Chapter 12: Manifest Destiny
After the War of 1812, Americans settled the Great Lakes region rapidly thanks in part to aggressive land sales by the federal government
The harassment and dispossession of Native Americans—whether driven by official U.S. government policy or the actions of individual Americans and their communities—depended on the belief in manifest destiny
Manifest destiny was grounded in the belief that a democratic, agrarian republic would save the world
The quasi-religious call to spread democracy coupled with the reality of thousands of settlers pressing westward
The Young America movement, strongest among members of the Democratic Party but spanning the political spectrum, downplayed divisions over slavery and ethnicity by embracing national unity and emphasizing American exceptionalism, territorial expansion, democratic participation, and economic interdependence
American action in Florida seized Indigenous people’s eastern lands, reduced lands available for freedom-seeking enslaved people, and killed entirely or removed Native American peoples farther west
Desire to remove Native Americans from valuable farmland motivated state and federal governments to cease trying to assimilate Native Americans and instead plan for forced removal
Congress passed the Indian Removal Act in 1830, thereby granting the president authority to begin treaty negotiations that would give Native Americans land in the West in exchange for their lands east of the Mississippi
Many advocates of removal, including President Jackson, paternalistically claimed that it would protect Native American communities from outside influences that jeopardized their chances of becoming “civilized” farmers
President Martin van Buren, in 1838, decided to press the issue beyond negotiation and court rulings and used the New Echota Treaty provisions to order the army to forcibly remove those Cherokee not obeying the treaty’s cession of territory
Harsh weather, poor planning, and difficult travel compounded the tragedy of what became known as the Trail of Tears (a series of forced displacements that resulted in thousands of deaths)
The allure of manifest destiny encouraged expansion regardless of terrain or locale, and Indian removal also took place, to a lesser degree, in northern lands
The dream of creating a democratic utopia in the West ultimately rested on those who picked up their possessions and their families and moved west
Americans debated the role of government in the westward expansion
This debate centered on the proper role of the U.S. government in paying for the internal improvements that soon became necessary to encourage and support economic development
More than anything else, new roads and canals provided conduits for migration and settlement
The use of steamboats grew quickly throughout the 1810s and into the 1820s
Economic chains of interdependence stretched over hundreds of miles of land and through thousands of contracts and remittances
America’s manifest destiny became wedded not only to territorial expansion but also to economic development
The debate over slavery became one of the prime forces behind the Texas Revolution and the resulting republic’s annexation by the United States
New immigrants, mostly from the southern United States, poured into Mexican Texas, resulting in concerns over the growing American influence over the area
In 1834, an internal conflict between federalists and centralists in the Mexican government led to the political ascendency of General Antonio López de Santa Anna
Santa Anna, governing as a dictator, repudiated the federalist Constitution of 1824, pursued a policy of authoritarian central control, and crushed several revolts throughout Mexico
Texas annexation had remained a political landmine since the Republic declared independence from Mexico in 1836
American politicians feared that adding Texas to the Union would provoke a war with Mexico and reignite sectional tensions by throwing off the balance between free and slave states
The U.S.-Mexican War had an enormous impact on both countries
The American victory helped set the United States on the path to becoming a world power and served as a training ground for the Civil War
If the great draw of the West served as manifest destiny’s kindling, then the discovery of gold in California was the spark that set the fire ablaze
Most western settlers sought land ownership, but the lure of getting rich quick drew younger single men (with some women) to gold towns throughout the West
Lawlessness, predictable failure of most fortune seekers, racial conflicts, and the slavery question all threatened manifest destiny’s promises
Linguistic, cultural, economic, and racial conflict roiled both urban and rural areas
The ethnic patchwork of these frontier towns belied a clearly defined socioeconomic arrangement that saw whites on top as landowners and managers, with poor whites and ethnic minorities working the mines and assorted jobs
The expansion of influence and territory of the continent became an important corollary to westward expansion
The U.S. government sought to keep European countries out of the Western Hemisphere and applied the principles of manifest destiny to the rest of the hemisphere
Bitter disagreements over the expansion of slavery into the new lands won from Mexico began even before the war ended
Many northern businessmen and southern enslavers supported the idea of expanding slavery into the Caribbean as a useful alternative to continental expansion since slavery already existed in these areas
Some were critical of these attempts, seeing them as evidence of a growing slave-power conspiracy
Many others supported attempts at expansion, like those previously seen in eastern Florida, even if these attempts were not exactly legal
Fears of racialized revolution in Cuba (as in Haiti and Florida before it), as well as the presence of an aggressive British abolitionist influence in the Caribbean, energized the movement to annex Cuba and encouraged filibustering as expedient alternatives to lethargic official negotiations.
