TX History Ch 16.2

14
Chapter 16: Western Expansion and Conflict Section 2: Results of the Mexican War

Transcript of TX History Ch 16.2

Page 1: TX History Ch 16.2

Chapter 16: Western Expansion and Conflict

Section 2: Results of the Mexican War

Page 2: TX History Ch 16.2

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

•Nicholas Trist—U.S. diplomat who negotiated the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

Nicholas Trist

Page 3: TX History Ch 16.2

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

•Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo—agreement that ended the Mexican War Page from the Treaty

of Guadalupe Hidalgo

Page 4: TX History Ch 16.2

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

•Mexico recognized annexation of Texas

•Rio Grande recognized as border of Texas

•U.S. agreed to cover $3.25 million in claims against the Mexican government

Page 5: TX History Ch 16.2

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

•Mexico agrees to turn over Mexican Cession to the U.S.

•U.S. pays $15 million for Mexican Cession

•Mexican citizens in territory were to receive U.S. citizenship

Page 6: TX History Ch 16.2

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

•Mexican Cession—territory in northern Mexico that was ceded to the United States

Page 7: TX History Ch 16.2

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

•Slavery in the new territories

•Issues over Texas’ boundary

Page 8: TX History Ch 16.2

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

• Texas claimed Rio Grande was southern and western boundary

• Claim rejected by Santa Fe

• Debate extended to U.S. Congress

Page 9: TX History Ch 16.2

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

•Compromise of 1850—agreement under which Texas gave up land claims in New Mexico

Page 10: TX History Ch 16.2

Tejanos & the War

•Tejano loyalty questioned during the Texas Revolution

•Tejanos viewed as enemies during the Mexican war

•Many Tejanos sold property and left Texas

Page 11: TX History Ch 16.2

Tejanos & the War

•Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo granted Mexicans American citizenship

•Discrimination continued

•Many Mexican Americans remained

Page 12: TX History Ch 16.2

New Migration to Texas•1850-1860: State’s population

increases from 212,592 to 604,215

•Many new settlers were slave holders from the Southern U.S.

•1850-1860: African American population increases from 58,000 to 183,000

Page 13: TX History Ch 16.2

New Migration to Texas• Crop failures and

revolutions drove many people out of Europe

• Germans largest European immigrant group

• French, Slavic, Polish, Dutch, Norwegian, Czech, Italian, & Jewish

German Flag

Page 14: TX History Ch 16.2

Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

United States Mexico

Compromise of 1850