meant to expand the Pacific. Many Americans believed that they were better than the Native Americans and Mexicans. For these Americans, racism justified taking over lands belonging to the Indians and Mexicans only considered inferior. In 1844, James K. Polk was elected president because he favored the expansion of the United States.

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4. The Mexican War


President Polk was determined to add Texas to the United States. To

fulfill his dream, he led the United States into a bloody war with Mexico. Annexing Texas In 1844, Sam Houston, the press of Texas, signed a treaty of annexation with the United States. The Senate refused to ratify the treaty because they feared that this would cause a war with Mexico. Sam Houston tricked the Senate by telling them that Texas would become an ally of Britain. When the Senate heard this, they feared a war with Britain so they added Texas to the United States.
Texas is part of the U.S.A.

Sam Houston
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Fighting in Mexico On June 14, 1846 rebels declared California an independent nation. They called it the Bear Flag Republic. In February of 1847 General Zachary Taylor met the Mexican General Santa Anna in the Battle of Buena Vista. The final battle of the Mexican was offered in Chapultepec. The Americans were successful in winning the war against the Mexicans. The Mexicans signed the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo. Under the treaty the Mexicans hade to cede, or give up, all of California and New Mexico to the United States. These lands were called the Mexican Cession. A few years later in 1853, the United States paid Mexico for a strip of land we call today, Arizona and New Mexico. This land was called the Gadsden Purchase.

General 32 Zachary Taylor

5. Americans Rush West

The largest group of settlers to move into the Mexican cession were the Mormons. Mormons belonged to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints founded by Joseph Smith in 1830. The Mormons moved to Ohio. They set up a community called Nauvoo. Soon afterwards, the Mormons had trouble with their neighbors. The Mormons needed to seek refuge, or a place were they would be safe from persecution. The Mormons made a difficult journey to the land we call Utah today. In this land they 33 settled.

The California Gold Rush

While the Mormons were moving to Utah, thousands of Americans were racing farther west to California. The great attraction there was gold. In 1848 Gold was found in Sutters Mill. Everybody rushed to the Sutter Mill in Sacramento, California. They hoped to find gold and become rich. Newspapers spread the word of the great gold strike at Sutters Mill. Soon more than 80,000 people made the long journey to California in 1849. They became known as the Forty-niners.

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Sutters Mill in 1850

Forty-niners

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Very few miners struck it rich. Many miners became broke trying to find their fortunes in gold. Many stayed in California and began farming. They did not return home. The gold rush enabled the city of San Francisco to grow from a sleepy town to a bustling city of newcomers.

San Francisco today

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California contained a diverse Population. The newcomers included runaway slaves from the south, New Englanders, and people from Hawaii. The Native Americans of California were driven off their land without a means of making a living. Many Chinese sailed across the Pacific Ocean to California to join the Gold Rush. Free blacks joined the Gold Rush hoping to strike it rich. California contained the richest population of African Americans. African Americans and other minorities still faced racial discrimination in California.

An African American digs for gold in Auburn Ravine in 1852. Some of the Gold Rush era's most daring pioneers were black.

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