After the War of 1812, Americans settled the Great Lakes region rapidly thanks in part to aggressive land sales by the federal government
The harassment and dispossession of Native Americans—whether driven by official U.S. government policy or the actions of individual Americans and their communities—depended on the belief in manifest destiny
Manifest destiny was grounded in the belief that a democratic, agrarian republic would save the world
The quasi-religious call to spread democracy coupled with the reality of thousands of settlers pressing westward
The Young America movement, strongest among members of the Democratic Party but spanning the political spectrum, downplayed divisions over slavery and ethnicity by embracing national unity and emphasizing American exceptionalism, territorial expansion, democratic participation, and economic interdependence
American action in Florida seized Indigenous people’s eastern lands, reduced lands available for freedom-seeking enslaved people, and killed entirely or removed Native American peoples farther west
Desire to remove Native Americans from valuable farmland motivated state and federal governments to cease trying to assimilate Native Americans and instead plan for forced removal
Congress passed the Indian Removal Act in 1830, thereby granting the president authority to begin treaty negotiations that would give Native Americans land in the West in exchange for their lands east of the Mississippi
Many advocates of removal, including President Jackson, paternalistically claimed that it would protect Native American communities from outside influences that jeopardized their chances of becoming “civilized” farmers
President Martin van Buren, in 1838, decided to press the issue beyond negotiation and court rulings and used the New Echota Treaty provisions to order the army to forcibly remove those Cherokee not obeying the treaty’s cession of territory
Harsh weather, poor planning, and difficult travel compounded the tragedy of what became known as the Trail of Tears (a series of forced displacements that resulted in thousands of deaths)
The allure of manifest destiny encouraged expansion regardless of terrain or locale, and Indian removal also took place, to a lesser degree, in northern lands
The dream of creating a democratic utopia in the West ultimately rested on those who picked up their possessions and their families and moved west
Americans debated the role of government in the westward expansion
This debate centered on the proper role of the U.S. government in paying for the internal improvements that soon became necessary to encourage and support economic development
More than anything else, new roads and canals provided conduits for migration and settlement
The use of steamboats grew quickly throughout the 1810s and into the 1820s
Economic chains of interdependence stretched over hundreds of miles of land and through thousands of contracts and remittances
America’s manifest destiny became wedded not only to territorial expansion but also to economic development
The debate over slavery became one of the prime forces behind the Texas Revolution and the resulting republic’s annexation by the United States
New immigrants, mostly from the southern United States, poured into Mexican Texas, resulting in concerns over the growing American influence over the area
In 1834, an internal conflict between federalists and centralists in the Mexican government led to the political ascendency of General Antonio López de Santa Anna
Santa Anna, governing as a dictator, repudiated the federalist Constitution of 1824, pursued a policy of authoritarian central control, and crushed several revolts throughout Mexico
Texas annexation had remained a political landmine since the Republic declared independence from Mexico in 1836
American politicians feared that adding Texas to the Union would provoke a war with Mexico and reignite sectional tensions by throwing off the balance between free and slave states
The U.S.-Mexican War had an enormous impact on both countries
The American victory helped set the United States on the path to becoming a world power and served as a training ground for the Civil War
If the great draw of the West served as manifest destiny’s kindling, then the discovery of gold in California was the spark that set the fire ablaze
Most western settlers sought land ownership, but the lure of getting rich quick drew younger single men (with some women) to gold towns throughout the West
Lawlessness, predictable failure of most fortune seekers, racial conflicts, and the slavery question all threatened manifest destiny’s promises
Linguistic, cultural, economic, and racial conflict roiled both urban and rural areas
The ethnic patchwork of these frontier towns belied a clearly defined socioeconomic arrangement that saw whites on top as landowners and managers, with poor whites and ethnic minorities working the mines and assorted jobs
The expansion of influence and territory of the continent became an important corollary to westward expansion
The U.S. government sought to keep European countries out of the Western Hemisphere and applied the principles of manifest destiny to the rest of the hemisphere
Bitter disagreements over the expansion of slavery into the new lands won from Mexico began even before the war ended
Many northern businessmen and southern enslavers supported the idea of expanding slavery into the Caribbean as a useful alternative to continental expansion since slavery already existed in these areas
Some were critical of these attempts, seeing them as evidence of a growing slave-power conspiracy
Many others supported attempts at expansion, like those previously seen in eastern Florida, even if these attempts were not exactly legal
Fears of racialized revolution in Cuba (as in Haiti and Florida before it), as well as the presence of an aggressive British abolitionist influence in the Caribbean, energized the movement to annex Cuba and encouraged filibustering as expedient alternatives to lethargic official negotiations.