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Title: Statehood for Texas


1
Statehood for Texas
  • Chapter 12
  • 1845-1851

2
From a Republic to a State
  • In 1836 Texans held their first elections. They
    voted by a large margin to become a part of the
    United States.
  • Annexation to the United States, however, it took
    ten years to become a reality.
  • During those ten years, Texans developed pride in
    their independence.
  • The years Texas spent as an independent republic
    shaped Texans attitudes toward government,
    society, and themselves.

3
The Constitutional Convention of 1845
  • Delegates to the Constitutional Convention met on
    July 4, 1845, in Austin to create a state
    constitution.
  • Most of the men who wrote the Texas Constitution
    had moved to Texas from the United States.
  • Jose Antonio Navarro was the only Texas-born
    delegate among them.
  • Five delegates had been signers of the Texas
    Declaration of Independence (1836)

4
Jose Antonio Navarro
  • The only Texas born delegate who helped write the
    constitution for Texas.
  • After Texass independence he was elected to the
    Texas Congress.
  • Navarro served two terms in the Texas Senate.
  • In 1846 Navarro County was named after him.

5
The Constitutional Convention
  • Thomas Jefferson Rusk was nominated as the
    president of the convention.
  • He was well known because of his experience in
    Texas politics.
  • He was chosen unanimously.
  • Rusk greatly influenced the
  • form of the new state government.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson_Rusk
6
The State Constitution
  • Delegates to the constitution studied the U.S.
    Constitution and the constitutions of other
    states.
  • Some parts of the Constitution of the Republic of
    Texas were kept.
  • They kept Texass homestead laws.
  • They did not allow ministers and priests to serve
    in the legislature.

Legislature a government body that has the power
to make or pass laws.
7
What are Homestead Laws?
  • Citizens of Texas cannot have their homes taken
    to pay their debts.

8
Constitution Provisions
  • Protected homesteads from being taken to pay
    debts.
  • Did not allow ministers or priests to serve in
    the legislature
  • Allowed settlers to continue bringing slaves into
    the state
  • Protected womens right to own land
  • Outlined 3 branches of government.
  • Created the legislature (House of Representatives
    and Senate)
  • Set up a state court system
  • Created offices for the governor and the
    lieutenant governor

9
The Election of 1845
  • The first elections of the State of Texas were
    held on December 15, 1845.
  • James Pinckney Henderson was elected the first
    governor. (executive)
  • Albert C. Horton was elected the first lieutenant
    governor. (executive)
  • The legislature selected Thomas J. Rusk and Sam
    Houston as U.S. senators. (legislative)

10
James Pinckney Henderson
  • Came to Texas from Mississippi in 1836.
  • Helped bring troops to Texas during the Texas
    Revolution.
  • Was President Houstons attorney general and
    secretary of state.
  • Member of the Constitutional Convention

photo by www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/m
ultimedia/docs/1226.html
11
The Election of 1845
  • Governor Henderson served only one term, but it
    was an important one.
  • He established the state government of Texas.
  • He governed during the war with Mexico that
    resulted when Texas was admitted to the Union.

12
Vocabulary Check
  • Legislature a government body that has the
    power to make or pass laws.

13
There were three branches of government for Texas
  • Legislative branch the part of government that
    makes the laws
  • Executive branch the part of government that
    carries out the laws.
  • Judicial branch the part of government that
    interprets the laws and applies these laws in the
    court system.

14
Vocabulary Check
  • Governor the highest ranking officer in the
    state government.
  • Lieutenant governor the second highest ranking
    officer in the state government.

15
Organizing Information
Constitutional Convention Begins
Constitutional Convention Ends
Texans Vote For the Constitution
Constitution Formally Accepted
Texans Elect State Officeholders
Aug
Oct
July
Sept
Nov
Dec
1845
16
Texas The Twenty-Eighth State
Section One
Main Idea
  • When Texas accepted the offer to become a state
    of the United States, the first task was to form
    the state government. In 1845 delegates from
    across Texas met to write a state constitution.
    Later that year, Texans elected their state
    officers.

Why it matters now
In its first years as a state, Texas established
the framework for its laws and government today.
17
Mexican and U.S. Policy on Texas
  • Under the Treaties of Velasco Santa Anna had
    promised to recognize the independence of Texas.
  • The government in Mexico, though, refused to
    honor that treaty and claimed that Santa Anna had
    only signed it because he was afraid he was going
    to be killed.

18
Mexico considered the Nueces River the boundary
between Mexico and Texas
http//www.texassportfishing.com/Region_Rivers_Mai
n/nueces_river.htm
19
Tensions Between Mexico and the United States
  • Mexico still considered Texas a part of their
    country.
  • They claimed that if Texas was annexed by the
    United States, they would go to war.

