<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_32"></SPAN>CHAPTER 32</h2>
<h3>THE MEXICAN WAR</h3>
<p class="side">The Mexican Republic, 1821.<br/>
Texas secedes from Mexico, 1836, <i>McMaster</i>, 320-322; <i>Hero
Tales</i>, 173-181.</p>
<p><b>329. The Republic of Texas.</b>--The Mexicans won their
independence from Spain in 1821 and founded the Mexican Republic.
Soon immigrants from the United States settled in the northeastern
part of the new republic. This region was called Texas. The Mexican
government gave these settlers large tracts of land, and for a time
everything went on happily. Then war broke out between the Mexicans
and the Texans. Led by Samuel Houston, a settler from Tennessee,
the Texans won the battle of San Jacinto and captured General Santa
Anna, the president of the Mexican Republic. The Texans then
established the Republic of Texas (1836) and asked to be admitted
to the Union as one of the United States.</p>
<p class="side">Question of the admission of Texas to the
Union.</p>
<p><b>330. The Southerners and Texas.</b>--The application of Texas
for admission to the Union came as a pleasant surprise to many
Southerners. As a part of the Mexican Republic Texas had been free
soil. But Texas was well suited to the needs of the cotton plant.
If it were admitted to the Union, it would surely be a slave state
or, perhaps, several slave states. The question of admitting Texas
first came before Jackson. He saw that the admission of Texas would
be strongly opposed in the North. So he put the whole matter to one
side and would have nothing to do with it. Tyler acted very
differently. Under his direction a treaty was made with Texas. This
treaty provided for the admission of Texas to the Union. But the
Senate refused to ratify the treaty. The matter, therefore, became
the most important question in the presidential election of
1844.</p>
<p>[Illustration: JAMES K. POLK.]</p>
<p class="side">Candidates for the presidency, 1844.<br/>
The Liberty party.<br/>
Polk elected.</p>
<p><b>331. Election of 1844.</b>--President Tyler would have been
glad of a second term. But neither of the great parties wanted him
as a leader. The Democrats would have gladly nominated Van Buren
had he not opposed the acquisition of Texas. Instead they nominated
James K. Polk of Tennessee, an outspoken favorer of the admission
of Texas. The Whigs nominated Henry Clay, who had no decided views
on the Texas question. He said one thing one day, another thing
another day. The result was that the opponents of slavery and of
Texas formed a new party. They called it the Liberty party and
nominated a candidate for President. The Liberty men did not gain
many votes. But they gained enough votes to make Clay's election
impossible and Polk was chosen President.</p>
<p class="side">Texas admitted by joint resolution, 1845.
<i>McMaster</i>, 325.</p>
<p><b>332. Acquisition of Texas, 1845.</b>--Tyler now pressed the
admission of Texas upon Congress. The two houses passed a joint
resolution. This resolution provided for the admission of Texas,
and for the formation from the territory included in Texas of four
states, in addition to the state of Texas, and with the consent of
that state. Before Texas was actually admitted Tyler had ceased to
be President. But Polk carried out his policy, and on July 4, 1845,
Texas became one of the United States.</p>
<p class="side">Southern boundary of Texas.<br/>
Taylor on the Rio Grande.<br/>
War declared, 1846. Lowell in <i>Source-Book</i>, 271-276.</p>
<p><b>333. Beginning of the Mexican War, 1846.</b>--The Mexicans
had never acknowledged the independence of Texas. They now
protested against its admission to the United States. Disputes also
arose as to the southern boundary of Texas. As no agreement could
be reached on this point, President Polk ordered General Zachary
Taylor to march to the Rio Grande and occupy the disputed
territory. Taylor did as he was ordered, and the Mexicans attacked
him. Polk reported these facts to Congress, and Congress authorized
the President to push on the fighting on the ground that "war
exists, and exists by the act of Mexico herself."</p>
<p class="side">The three parts of the Mexican War.<br/>
Taylor's campaign. <i>McMaster</i>, 326-327.<br/>
Battle of Buena Vista, 1847.</p>
<p><b>334. Taylor's Campaigns.</b>--The Mexican War easily divides
itself into three parts: (1) Taylor's forward movement across the
Rio Grande; (2) Scott's campaign, which ended in the capture of the
City of Mexico; and (3) the seizure of California. Taylor's object
was to maintain the line of the Rio Grande, then to advance into
Mexico and injure the Mexicans as much as possible. The battles of
Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma (May 8, 9, 1846) were fought
before the actual declaration of war. These victories made Taylor
master of the Rio Grande. In September he crossed the Rio Grande.
So far all had gone well. But in the winter many of Taylor's
soldiers were withdrawn to take part in Scott's campaign. This
seemed to be the Mexicans' time. They attacked Taylor with four
times as many men as he had in his army. This battle was fought at
Buena Vista, February, 1847. Taylor beat back the Mexicans with
terrible slaughter. This was the last battle of Taylor's
campaign.</p>
<p class="side">Scott's campaign. <i>Eggleston</i>, 284-286;
<i>McMaster</i>, 327-328.<br/>
He captures City of Mexico, 1847.</p>
<p><b>335. Scott's Invasion of Mexico.</b>--The plan of Scott's
campaign was that he should land at Vera Cruz, march to the city of
Mexico,--two hundred miles away,--capture that city, and force the
Mexicans to make peace. Everything fell out precisely as it was
planned. With the help of the navy Scott captured Vera Cruz. He had
only about one-quarter as many men as the Mexicans. But he
overthrew them at Cerro Gordo, where the road to the City of Mexico
crosses the coast mountains (April, 1847). With the greatest care
and skill he pressed on and at length came within sight of the City
of Mexico. The capital of the Mexican Republic stood in the midst
of marshes, and could be reached only over narrow causeways which
joined it to the solid land. August 20, 1847, Scott beat the
Mexicans in three pitched battles, and on September 14 he entered
the city with his army, now numbering only six thousand men fit for
active service.</p>
<p>[Illustration: THE BEAR FLAG.]</p>
<p class="side">California.<br/>
The "Bear Republic," 1846.<br/>
California seized by American soldiers.</p>
<p><b>336. Seizure of California.</b>--California was the name
given to the Mexican possessions on the Pacific coast north of
Mexico itself. There were now many American settlers there,
especially at Monterey. Hearing of the outbreak of the Mexican War,
they Set up a republic of their own. Their flag had a figure of a
grizzly bear painted on it, and hence their republic is often
spoken of as the Bear Republic. Commodore Stockton with a small
fleet was on the Pacific coast. He and John C. Frémont
assisted the Bear Republicans until soldiers under Colonel Kearney
reached them from the United States by way of Santa Fé.</p>
<p>[Illustration: JOHN C. FRÉMONT.]</p>
<p class="side">Mexican cessions, 1848.<br/>
The Gadsden Purchase, 1853. <i>McMaster</i>, 334.</p>
<p><b>337. Treaty of Peace, 1848.</b>--The direct cause of the
Mexican War was Mexico's unwillingness to give up Texas without a
struggle. But the Mexicans had treated many Americans very unjustly
and owed them large sums of money. A treaty of peace was made in
1848. Mexico agreed to abandon her claims to Texas, California, New
Mexico, Nevada, Utah, and Colorado. The United States agreed to
withdraw its armies from Mexico, to pay Mexico fifteen million
dollars, and to pay the claims of American citizens on Mexico.
These claims proved to amount to three and one-half million
dollars, In the end, therefore, the United States paid eighteen and
one-half million dollars for this enormous and exceedingly valuable
addition to its territory. When the time came to run the boundary
line, the American and Mexican commissioners could not agree. So
the United States paid ten million dollars more and received an
additional strip of land between the Rio Grande and the Colorado
rivers. This gave the United States its present southern boundary.
