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United s and Mexican War ‘Our age is … of a different character from the past,’ said the Senator Daniel Webster Society is full of excitement.’ America was going through a boom time. The 1840s saw rapid expansion in the industries. (Feldman, 2004) Some people in America thought the ‘western expansion was their God-given right.’ 2 The United States and Mexico could not agree on the border them. The United States argues that Mexico infantry to attack U.S. soldiers. Some The United States said it was just an excuse to get land claimed by Mexico.
Others feared that the practice of slavery spreading the new country was a war. Most of Congress and President Polk were not for war. They believed in Manifest Destiny and Polk wanted California. In May 1846 the U.S. declared war. It became known as the Mexican-American War. News of the war lasted more than a month to reach California. 2. July, John D. Commodore Sloat, Head of U.S. Navy ships in the Pacific, waiting news. He was ordered to take the California ports, where the war burst. He decided to take action on July 7, and more American Flag in Monterrey.
Yerba Buena St. Francisco Bay was captured, and Commodore Robert Stockton, San Diego and Los Angeles. At the end of the war with Mexico, the spirit of expansion was particularly strong. Some in Congress denounced the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, as it does not all of Mexico to the United States after the landslide victory of the United States. Others, however, argued that the racial impurity of the people of Mexico would lead to disaster. Hence, racism has allowed Mexico to maintain its sovereignty.
On the issue of slavery in the West, which has become the obsession of U.S. policy after the war with Mexico, Polk felt that the expansion would preserve the agricultural character and democratic United States, and weaken the trend toward centralization power. He believed that these benefits are the main target of development of the West, and felt they should take if the new territory was free or slave. He saw the Missouri Compromise, prohibiting slavery in all lands north of 36 degrees 30 minutes latitude, as a solution to the problem of slavery.
Some anti-Whigs strongly opposed to slavery, especially the abolitionists of New England and New York, opposed the extension of slavery in the territories on moral grounds. However, a major challenge to the expansion of slavery was the Northern Democrats, who feared that the extension of slavery in New Mexico and California to deter workers freedom of movement no. They said that discourage migration to the West would intensify the class struggle in the East. David Wilmot fell into this second category.
It was not an abolitionist; he did not seek to divide his party. He only spoke for the Democrats in the North who had been led to believe that Texas would be the last slave state. Polk and his cabinet had given the impression that Texas would be slave owners, and California and New Mexico for free labor. The question of slavery in the region has raised questions of constitutionality. John Calhoun and his followers have argued that since the slaves of property must be protected in all areas of the Constitution, namely the amendment of the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional and slaveholders to their slaves to what they wanted.
North, across the history of slavery in the federal government regulation and the formulation of the Constitution that gave Congress the power to "adopt all rules and regulations in conformity with the territory or other property of the United States." Politicians are looking for something in between, but more often than not are found only in swamps and deadlocks. The increasing expansion of the territory of the West, largely because of the gold rush, made even more frantic search for a compromise.
References Feldman, Ruth T. (2004) The Mexican-American War, Twenty-first Century Publications. Sparknotes, (2011) Mexican War and Aftermaths, http://www.sparknotes.com/history/american/westwardexpansion/section10.rhtml War Costs, 2011, http://www.cwc.lsu.edu/cwc/other/stats/warcost.htm
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