Preview

Summary: The Annexation Of Texas

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
243 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary: The Annexation Of Texas
Soon after gaining independence, Texas elected Sam Houston as their first president and voted for annexation. Andrew Jackson decided to wait a few years before adding Texas to the United States. Texas, being a slave state would upset the balance of slave states. He also knew that the addition could spark a war with Mexico. The annexation of Texas immediately caused tensions between the Mexican government and the United States. With the desire to acquire California and New Mexico, President James Polk sent troops to disputed territory to further upset the Mexican government. The American troops were quickly attacked, and the Mexican- American War was ignited. General Zachary Taylor led his men to victory at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    During the 1500 and 1600s, what stimulated or discouraged Spanish interest in the lands that are now Texas?…

    • 414 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the 1840s, Texan and its supporter were all focused on the Annexation of Texas. The Annexation was a must because Texas was no longer able to be an independent state. Texas need help, and that help was from the United States. The Annexation of Texas was a great thing for everyone because it offered Texas so much resources, but that did not mean it did not cause Texas problems or frustrations.…

    • 629 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    San Jacinto is known as the birthplace of Texas freedom. San Jacinto is considered one of the world's definitive fights. Sam Houston and his battered band of 910 pioneers steered Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, President, and Dictator of Mexico and so-called "Napoleon of the West," with his glad armed force, and changed the guide of North America. This story that has excited Texans for over a century. An account of high courage and initiative; of horrid hardship, disaster and sentiment. On April 21, 1836, this battle had permanently engraved the names of Texas loyalists on history's look of American immortals. Although the battle only lasted twenty minutes, the outcome had about a six-year long affect (Kemp). At the…

    • 789 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Moses Austin was born in 1761, at the age of 22 Moses Austin left home and moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania years later. In 1785 he married Mary Brown. The young couple moved to Richmond,Virginia, where Austin opened a branch of his dry good store. Stephen F. Austin was born November 3 1793. In 1819 a Nationwide economic depression caused Moses Austin to seem to his family humiliating because of his finacial downfall. Some the war of 1812 fought in the southern united states. This cause a lot of people have money problems After the War of 1812 , Stephen F. Austin inherited his father daring plans to colonize Spanish Texas. Austin had mixed success with the Mexican government. Mose Austin received a permit to send 300 Spanish people to Texas in 1821.…

    • 392 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    No ports, shallow water, hostile natives. No wonder the Spanish nearly failed to settle Texas. In 1682, the Spanish first arrived in Texas, hoping to successfully colonize it. They built their first mission, and continued to settle and colonize Texas. The main reasons Texas almost failed as a Spanish colony is because of rough geography, unstable population, very poor government and uncontrollable hostile natives.…

    • 333 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A nation in four decades had been multiplied several times its territory, purchase of Louisiana to France, Florida to Spain, the annexation of Texas and the subsequent war with Mexico (1846-1848) ambient. The political states of north and south had been mounded by the interest of the second in their plantations and the conservation of slavery, while the firs inclined towards trade; shipping and financial interests on one side were the debtor farmers, and other creditors’ capitalists. After independence, the first were represented by Democrat Thomas Jefferson and the last by the Federalists under Alexander Hamilton. The congress in Philadelphia in 1787 was the problems faced by the new state, debt, inter-state…

    • 318 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Failures Like all Presidents, both prior to and after 1849, James K Polk made some decisions that had a great impact on the country and shaped it in defining ways. One of his earliest mistakes was the engaging of Mexico in war. Despite running on the platform of possible Mexican-American tensions, nearly half of the American population was against annexing Texas for fear of Mexican retaliation. The Mexican American war was substantially detrimental to the populations, despite its clear victory. It resulted in over 13 000 American deaths.…

    • 336 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In addition, the expansion of slavery enabled James K. Polk, the supporter of Texas annexation, to win the election of 1844, which caused the resent among the Democrats in the North. After separating from Mexico, Texas requested to become a part of America. By rejecting Texas to enter in the United States as a slave state, the candidate for president from Democratic partly, Van Buren lost his support in the slave states in the South. As a result, James K. Polk, who agreed on the Texas annexation, eventually won the election of 1844. Many Democrats in the South betrayed the Northern Democrats by voting for Polk to support Texas annexation, which caused the resent among the Northern Democrats.…

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Around the 1840s, the US aspired to annex Texas and incorporate it as a state within the Union. However, gaining Texas had its consequences as it lead a war with Mexico. William Ellery Channing, an abolitionist and pacifist, saw that the policy regarding obtaining Texas would led the “nation into war” as it severed as “encroachment,” and a way “to propagate the curse of slavery.” (Doc 2) The annexation of Texas was seen invading Texas’ link to Mexico as in document one, the American Review stated the annexation “shall dissolve the slight bounds that now link the province to Mexico” (Doc 1) This served as a situation for Mexico, who had refused to recognize Texas’ independence and its takeover by the United States, although President James Polk, a strong supporter of the annexation of Texas as seen in his Inaugural Address- where he stated “none can fail to see the danger to our safety and future peace if Texas remains an independent states,” attempted to aid Mexico in coming to an understanding. Therefore, the Mexican War broke out, out of the effort for Texas to break free its bond to Mexico. Eventually, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the war, and came to an agreement that included setting boundaries for Texas and the acquisition of new territory- California, Utah, Nevada, Arizona,…

