How America Seized California
Daniel Webster once remarked
that the port of San
Francisco was worth more to the United
States than all of Texas.
California was important in the functioning of
the China
trade and in the late 1830s, following the particularly severe Panic of 1837,
many American pioneers made their way west, seeking new lives in the fertile
regions along the Pacific coast. There were only 800 Americans in California in 1846.
Following the establishment of the Bear
Flag Republic
and the discovery of gold at John Sutter’s mill, the American population soared
to well over half a million. California
was a crucial acquisition goal for the Polk administration.
Early European Claims to California
California was part of New Spain
in the 16th Century, securing that claim through the establishment
of numerous missions staffed by Franciscan priests and brothers. Small military
garrisons were also housed on the mission compounds while a weak administrative
staff represented Mexican interests in Monterey.
Upper California was also claimed
by Imperial Russia as well as by Great Britain. The proliferation of
Franciscan missions built after 1769 was designed to aggravate further Russian
expansion southward. British interests focused on the Oregon
Territory, although claims to San Francisco were linked
to Sir Francis Drake, whose circumnavigation in 1577-1580 involved an extended
stay in the protected harbor.
Mexican Independence Changes the Role of Spanish
Missions
In 1821 Mexico achieved independence from Spain and in
1833, under the leadership of Santa Anna, pursued a policy of secularization.
The Franciscans had already been viewed unfavorably in Mexico City because of their opposition to
the independence movement. Untrue stories of Native American abuse by the
priests and brothers further damaged the missions.
The Mexican government
ordered the missions to support the garrisons, promising financial
compensation, but those reimbursements were never made. By the outbreak of the
Mexican American War, all mission lands had been confiscated and Native
Americans were resettled on land allotments. As would happen to tribes in America decades
later, the system broke down and most of the land was acquired by white
speculators.
American Pioneers Migrate to
the Pacific Coast
California offered numerous fertile valleys that attracted
settlers from the East, such as Sacramento in
northern California.
The Panic of 1837 increased migration in the westward movement, spurred on by
newspaper stories and advertisements. This suited the U.S. government, especially the
hyper-expansionists like John Tyler and James K. Polk.
Polk promised that, if
elected, California, along with the other
territories that came to be called the “Mexican Cession” in 1848, would be
acquired by the U.S.
By late 1845, explorer and adventurer John C. Freemont arrived on the Pacific
coast.
After receiving a confidential
letter from his father-in-law Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton, he led his
small contingent of men south into California
to help chart an independence movement. The result would be the proclaiming of
the Bear Flag Republic.
California Becomes a Territory and State
Following the arrival of U.S.
General Stephen Kearney in California and the
defeat of Mexico, California became a U.S. territory. By 1849, the territory
had written a free-soil state constitution and submitted it to President
Zachary Taylor. This action reignited the fierce Congressional debate regarding
the presence of slavery in the territories.
Polk had fulfilled his
campaign pledge. President Taylor, who opposed the extension of slavery in the
newly acquired territories despite being a planter himself, recommended California’s admission to the Union,
accomplished in 1850 by yet another president, Millard Fillmore. The goals of
Manifest Destiny had been met.
Sources:
Frederick Merk, History of the Westward Movement (Alfred
A. Knopf, 1978)
Frederick Merk, Manifest Destiny and Mission in American History (Vintage
Books, 1966)
Page Smith, A Nation Comes of Age: A people’s History of
the Ante-Bellum Years (McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1981)
John Edward Weems, To Conquer A Peace: The War Between the United States and Mexico (Doubleday, 1974)
Albert K. Weinberg, Manifest Destiny: A Study Of Nationalist
Expansionism in American History (The Johns Hopkins Press, 1935)
Published January 6, 2011 in Decoded Past by M.Streich. Copyright
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