“Manifest Destiny,” a term invented by reporter John O’ Sullivan, was a popular belief of many nineteenth century Americans in the United States. This was the belief of the people that it was the United States’ “destiny” to expand its boundaries further out west coast. The Manifest Destiny was a belief that was used to justify and rationalize the enlargement of the States westward. It was immensely beneficial to the States, but harmed the Native tribes and were forcefully removed from their rightfully owned land. It was a violent act that was justified by many Americans with immoral values.
The Manifest Destiny was a complicated concept that could be explained as both a negative and positive movement. The painting “American Progress” by John
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The midwest and west had fertile soil and an environment that agriculture could thrive in. A thriving agricultural system resulted in thriving poultry and livestock, another benefit for the Americans. Along with ecological environments, Manifest Destiny also allowed the United States to expand its trade market. The expansion of America’s borders allowed new regions to be included in the country’s economy. Additionally, the growth of the country piqued the interest of businesses and investors to invest in the nation’s economy and market. The Manifest Destiny unarguably did benefit Americans and America as a group in terms of bettering the country’s economy, trade market, and technological advancements. These reasons are the few that could have been used to justify the expansion and Manifest Destiny, and is why many people in America accepted the act without …show more content…
The United States continued to take over land and expand their region. The expansion skyrocketed in 1803 with the Louisiana Purchase. The Louisiana Purchase encouraged more westward expansion as the States had gained a new area of territory that doubled the size of the States’ nation. Many Native American tribes such as Choctaw and Chickasaw were forcefully expelled from their homes. They were seen by white settlers as obstacles preventing them from reaching their destiny, rather than human beings who were trying to survive. Soon, more and more Native American tribes, like the Cherokee and Seminole, were also forcefully eliminated from their homes, along with many others. This expulsion of Native American tribes by the American travelers and settlers came to be known as the infamous Trail of
Manifest destiny was the belief that was created by John L. O'sullivan in the 1840. Manifest destiny consisted of three steps, the creation of manifest Destiny, the process of achieving manifest Destiny, and finally achieving Manifest Destiny. These are the three subjects that will be talked about in this article. Like I said in the previous Paragraph it was created by John L. O’sullivan when he wrote it in his article on Texas annexation and the dispute over the British Oregon trails. There were several diffrent way people used the word Manifest Destiny like the way John L. O'sullivan used it was he believed that “ majority of Americans at the time believed was their mission from God: to expand to west and bring the United States government to unenlightened people.”
The concept of starting the Manifest Destiny was to expand their land and gain territory for their people. This proposal came from John Quincy Adams during the 1819 who wanted to lengthened the land to the pacific ocean to the Westward expansion but, it wasn’t until John O' Sullivan a newspaper editor published it during the 1940's had proclaimed it officially, giving it the name of the "Manifest Destiny." In the beginning two people went to explore the recently new land from the Louisiana Purchase. After two years, the Lewis and Clark Expedition was quite successful, they had found the pacific ocean. It was then later they decided to expand The Manifest Destiny was successful in gaining land but the consequences
"Manifest destiny" enlightened Americans to their right of land. It was the explanation for the war that the Mexicans could not control their extra land, so it was the right of the Americans to control it for them. When Stephen Austin and his settlers settled in Texas, it showed that the Mexican Government could not handle the extra territory. In order to get even with Mexico after the Alamo war was a necessity. Polk tried time and time again to negotiate peace but his vision of a better America and respected stubbornness allowed him to keep his mind set for the interest of the American people.
Manifest Destiny is the belief of the nineteenth century that America was destined by God to expand westward. The author of Our Country: Its Possible Future and Its Present Crisis believed that God established Anglo-Saxons as the superior people whose purpose was to spread Christianity. (Doc B) This idea of spreading a superior culture or religion has been a motive for expansion for decades before this. Despite this support for expansionism, there were those who were against it.
Manifest Destiny influenced America economically, socially, and geographically, both positively and negatively. To begin, America was substantially modified economically because of Manifest Destiny. As Americans moved, they harnessed resources of the west. For example, the industrial revolution increased the demand for cotton. This demand caused Americans to settle and farm new grounds.
