Manifest destiny.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
HY 135 Chapter Twelve The New West and Free North,
Advertisements

Chapter 19 From Sea to Shining Sea: American Expansion 1820–1848.
The Western Pioneers Click the mouse button to display the information. Americans moved west for land, adventure, or trade.  Many people believed that.
Manifest Destiny Chapter 9.
Chapter 9: Manifest Destiny American History. Heading Westward Many Americans began to move westward religious reasons opportunity to begin own farm Squatters.
CHAPTER 11. KEY QUESTIONS Name that tune… O beautiful for spacious skies, For amber waves of grain, For purple mountain majesties Above the fruited plain!
Just Do It!. Chapter 9.2  Americans believed in the rightful expansion of the United States from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean as they increasingly.
The Mexican War Chapter 7 Section 4 Objective 2.4 – Assess political events that contributed to sectionalism.
Conflict with Mexico. Stephen Austin owned land in Texas, passed down from his father He led a group of 300 Americans to Texas to start a small colony.
Manifest Destiny and Texas Independence US History CH 7.1 – 7.3.
Chapter 12 Review Sheet Class Notes. Key People Moses Austin: received the first land grant in Texas; his son brought the first Americans into Texas.
MANIFEST DESTINY AND THE WAR WITH MEXICO If the nation expands, so will slavery - ?
Manifest Destiny Chapter 7 Section 1,2,3.
Manifest Destiny -theory that the US should expand across the continent - From east coast to west coast; “God’s Will” Louisiana Purchase - doubled the.
CHAPTER 9 MANIFEST DESTINY. CHAPTER 9, Sec 1 I. Americans Head West 1800 – 387,000 white settlers lived west of the Appalachian Mtns 1820 – 2.4 million.
Immigration, Expansion and Sectional Conflict,
MANIFEST DESTINY AND THE WAR WITH MEXICO If the nation expands, so will slavery - ?
Independence for Texas
Chapter 7 section 3 Objective 4.2 Evaluate the impact settlement had upon different groups of people.
TrailsWest The Texas Revolution The War with Mexico ManifestDestiny The California Gold Rush Final Jeopardy Final Jeopardy.
 Large area of land between the Pacific Ocean and the Rocky Mountains north of California  Many different countries had claims to the land  Americans.
Edited by Tony Nassivera 2006 ( Some slides edited from Susan Pojer and Carol Jean Cox)
To The West. Westward Expansion Size of the U.S ,000 Sq Mi ,000,000 Sq Mi.
Manifest Destiny.
Manifest Destiny, Chapter 9. Manifest Destiny, Chapter 9.
Essential Question How did Manifest Destiny change the United States?
UNIT 7: MILITARY CONFLICT LESSON 7.4: TEXAS INDEPENDENCE AND THE MEXICAN AMERICAN WAR.
Mexican-American War By J.A.SACCO.
Westward movement, Texas Independence, and the Mexican- American War.
Chapter 13 AN AGE OF EXPANSIONISM. Territorial Expansion by the Mid-Nineteenth Century.
Manifest Destiny and the U.S.-Mexican War. Manifest Destiny Term originated by newspaper editor John O’Sullivan in 1845 Merging of political and economic.
Manifest Destiny: Chapter 9. Western Pioneers Section 1.
Independence for Texas 1. Began in 1803 with the Louisiana Purchase. The United States claimed that some of Texas was included within the purchase, but.
Manifest Destiny -theory that the US should expand across the continent Louisiana Purchase War of 1812 Lure of the West.
MANIFEST DESTINY Chapter 12. SECTION 1: OREGON TERRITORY Convention of 1818 Britain and U.S. had joint occupation ( )
Social Studies Project By: Julia Nations. Manifest Destiny Manifest Destiny- belief that the U.S. was destined to expand from the Atlantic to Pacific.
WESTWARD EXPANSION Go West Young Man!!.
Texas Independence 1836.
War with Mexico Manifest Destiny Goal 2 - War with Mexico.
How did the United States expand in the 1800s?
Manifest Destiny Section One The Western Pioneers.
Chapter 9 Vocab Words Telegraph Santa Fe Trail Oregon Trail Mormons
SECTION 1.
Manifest Destiny and the U.S.-Mexican War
Manifest Destiny, Oregon, Texas, and the War with Mexico
Manifest Destiny Texas Moses & Stephen Austin John L. O’Sullivan
Manifest Destiny.
#17 Ch.3.3 Notes Manifest Destiny
Have you ever played Oregon Trail?
Manifest Destiny.
Trends in Antebellum America:
CHAPTER 9 MANIFEST DESTINY.
Manifest Destiny and the U.S.-Mexican War
Jeopardy Let’s Begin!.
Westward Expansion Jeopardy
Essential Question: How did the American desire for Manifest Destiny lead to the acquisition of Texas, Oregon, & California? Warm-Up Question: What.
Texas and Westward Expansion
Manifest Destiny 3.1 Notes.
Mexican-American War By J.A.SACCO.
TAV Chapter 7 Manifest Destiny.
Manifest Destiny.
MANIFEST DESTINY AND THE WAR WITH MEXICO
Manifest Destiny Settling the Frontier
Manifest Destiny.
The Texas Revolution (Sec. 2)
Chapter 12 Manifest Destiny
Chapter 17 Ole’ Manifest Destiny
Westward Expansion (1820s-1850)
United States History & Government
Manifest Destiny Chapter 7
Presentation transcript:

Manifest destiny

Themes Pioneers Independence of Texas Mexican War

Western Pioneers Discuss the invention that made it easier to farm the Great Plains. Analyze why Americans were willing to give up their lives in the East to move to the West. Explain the actions Congress made to help squatters acquire land.

West John Louis O’ Sullivan Squatter Preemption Act 1830 Inventions Iron plow - Jethro Wood Steel plow – John Deere Mechanical reaper – Cyrus McCormick

Pacific Coast Oregon California Trappers Overlanders Indians Joint claims Missionaries California Mexican Independence (1821) John Sutter (50,000 acres) Trappers Beaver Frontier life Trails – Oregon, Californian, Santa Fe Overlanders Indians Trade Buffalo Treaty of Ft. Laramie

C. Mormons Religious freedom Brigham Young Great Salt Lake – “Deseret”

Chapter 9.1 Review Questions How did Congress protect squatters? Why did Native Americans begin to fear American settlers who migrated West? Why was the Mormon Trail important to western settlement?

Independence for Texas

Americans Tejanos Mexican Policy National Colonization Act Rebellion Citizenship Mexican law Roman Catholicism National Colonization Act empresarios Stephen Austin – Washington-on-the-Brazos Rebellion Haden & Benjamin Edwards Fredonia Mexican Reaction

Texas War for Independence Texas Conventions 1832 & 1833 1832 – petition the Mexican government 1833 – more aggressive (Coahuila) Negotiations – Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna Battle of Gonzales first victory “Come and Take It” Sam Houston Battle of the Alamo William B. Travis Significance Goliad Battle of San Jacinto Annexation

Chapter 9.2 Questions Why did the Mexican government close its borders to American immigration? Why did Texas declare their independence from Mexico?

III. Mexican War

Territorial Dispute Louisiana Purchase President John Tyler Mexico Stance on Texas

Election of 1844 Publicity campaign Election 1844 Texas (1845) Henry Clay & Martin Van Buren James K. Polk “Fifty Four Forty or Fight” Texas (1845) Border Dispute Nueces River Rio Grande River John Slidell

War with Mexico General Zachary Taylor “American blood has been shed on American soil” Three Pronge Strategy Zach Taylor Santa Fe Mexico City Call for volunteers Stephen Kearny John C. Fremont – Bear Flag Republic General Winfield Scott Treaty of Guadalupe Hildalgo

Chapter 9.3 Review Questions Why was war with Mexico inevitable? How did Texas and Oregon enter the Union? What were the provisions of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo?