Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Westward Expansion Though the early history of North America includes Spanish settlement moving north into the American Southwest and French movement south down the Mississippi River, we most often tell American history from the perspective of Euro-Americans arriving on the Atlantic shore and moving west. Look at the Maps folder to see the extent of Euro-American settlement in the British colonies at the start of the American Revolution in 1775 and then at that settlement in the early years of the new nation of the United States in 1790 and trace the nation's expansion from 1810 to 1850. Those who have studied colonial American history know that the continued movement of Euro-Americans over the Appalachian Mountains caused turmoil that led the British to issue the Proclamation of 1763 to try to stop that migration and keep peace with Indians in the Ohio Valley. Then in the early years of independence, the United States faced continued troubles in the Ohio Valley with Indians because whites kept moving west. In the War of 1812, westward expansion was a factor and the west was the scene of crucial battles. Look at the maps from 1810 to 1850. As you can see, EuroAmericans trekked westward relentlessly. By 1830, more than a third of the population lived west of the original thirteen colonies. The transportation revolution of this era resulted in improved roads, canals, and steamboats, and the opening by railroads of the interior east of the Mississippi River that encouraged people to move. The federally financed National Road began in Baltimore in the 1810s, crossed the Appalachian Mountains, and reached Vandalia, Illinois, by 1850. States financed improvements such as New York's famous Erie Canal, which connected New York City with the Great Lakes in 1825. After steamboat design improved early in the nineteenth century, these vessels moved up and down the Ohio, Mississippi, and Missouri rivers and their WSBCTC 1 tributaries opening up new regions. But the most remarkable of these transportation changes was the railroad. New in 1830, the railroads grew to 31,000 miles of track by 1860. In 1869, the Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroads met in Promontory Point of Utah Territory where, with the driving of the golden spike, the first transcontinental line was completed. The growth of a transportation network together with industrialization hastened the transition of the United States from a rural/agricultural nation to an urban/industrial one. The United States physically expanded in the first half of the century from sixteen states in 1800 to thirty-one in 1850. In addition, huge areas west of the Mississippi came under American jurisdiction and would eventually gain statehood. A spirit, some would say plague, of boosterism called “Manifest Destiny” convinced many Americans that the nation's God-given mission was to stretch from the Atlantic to the Pacific. "Manifest Destiny" originated with a New York newspaper editor John O'Sullivan as you read in the textbook. Painter John Gast depicted it in his work "American Progress" (sometimes called "Westward Ho" or "Westward the course of destiny"). WSBCTC 2 Credit: Crofutt, George. "American Progress," chromolithograph, ©1873 George Crofutt, after the 1872 John Gast painting of the same name. The copyright for the Crofutt work has expired. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C., LC-DIG-ppmsca-09855. or view the painting here: http://www.cprr.org/Museum/Ephemera/American_Progress.html What does this painting tell you about "Manifest Destiny" and its image of the West? The Goddess of Liberty floats through the sky, carrying a book of laws and linking the continent with a telegraph wire. As she leads WSBCTC 3 the march of "civilized" progress, she ties the nation together with a telegraph. Invented by Samuel F.B. Morse in 1837, the telegraph crisscrossed the country with over 23,000 miles of wire by the mid-1850s. Note how the Indians, buffalo, and wild bears casting backward glances retreat before the pioneers. With the "sacred plow," covered wagon, stagecoach, and ultimately the railroad, the sturdy pioneer moves forward. Expansionists inspired the United States to negotiate the Oregon Treaty with Great Britain in 1846, which added today's Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and part of Montana and Wyoming. When the United States acquired Puget Sound in this treaty, it became the only good Pacific port under American control because the mouth of the Columbia was so dangerous and because Mexico still controlled the harbors of San Francisco and San Diego. At the conclusion of the Mexican-American War in 1848, the country grew to include present-day Texas, California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and parts of other western states. American actions in Texas to provoke the war with Mexico exposed the imperialistic and racist aspects of manifest destiny practiced by a nation that less than seventy-five years before had struggled as thirteen colonies against Britain's imperialism. The "American Communities" section that precedes Chapter 14 makes those imperialistic and racist aspects clear. Look at the 1850 map to see the land the United States acquired as a result of the Mexican-American War and the Oregon Treaty. From 1845 to 1848 the United States added 1.5 million square miles of territory and increased in size by more than 30 percent. ©Susan Vetter 2008, rev. 2011 WSBCTC 4