This agreement was made in 1853 by James Gadsden for the United
States, and the land bought is usually called the Gadsden
Purchase.</p>
<p class="side">Oregon.<br/>
Joint occupation by United States and Great Britain.</p>
<p><b>338. The Oregon Question.</b>--It was not only in the
Southwest that boundaries were disputed; in the Northwest also
there was a long controversy which was settled while Polk was
President. Oregon was the name given to the whole region, between
Spanish and Mexican California and the Russian Alaska. The United
States and Great Britain each claimed to have the best right to
Oregon. As they could not agree as to their claims, they decided to
occupy the region jointly. As time went on American settlers and
missionaries began to go over the mountains to Oregon. In 1847
seven thousand Americans were living in the Northwest.</p>
<p class="side">"All Oregon or none."<br/>
Division of Oregon, 1846.</p>
<p><b>339. The Oregon Treaty, 1846.</b>--The matter was now taken
up in earnest. "All Oregon or none," "Fifty-four forty or fight,"
became popular cries. The United States gave notice of the ending
of the joint occupation. The British government suggested that
Oregon should be divided between the two nations. In 1818 he
boundary between the United States and British North America had
been fixed as the forty-ninth parallel from the Lake of the Woods
to the Rocky Mountains. It was now proposed to continue this line
to the Pacific. The British government, however, insisted that the
western end of the line should follow the channel between
Vancouver's Island and the mainland so as to make that island
entirely British. The Mexican War was now coming on. It would
hardly do to have two wars at one time. So the United States gave
way and a treaty was signed in 1846. Instead of "all Oregon," the
United States received about one-half. But it was a splendid region
and included not merely the present state of Oregon, but all the
territory west of the Rocky Mountains between the forty-second and
the forty-ninth parallels of latitude.</p>
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<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_33"></SPAN>CHAPTER 33</h2>
<h3>THE COMPROMISE OF 1850</h3>
<p class="side">Should Oregon and Mexican cessions be free
soil?<br/>
The Wilmot Proviso. <i>McMaster</i>, 324.</p>
<p><b>340. The Wilmot Proviso, 1846.</b>--What should be done with
Oregon and with the immense territory received from Mexico? Should
it be free soil or should it be slave soil? To understand the
history of the dispute which arose out of this question we must go
back a bit and study the Wilmot Proviso. Even before the Mexican
War was fairly begun, this question came before Congress. Every one
admitted that Texas must be a slave state. Most people were agreed
that Oregon would be free soil. For it was too far north for
negroes to thrive. But what should be done with California and with
New Mexico? David Wilmot of Pennsylvania thought that they should
be free soil. He was a member of the House of Representatives. In
1846 he moved to add to a bill giving the President money to
purchase land from Mexico a proviso that none of the territory to
be acquired at the national expense should be open to slavery. This
proviso was finally defeated. But the matter was one on which
people held very strong opinions, and the question became the most
important issue in the election of 1848.</p>
<p>[Illustration: ZACHARY TAYLOR.]</p>
<p class="side">Candidates for the presidency, 1848.<br/>
"Squatter sovereignty."<br/>
Free Soil party. <i>McMaster</i>, 334-335.<br/>
Taylor and Fillmore elected.</p>
<p><b>341. Taylor elected President, 1848.</b>--Three candidates
contested the election of 1848. First there was Lewis Cass of
Michigan, the Democratic candidate. He was in favor of "squatter
sovereignty," that is, allowing the people of each territory to
have slavery or not as they chose. The Whig candidate was General
Taylor, the victor of Buena Vista. The Whigs put forth no statement
of principles. The third candidate was Martin Van Buren, already
once President. Although a Democrat, he did not favor the extension
of slavery. He was nominated by Democrats who did not believe in
"squatter sovereignty," and by a new party which called itself the
Free Soil party. The abolitionists or Liberty party also nominated
a candidate, but he withdrew in favor of Van Buren. The Whigs had
nominated Millard Fillmore of New York for Vice-President. He
attracted to the Whig ticket a good many votes in New York. Van
Buren also drew a good many votes from the Democrats. In this way
New York was carried for Taylor and Fillmore. This decided the
election, and the Whig candidates were chosen.</p>
<p>[Illustration: THE SITE OF SAN FRANCISCO IN 1847. From an
original drawing.]</p>
<p class="side">Discovery of gold in California, 1848.<br/>
The "rush" to California, 1849. <i>McMaster</i>, 337-338;
<i>Source-Book</i>, 276-279.</p>
<p><b>342. California.</b>--Before the treaty of peace with Mexico
was ratified, even before it was signed, gold was discovered in
California. Reports of the discovery soon reached the towns on the
western seacoast. At once men left whatever they were doing and
hastened to the hills to dig for gold. Months later rumors of this
discovery began to reach the eastern part of the United States. At
first people paid little attention to them. But when President Polk
said that gold had been found, people began to think that it must
be true. Soon hundreds of gold-seekers started for California. Then
thousands became eager to go. These first comers were called the
Forty-Niners, because most of them came in the year 1849. By the
end of that year there were eighty thousand immigrants in
California.</p>
<p class="side">California constitutional convention, 1849.<br/>
Slavery forbidden.</p>
<p><b>343. California seeks Admission to the Union.</b>--There were
eighty thousand white people in California, and they had almost no
government of any kind. So in November, 1849, they held a
convention, drew up a constitution, and demanded admission the