    • 1065 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Manifest Destiny Dbq

    • 1087 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Polk responds to this by ordering General Zachary Taylor to cross to cross the Nueces and approach the borderline but not cross it, this provoked the Mexican soldiers into firing at the Americans first, as planned. Overall, due to the expansion west, America engaged in this conflict with Mexico and effectively started a war. This changed things political because, there were new borders, now that Texas was a state, as well as the relationship with Mexico, Although Texas was an addition to the U.S., it could have been obtained by less forceful means, and this aggressive act could have been avoided, but the Americans decided to act as a steamroller and take everyone down that was standing in their…

    • 1087 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Texas took many steps toward independence and annexation. This all began with the idea of Manifest Destiny, which was the thought that God wanted white men to take land for their own pleasing. This idea was spread by Mountain Men, who in search for beaver and other furs for trade, probed the Rockies to explore more of the western part of the country. The most famous Mountain Man, Jedediah Smith, crossed the Great Basin and the Sierra Nevada to reach the California trail, which linked the U.S. to the Pacific coast. In 1842 an official government expedition led by John C. Frémont set across the western country, following these trails made by the Mountain Men. Most of nothing was found on this expedition but Frémont’s vivid and romantic accounts of the west drew settlers to the far west. Soon wagons of courageous and hopeful pioneers were making the demanding 2,000 mile and about 5 month journey west. With this great migration to the west American expansionists were seeking new territory. Though Mexico had most of the control of the south and west territories. Many provinces were located throughout the land the American migrants were hoping to settle in. Of all the provinces of Mexico, Texas was most vulnerable to the U.S. expansion. Texas had abundant, fertile land, and lay close to U.S. borders. It had a small population of Hispanics known as Tejanos to protect the province. To further grow and protect Texas, Mexico agreed to allow Americans settle in Texas. In return Americans had to become Mexican citizens, to worship as Roman Catholics, and to accept the Mexican constitution, which banned slavery. Mexico hoped that this would convert the Americans from a potential threat to an economic asset. Led by Stephen F. Austin, Americans began to settle east of San Antonio, in Austin founded and named by Austin. The Americans sought the economic opportunity of good farmland in large amounts, like many other settlers on other frontiers. By 1835, Texas was home to about…

    • 1083 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Texas’s annexation was legal and only between the US and Texas. It was also a god given right to expand west and for no foreign nation to interfere with expansion. Also, according to the Monroe Doctrine, “The Western Hemisphere was to be off-limits to future colonization by any foreign power.” That means that no other foreign country can interfere with our nation expanding west. Also, the question if Texas should is going to be a state in the United States is only between the US and Texas. US president, vice-president, representative, and governor of Virginia, John Tyler said, “The question of annexation as belonging exclusively to the U.S. and Texas.” Texas also wants to be a state because Mexico is being unfair in the rights…

    • 200 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Texas History

    • 1437 Words
    • 5 Pages

    2. He describes the climate as that of Mexico, sometimes hot. At that time, only once did he experience the chance of rain. During the winter you can expect it to be cold. When it’s cold, it’s cold! The snow he said to be rather…

    • 1437 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Zinn Essay Ch 8

    • 815 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The original provocation that enabled the U.S. to launch war against Mexico was Polk ordering General Taylor to send soldiers to the area between the Rio Grande and the Nueces River. Texas declared its independence from Mexico in 1836 and was bought by the U.S. in 1845. To ensure that the Texans would ally themselves with the U.S. Polk promised them their claim to the Rio Grande, and to carry out that promise, he sent troops to challenge Mexico. Inspired by greed, Taylor agreed to carry out Polk's orders with General Hitchcock stating that "the General [wanted] an additional brevet, and would strain a point to get it" (150). The greed of the American soldiers to obtain a reward for their efforts in Mexico inspired them to invade Mexican territory and provoke a war. If they were to win the war, then they would be promised rewards. This coincided with the U.S. government's attempt to provide an incentive for volunteers to join the army.…

    • 815 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Texas Revolution occurred because of a series of events that began long before the first shots fired at the Battle of Gonzales. In the summer of 1820 a 59 year-old Missourian named Moses Austin asked the Spanish Authorities for a large land tract which he wanted to use to attract American Pioneers. To manys surprise in early 1821 the Spanish government gave him permission to settle 300 families. Spain had welcomed Americans to help develop the land and to provide a buffer against the illegal U.S. immigrants who were causing problems. Although Moses Austin died and was not able to see his goal reached his son Stephen F. Austin stepped into his shoes and promised to carry out his fathers goal of colonizing Texas. By the end of 1824 Austin had attracted over 242 colonists to Texas and persuaded the Mexican government that the best way to attract Americans was to give out land grants. By the 1830's there were 16,000 Americans settled in Texas. As the population grew, the Mexican government grew skeptical of the growing American population. Mexico had feared the U.S. was planning to gain the province by revolution. Due to the diverse differences in language and culture their was bitter conflict between the Native Mexicans and the colonists. To reclaim the authority over Texas the Mexican government reestablished its constitutional prohibition against slavery, restricted trade with the United States, and put a end to further American Immigration. These actions possibly could have provoked the Texas Revolution. In 1832 General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna became Mexico's president. Many colonists hoped that Antonio would make Texas a self-governed state within the United States. Once in power, Santa Anna was less truthful than many Texans were led to believe. In mid 1834 Santa Anna overthrew Mexico's constitutional government, abolished state governments, and pronounced himself as dictator. When…

    • 857 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays