Mexican War Effects

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The war finally came to an end in 1848 with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The terms of the treaty included U.S. paying Mexico $15 million in cessions (plus interest) along with assuming the claims and responsibility for Indian damages (Connor and Faulk 168). Mexico ceded New Mexico and California as well as accepting the Rio Grande River as the Texas boundary (168). Furthermore, the U.S. honored all land grants in the ceded areas along with extending an offer of citizenship to all Mexicans living in the ceded areas (168-169). The two countries also agreed to the Gadsden Purchase which drew a final boundary between the nations and the U.S. paid Mexico $10 million for ceded lands when the original agreement was $15 million (179). The reason …show more content…

The results of the war created further division over the issue of slavery in new territories. The Fugitive Slave Act was passed which made it easier to recapture escaped slaves. This did little to quell tensions (Henderson 181). The war also trained many of the men who would go on to lead in the Civil War (Connor and Faulk 183). The result of the Mexican War increased congressional support of the concept of Popular Sovereignty, which was one of the causes of the Civil War (Connor and Faulk 183). The Civil War also made the use of Scott’s tribunals necessary again and were given “firm legal footing” (Myers 88). It is also important to examine the effects the Mexican War had on the world past the Civil War. The outcome of the war guaranteed that Europe would not re-establish a foothold in North America, much to their disappointment. This was also an indicator of the increasing power of the U.S. (Hirschfield 178). Another effect of the war is that Scott’s feelings on alcohol would later inspire the first U.S. temperate societies (Connor and Faulk 106). Myers says that “Scott’s practices in the Mexican War also had a significant effect on the development of international law” (236). Moreover, Mexico now opposes U.S. intervention throughout the world along within itself (Henderson 187). Mexico is also an opponent of U.S. activity in Central American and Cuba along U.S. invasion plans of Iraq (Henderson 187). Furthermore, the border betwixt the U.S. and Mexico created by the war has since become a place for many problems throughout time including Indian raids, illegal immigration, pollution, and drug smuggling (Henderson 187). Henderson opines that “most of these difficulties are, of course, the result of the

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