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Expansion and the Slavery Debate Continue 1846- 1853
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How Did the US get Texas? 1 st - Mexico declared it’s independence from Spain. Mexican Republic included present day Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah. 2 nd - Texas declared it’s independence from Mexico. Many Mexican officials did not accept that Texas was independent. 3 rd - After years of struggle, the US annexed Texas in 1845.
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Mexican War Mexico continued to claim Texas and dispute its southern border President James Polk sent US soldiers to protect the Rio Grande, and Mexico attacked General Taylor’s soldiers. May 13, 1846- Congress declared war
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Mexican Cession and Oregon Country September 1847- After more than a year, the war finally ends February 1848- Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo Mexico gave nearly 500,000 square miles to the US called the Mexican Cession. The US paid Mexico $15 million dollars and forgave $3 million in Mexican debts 1848- US and Britain agree to extend the 49 th Parallel and the US gets the Oregon Country
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United States, 1848
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Compromise of 1850 Polk and others want to extend the Missouri Compromise Line and divide the Mexican Cession into free and slave territories Sectionalism divides the nation and states enforce their rights “The Great Compromiser” proposes a plan called the Compromise of 1850. It has 5 provisions.
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Provisions of the Compromise of 1850 California enters Union as a free state Rest of the Mexican Cession would be divided into Utah and New Mexico, and popular sovereignty would decide the slavery status Settled a border dispute between Texas and New Mexico End slave trade in the country’s capital Enforce a tougher fugitive slave law.
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United States, 1850
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Kansas-Nebraska Act In 1853 the US bought the rest of our country from Mexico- The Gadsden Purchase. 1854- Stephen Douglas devised a plan to open the rest of the Louisiana Purchase to slavery. The Kansas-Nebraska Act divided the remainder of the Louisiana Purchase into two territories and said that slavery would depend on popular sovereignty.
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Bleeding Kansas Northerners and Southerners fought for control of Kansas 2 governments- 2 constitutions 1855 John Brown came to fight slavery. Pro slavery attack on Lawrence- one death Charles Sumner (anti slavery) Beating Pottawatomie Massacre led by abolitionist John Brown and anti slavery followers Lasted until 1859- 56 total deaths Kansas becomes a free state in 1861
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