Manifest Destiny Article

Manifest Destiny Timeline

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1803

U.S. President Thomas Jefferson completes the Louisiana Purchase, which doubles the size of the country. (The purchase from France includes the western half of the Mississippi River basin—far more land than what is now the state of Louisiana.)

1819

The Transcontinental Treaty with Spain cedes Florida and the Oregon Country to the United States. In exchange the United States recognized Spanish sovereignty over Texas.

May 28, 1830

U.S. President Andrew Jackson signs the Indian Removal Act, which led to the forced relocation of Indian tribes to the west on the Trail of Tears.

Early 1840s

Pioneers begin traveling west on the Oregon Trail.

1845

Magazine editor John L. O’Sullivan is the first to use the term manifest destiny, in an essay arguing for the annexation of Texas. Texas is admitted to the Union on December 29.

1846

The Mexican-American War begins. The conflict arises from a border dispute between Mexico and the United States. Mexico claims that the southern border of Texas is the Nueces River, but the United States claims it is the Rio Grande. The United States declares war on Mexico in May. (The conflict will last nearly two years.) On June 15 U.S. President James K. Polk signs the Oregon Treaty with Great Britain, establishing the northern border of the Oregon Territory at the 49th parallel.

February 2, 1848

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ends the Mexican-American War. Under the treaty Mexico cedes to the U.S. nearly all of present New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, California, Texas, and western Colorado.

December 30, 1853

The United States purchases a piece of land from Mexico in a sale known as the Gadsden Purchase. That land is now southern Arizona and southern New Mexico. The purchase moves the border between the United States and Mexico south to where it lies today.

1867

U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward negotiates Alaska’s sale from Russia to the United States. The subsequent discovery of gold stimulates American settlement in Alaska.

1898

The Spanish-American War is fought. Admiral George Dewey leads the U.S. naval squadron that defeats the Spanish fleet in the Philippines on May 1, and General William Shafter leads regular troops and volunteers (including future U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt and his Rough Riders) in the destruction of Spain’s Caribbean fleet near Santiago, Cuba, in July. In the Treaty of Paris (December 10), Spain renounces all claims to Cuba and cedes Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines to the United States, marking the emergence of the United States as a world power. The United States also annexes Hawaii this same year.