Objectives

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Objectives
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Explain how Texas won independence from
Mexico.
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Analyze the goals of President Polk.
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Trace the causes and outcome of the
Mexican–American War.
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Terms and People
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Stephen Austin – leader of American emigrants
who settled in Austin, Texas
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Antonio López de Santa Anna – charismatic
general who seized power of Mexico in 1834
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autonomy – independent control over one’s affairs
•
Lone Star Republic – new nation created by
Texans in 1835
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Alamo – Texas garrison where Santa Anna
executed all the defenders following battle in 1836
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Terms and People
(continued)
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Sam Houston – Texas army commander,
President, territorial governor, and later senator
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James K. Polk – Southern Democrat and
expansionist elected President in 1844
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Zachary Taylor – general who led troops at the
borderland between Mexico and the U.S. in 1846
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Winfield Scott – general who invaded Mexico
winning at Vera Cruz in 1847
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How did the revolution in Texas lead to
war with Mexico?
American expansionists sought new
territory in the South and West, making
conflict with Mexico seem inevitable.
The flashpoint for conflict became Texas.
The resulting war vastly increased the size
of the United States.
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American expansionists had their eyes on Texas.
Only 4,000 Hispanic Tejanos lived there in 1821.
Mexico sought to defend and to develop Texas by
inviting settlers. They offered inexpensive land on
three conditions. Settlers had to:
•
accept Mexican citizenship.
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worship in the Catholic Church.
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follow the Mexican Constitution,
which did not permit slavery.
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American settlers arrived, but tensions grew as
Americans ignored the Mexican government.
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Led by Stephen F. Austin, 30,000 Anglo-Texans
outnumbered the Tejanos six-to-one by 1835.
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Many brought slaves and ignored the Church.
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In 1834, Antonio López de Santa Anna
seized power in Mexico City, seeking greater
centralized control. But Texans wanted more
autonomy.
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In 1835, Texans declared
independence for the
Lone Star Republic.
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Santa Anna personally led
a siege of Texan forces at
the Alamo in San Antonio.
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After twelve days, he
stormed the mission and
executed any surviving
defenders, including Jim
Bowie and Davy Crockett.
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Several weeks later, Santa Anna took Goliad
and again executed prisoners, in an attempt
to frighten Texas into surrender.
Instead, Santa Anna created a set of martyrs.
“Remember the Alamo,” became the Texans’
rallying cry.
Many Southerners were inspired to volunteer
and joined the Texans.
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Sam Houston led a counter-attack.
At the Battle of San Jacinto, Santa Anna
was defeated and taken prisoner.
Houston later became president of the
Lone Star Republic.
After statehood in 1845, Houston
served as governor and then as
U.S. Senator from Texas.
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Fearing execution, Santa Anna signed a treaty
expanding the Texas border to the Rio Grande
and giving half of New Mexico to the Texans.
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The Mexican government refused to honor this
treaty demanding a return to the original border
at the Nuecos River.
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Fighting would persist for ten years over the
disputed borderlands.
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In 1844, expansionist James K. Polk
was elected president on a promise
to obtain both Oregon and Texas.
In Congress, northern Democrats
reluctantly agreed to annex Texas if
all of Oregon was also added.
Britain did not concede all of the territory. Rather then
fight, Polk made a deal to split Oregon and extend the
49th parallel border with Canada to the Pacific Ocean.
Northerners felt betrayed.
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The United States
annexed Texas in
1845, leading to
war with Mexico.
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President Polk claimed
all land as far as the
Rio Grande, tripling the
previous size of Texas.
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General Zachary Taylor
was sent to occupy these
border lands.
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Mexico objected to the
granting of statehood to
Texas and saw statehood
as an invasion of Mexican
territory.
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When Mexican patrols killed American
soldiers, Congress declared war on Mexico.
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Southern Democrats favored war, while Northern
Whigs felt that Polk deliberately provoked Mexico.
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The war was popular in the United States.
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Whigs dropped their opposition, fearing they
would be labeled disloyal as the Federalists were
for opposing the War of 1812.
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The United States easily defeated Mexico.
The U.S. had many advantages, including greater
wealth and a better-equipped military.
General Winfield Scott led an overwhelming
campaign in Mexico from Veracruz to Chapultepec,
forcing Santa Anna to abandon his capital Mexico
City and the war.
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Map of the
Mexican–
American
War
Texas
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