Union as a state. The peculiar thing about this constitution was
that it forbade slavery in California. Many of the Forty-Niners
were Southerners. But even they did not want slavery. The reason
was that they wished to dig in the earth and win gold. They would
not allow slave holders to work their mining claims with slave
labor, for free white laborers had never been able to work
alongside of negro slaves. So they did not want slavery in
California.</p>
<p class="side">Divisions on the question of the extension of
slavery. <i>McMaster</i>, 335-336.</p>
<p><b>344. A Divided Country.</b>--This action of the people of
California at once brought the question of slavery before the
people. Many Southerners were eager to found a slave confederacy
apart from the Union. Many abolitionists were eager to found a free
republic in the North. Many Northerners, who loved the Union,
thought that slavery should be confined to the states where it
existed. They thought that slavery should not be permitted in the
territories, which belonged to the people of the United States as a
whole. They argued that if the territories could be kept free, the
people of those territories, when they came to form state
constitutions, would forbid slavery as the people of California had
just done. They were probably right, and for this very reason the
Southerners wished to have slavery in the territories. So strong
was the feeling over these points that it seemed as if the Union
would split into pieces.</p>
<p class="side">Taylor's policy.<br/>
California demands admission.</p>
<p><b>345. President Taylor's Policy.</b>--General Taylor was now
President. He was alarmed by the growing excitement. He determined
to settle the matter at once before people could get any more
excited. So he sent agents to California and to New Mexico to urge
the people to demand admission to the Union at once. When Congress
met in 1850, he stated that California demanded admission as a free
state. The Southerners were angry. For they had thought that
California would surely be a slave state.</p>
<p class="side">Clay's compromise scheme, 1850. <i>McMaster</i>,
339-341; <i>Source-Book</i>, 279-281.</p>
<p><b>346. Clay's Compromise Plan.</b>--Henry Clay now stepped
forward to bring about a "union of hearts." His plan was to end all
disputes between Northerners and Southerners by having the people
of each section give way to the people of the other section. For
example, the Southerners were to permit the admission of California
as a free state, and to consent to the abolition of the slave trade
in the District of Columbia. In return, the Northerners were to
give way to the Southerners on all other points. They were to allow
slavery in the District of Columbia. They were to consent to the
organization of New Mexico and Utah as territories without any
provision for or against slavery. Texas claimed that a part of the
proposed Territory of New Mexico belonged to her. So Clay suggested
that the United States should pay Texas for this land. Finally Clay
proposed that Congress should pass a severe Fugitive Slave Act. It
is easily seen that Clay's plan as a whole was distinctly favorable
to the South. Few persons favored the passage of the whole scheme.
But when votes were taken on each part separately, they all passed.
In the midst of the excitement over this compromise President
Taylor died, and Millard Fillmore, the Vice-President, became
President.</p>
<p>[Illustration: MILLARD FILLMORE.]</p>
<p class="side">Art. IV, sec. 2.<br/>
Fugitive Slave Act of 1793.<br/>
Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. <i>McMaster</i>, 341-343.<br/>
Results of passage of this act. <i>Higginson</i>, 281;
<i>Source-Book</i>, 282-284.<br/>
round Railway." <i>Source-Book</i>, 260-263.</p>
<p><b>347. The Fugitive Slave Act.</b>--The Constitution provides
that persons held to service in one state escaping into another
state shall be delivered up upon claim of the person to whom such
service may be due. Congress, in 1793, had passed an act to carry
out this provision of the Constitution. But this law had seldom
been enforced, because its enforcement had been left to the states,
and public opinion in the North was opposed to the return of
fugitive slaves. The law of 1850 gave the enforcement of the act to
United States officials. The agents of slave owners claimed many
persons as fugitives. But few were returned to the South. The
important result of these attempts to enforce the law was to
strengthen Northern public opinion against slavery. It led to
redoubled efforts to help runaway slaves through the Northern
states to Canada. A regular system was established. This was called
the "Underground Railway." In short, instead of bringing about "a
union of hearts," the Compromise of 1850 increased the ill feeling
between the people of the two sections of the country.</p>
<p class="side">"Uncle Tom's Cabin."<br/>
Effects of this book.</p>
<p><b>348. "Uncle Tom's Cabin."</b>--It was at this time that Mrs.
Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin." In this story she
set forth the pleasant side of slavery--the light-heartedness and
kind-heartedness of the negroes. In it she also set forth the
unpleasant side of slavery--the whipping of human beings, the
selling of human beings, the hunting of human beings. Of course,
there never was such a slave as Uncle Tom. The story is simply a
wonderful picture of slavery as it appeared to a brilliant woman of
the North. Hundreds of thousands of copies of this book were sold
in the South as well as in the North. Plays founded on the book
were acted on the stage. Southern people when reading "Uncle Tom"
thought little of the unpleasant things in it: they liked the
pleasant things in it. Northern people laughed at the pretty
pictures of plantation life: they were moved to tears by the tales
of cruelty. "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and the Fugitive Slave Law
convinced the people of the North that bounds must be set to the
extension of slavery.</p>
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