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Locating the Site Map 1: The United States in 1800. Map 2: The United States in 1810. Key: Maps 1 & 2. (Maps 1 & 2, and the Map Key were adapted from the 1800 and 1810 U.S. territorial growth maps in the National Atlas of the United States of America, U.S. Department of the Interior Geological Survey, Washington, D.C. 1970. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.) Before the purchase of the Louisiana Territory from France in 1803, the United States of America much more closely resembled the shape and size of the original 13 colonies with the Mississippi River as the western boundary of the United States. After the Louisiana Purchase, the U.S. became a dominant landholder in North America. With the French now preoccupied with strengthening their claims in Europe and the Spanish claims limited mostly to the Southwest and Central America, the U.S. was eager to lay claim to the disputed Oregon Country that both Great Britain and the U.S. coveted. The Lewis and Clark expedition helped cement that claim. *Note on U.S. Territories: According to the Northwest Ordinance legislation of 1787, land would remain in territorial status until the population reached 60,000. At that time, the territorial legislature would submit a state constitution to Congress and, upon its approval, the state would enter the Union.