Manifest Destiny was the belief in the 19th century that the United States was destined to expand westward, from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific coast, in order to spread American values and institutions. This belief was used to justify the forced removal of Native American tribes from their ancestral lands, as well as the annexation of Texas, the Mexican-American War, and the Oregon Treaty. One of the main arguments given by supporters of Manifest Destiny was that it was a God-given mission for the United States to expand westward and bring Christianity and "civilization" to the "savages" who lived in the western territories. Manifest Destiny provided a religious and cultural justification for American expansion across the continental United States, with the belief that the destiny of the United States was to spread democratic institutions "from sea to shining
Title: Manifest Destiny: Economic, Political, and Religious Factors and the Consequences of U.S. Manifest Destiny was a belief prevalent in 19th-century America that asserted the divine right and obligation of the United States to expand across the North American continent. This expansion was driven by a combination of economic, political, and religious factors. The acquisition of territories such as the Oregon Country, Texas, and California and the Southwest was achieved through diplomacy, annexation, and war. However, the pursuit of expansionism was not without its critics, particularly in the case of the U.S.-Mexican War. Economically, Manifest Destiny was fueled by the desire for territorial expansion to secure new resources, trade routes, and markets.
Manifest Destiny is a unique, yet mysterious fundamental series of events in American history. No other country’s history contains such an eventful history as the United States. Amy Greenberg’s book, Manifest Destiny and American Territorial Expansion, provides documented evidence that settlers believed they were destined for expansion throughout the continent. In other words, many religious settlers believed that it was a call from God for the United States to expand west. On the other hand, people believed that Manifest Destiny vindicated the war against Mexico.
Around the 1840s, a movement called manifest destiny was introduced to the American people. In simple terms, this concept was Americans wanting to expand the boundaries of their current America outwards and claim new territory. The leaders of the movement hoped to justify expansion throughout North America by calling it “inevitable, just, and divinely foreordained” (Locks, 618). The supporters argued that they needed the land because of the growing population. Although the idea of manifest destiny was accepted and pushed by many Americans, it wasn’t agreed on by everyone.
Manifest Destiny was the idea that Americans were divinely ordained to settle the continent of North America. It also inflamed sectional tensions over slavery, which led to the Civil War. America wanted to expand from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean but Mexico and Great Britain stood in between. Manifest Destiny was brought into the Mexican-American War because, the southern wanted to find more land for cotton and that could expand slavery. Manifest Destiny gained more than 520,000 square miles of land, Arizona, California, Utah, Nevada, and New Mexico.
Manifest Destiny is the fate of the US to occupy all land between the 2 oceans, the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans. The idea of Manifest Destiny was created in 1845 and in 1853 the United States acquired all 48 contiguous states to fulfill Manifest Destiny. Manifest Destiny was first used in the 1840s. The people who supported Manifest Destiny are called Expansionists. The United States has achieved Manifest Destiny for many various reasons.
The benefits of the Manifest Destiny outweighed the consequences. This is because the U.S was able to get more resources, increase population in the west, advance trade, and improve technology. These benefits have contributed to the economic development in the U.S. Furthermore, as the U.S were fulfilling the Manifest Destiny, they also imposed the Homestead Act, which helped evolve frontiers. The discovery of gold in the west, specifically, in California lured more people to the west.
“Once we became an independent people it was as much a law of nature that this [control of all of North America] should become our pretension as that the Mississippi should flow to the sea” –John Quincy Adams (Henretta, p. 384). In the 1840s, Americans had a belief that God destined for them to expand their territory all the way westward to the Pacific Ocean. This idea was called Manifest Destiny. In the nineteenth century, Americans were recognized for coming together and building up one another for one cause: westward expansion.
In the 19th Century, there were strong supporters of the ideology of Manifest Destiny. Manifest Destiny was basically the belief of expansion by settlers expanding all over America because god supposedly destined the Americans for expansions by their resources. This resulted for the Americans to find a modern mode of transportation that would make traveling from the east to the west coast easier. This resulted in a mega construction known as the Transcontinental Railroad. The railroad not only helps with transportation but with trading.
Manifest Destiny was the term used by John O’Sullivan to describe America’s desire to expand West due to reasons including both the vast amount of unclaimed land and the opportunities Americans wanted to explore. During this time, Americans believed that it was their God-given right to expand West, and therefore they were entitled to push away any groups that were in their way. Due to the mindset that the Americans could do as they pleased with the groups of people who got in their way, Manifest Destiny affected many groups of people, including the American Indians and Slaves, and continued to build up the preexisting tension between the North and South. One of the groups of people affected greatly by Manifest Destiny were the Native Americans. Manifest Destiny affected the American Indians by spreading foreign diseases to them as they moved Westward, through the Native American territory.