Second Great Awakening Dbq Analysis

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The social developments of the Second Great Awakening caused the american people to believe it was God’s will for the United States to stretch from the east coast to the west coast. As the U.S. expanded westward, what to do with the new territory was fiercely debated and widely discussed not only in federal government but amongst American citizens. With the nation rapidly growing, the people of the United States desperately need an answer on how to add new states into the union, if they should decide to add any territories in at all; however, in this desperate time the nation was divided in three crucial aspects. First, political parties debating over the issue of slavery in the new territories divided the U.S. into distinct political factions. …show more content…

President James Polk not only believed in the legality of the war but also the reasoning behind it, arguing that having free trade, unrestricted communication, and peace with Texas was worth the cost of war (Doc. 6 pov). Evidently many Americans agreed with his argument since he was elected on a presidential platform that promised that these circumstances would be achieved. Despite his victory for the presidency, he only won the popular vote by 2 percent indicating that there were also many citizens who disagreed. Those who did not support the conflict claimed that the war was unjust and that fighting a war over land, money, and worst of all slavery was severely immoral (Doc. 2 Purpose). These points directly contradict the reasons Polk provided congress for war in 1846, encroachment of land near the Rio Grande and unpaid land claims in the area. This sharp contrast in beliefs amongst the American people can primarily be attributed to Manifest Destiny and the desire for territorial expansion because in the event that war is never considered, these opinions do not arise and population is not

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