Manifest Destiny Dbq

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In the 19th century, the U.S. experienced a major change. This change was the Manifest Destiny, an ideology first expressed in 1845 that the expansion of white settlement across the continent was inevitable and ordained by God, a means to spread protestant Christianity and Jacksonian Democracy to more people. It was this belief that fueled westward expansion, Native American removal, and war with Mexico. The U.S. reliance on Manifest Destiny permanently altered the geographical, social, and political visage of the nation.

Many Americans supported the Manifest Destiny for their own reasons. Some wanted to exploit lands in the west, others dreamed of starting over in rich, cheap, and new lands. Workers enjoyed the thought of rapid national expansion because it would guarantee them industrial profits and jobs, or give them a chance to completely start over. Some Americans, however, felt differently. Those who opposed the ideology was because they foresaw the violence associated with the expansion as simply wrong. Some wanted to focus on what they already have, like Henry Clay, who wanted to prioritize developing roads, canals, railroads, and industries to ensure its prosperity for the country instead of expanding it. …show more content…

But expansion didn’t stop there. In 1795, James Polk began serving as the 11th president of the U.S from 1845 to 1849. During his term, America’s territory grew by more than one-third and extended across the continent for the first time. After the Mexican-American war in 1848, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo gave the U.S. more land that would later become the states of Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, and

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