The Manifest Destiny: The Era Of Good Feeling

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The “Manifest Destiny,” was the belief that the United States was destined to take occupation and possession of the entire continent. Its intention was to promote further territorial expansion spreading a common system of principles across every area between the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of the early United States. The concept of American expansion was not a new thought. Years ago, many Europeans had also shared a similar understanding, claiming a divine right to obtain new lands as their own to tame. “A Plea for Compromise” Robert C. Winthrop recalls, “Spain and Portugal, we all know, in the early part of the sixteenth century, laid claim to the jurisdiction of this whole northern continent of America” (Winthrop). However, Journalist John …show more content…

This sequence helped place America into “the Era of Good Feeling”. Whig Henry Clay developed a plan called the American System during this time, as a way to strengthen and promote the nation and economy. It was a three-part system incorporating banks, taxes on imported goods, and internal transportation methods like canals and roads. This created strong national currency, tariff protection, and transportation improvements; initiating a spirit of nationalism, which swept through the land during the next few decades demanding a need for more territory, and a desire to grow the …show more content…

American missionaries thought that they had to save the souls of the Native Americans. Andrew Jackson addresses, “separate the Indians from immediate contact with settlement of whites; free them from the power of the States; enable them to pursue happiness in their own way and under their own rude institutions;… and through the influence of good counsels, to cast off their savage habits and become an interesting, civilized and Christian community” (Jackson). They perceived these populations as inferior, and it was the duty of the superior class to attempt to civilize and save them. There was very little consideration given as to how these new settlements would affect the native peoples. Westward expansion created the road toward the American dream for the Pioneers, but at the cost of the traditional way of life for

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