Period 5: Expansion and Sectional Crisis Flashcards
coined by John O’Sullivan; rhetoric that Anglo-American cultural and racial superiority would expand across the continent, moving westward
Manifest Destiny
between 1821 and 1835; led by the Austin family; promoted slavery and cotton expansion
Settlement of Texas
1836; slavery abolished by Mexico; the Alamo; Battle of San Jacinto
Texas War of Independence
1836-1845; President Van Buren refused annexation, fearing a war with Mexico; thus this period
Republic of Texas
the route that led from Independence, Missouri to the Willamette Valley; 1830s-1860s
Oregon Trail
a system devoted to raising livestock; allowed Plains Indians groups to thrive prior to the Civil War
pastoral system
James K. Polk’s campaign slogan in 1844; called for American sovereignty over the Oregon Territory
“Fifty-four forty or fight!”
annexing Texas; seizure of San Francisco Bay; invasion of Mexican territories; Rio Grande dispute
Polk’s Expansionist Program
lands taken by the United States after the war with Mexico, 1846-48; modern-day California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas
Mexican Cession
Whig politicians that opposed the war with Mexico on moral grounds; argued the war expanded control of the federal government
“conscience” Whigs
proposal to ban slavery in any territories gained from the war with Mexico; supported by Whigs and antislavery Democrats; a divided Congress did not pass it
Wilmot Proviso
the argument made by abolitionists, free soilers, and Republicans prior to 1861; southern slaveholders were using their representative advantage to demand proslavery policies
“slave power” conspiracy
political opposition of slavery’s expansion; new party in 1848; gained support from white farmers; promoted Jeffersonian ideals
free soil movement
a principle that ultimate power lies in the hands of the electorate; plan promoted by Democrats to allow settlers in new territories to determine its status as free or slave
popular sovereignty
laws that were meant to resolve the dispute over the status of slavery in the territories; California joins as a free state; a new Fugitive Slave Act is instituted
Compromise of 1850