20
  • The United States and Mexico were also in
    conflict over the land between Texas and the
    Pacific Ocean.
  • Americans were moving west and they wanted
    control over the land from Texas to California.
  • This idea was known as Manifest Destiny.
  • Mexico did not want to give up this land.

21
  • Mexico threatened war when Texas was annexed.
  • To avoid war the U.S. President, James K. Polk
    tried to negotiate with the Mexican government.
  • Polk sent John Slidell to Mexico to make a deal.
  • Slidell offered to pay Mexicos debts to U.S.
    citizens in exchange for all the land between
    Texas and California.
  • The Mexican government was offended that the
    United States offered to buy this land.

22
Tensions Between Mexico and the United States
  • Not all citizens in the United States wanted to
    annex the land between Texas and California.
  • Slavery was dividing the country and the land in
    the Southwest would have allowed slavery.
  • People in New England and the Midwest did not
    like the idea of adding states that would have
    allowed slavery.

23
Fighting Breaks Out
  • General Zachary Taylor was ordered by President
    Polk to station troops along the Nueces border.
  • The Mexican general, Mariano Arista, stationed
    troops along the Rio Grande.
  • When negotiations between Slidell and the Mexican
    government failed, Taylor ordered the American
    troops down to the Rio Grande.

24
Zachary Taylor at Camp
http//www.dmwv.org/mexwar/images/prints/taylor-in
-camp.jpg
25
Fighting Breaks Out
  • Major Jacob Brown was stationed at Fort Texas
    (near modern day Brownsville).
  • Both armies patrolled the area between the Nueces
    River and the Rio Grande.
  • Both countries claimed this land as their own.
  • On April 24, 1846 more than 60 U.S. troops
    clashed with Mexican troops.
  • Both armies claimed to have been fired upon.

26
The War with Mexico
  • The American troops engaged in battle with the
    Mexican troops at Palo Alto and Resca de la
    Palma.
  • The Americans claimed victory at each battle and
    soon President Polk urged Congress to declare war
    on Mexico.
  • The United States declared war on Mexico on May
    13, 1846.

http//www.latinamericanstudies.org/mexican-war-ma
ps.htm
27
Battle at Palo Alto
http//www.dmwv.org/mexwar/images/nebel/nebel1.jpg
28
Mexico has passed the boundary of the United
States, has invaded our territory and shed
American blood upon the American soil. She has
proclaimed that hostilities have commenced, and
that the two nations are now at war. . . . In
further vindication of our rights and defense of
our territory, I invoke the prompt action of
Congress to recognize the existence of the war. .
. . President James K. Polk Message to Congress,
May 11m 1846
29
The War with Mexico
  • General Taylor led his troops to victory against
    the Mexican troops at Monterrey and Buena Vista.
  • General Winfield Scott took command of most of
    Taylors regular troops and led them into Mexico.
  • Instead of marching by land into Mexico, they
    rode ships through the Gulf of Mexico and landed
    in Molino del Rey (September 1847).

30
The Troops at Buena Vista
http//www.dmwv.org/mexwar/images/prints/bvista.jp
g
31
The War with Mexico
  • American troops marched to Fort Chapultepec
    (outside Mexico City) and were victorious.
  • The Mexican troops fought to the last man.
  • To this day Mexicans celebrate September 15th as
    los ninos heros in honor of the young heroes of
    Mexico who sacrificed their lives.

32
Texans in the War with Mexico
  • Many veterans of the Texas Revolution viewed the
    War with Mexico as a chance to Remember the
    Alamo and settle the score for those killed from
    the Mier Expedition.
  • As many as 5,000 Texans, including Governor
    Henderson, volunteered to serve during this war.

33
Texas Rangers in the War
  • Texas Rangers had a reputation for being fierce
    fighters and for their knowledge of the land.
  • They served along side the U.S. troops and led
    them across Texas into Mexico.
  • Mexicans called them los diablos Tejanos (Texas
    Devils).
  • The Texas Rangers were led by Ben McCulloch,
    Samuel H. Walker, and John S. Ford.

34
Casualties of the War
  • 80,000 U.S. troops served in the war.
  • 13,000 died
  • Mexico lost many more lives.

35
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
  • The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the
    Mexican-American War.
  • It was signed on February 2, 1848.

There shall be firm and universal peace between
the United States of America and the Mexican
republic, and between their respective countries,
territories, cities, towns, and people, without
exception of places or persons.
36
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
  • Mexico agreed that Texas was now a part of the
    United States.
  • Mexico surrendered all land between Texas and the
    Pacific Ocean.
  • This transfer of land was known as the Mexican
    Cession.
  • The United States paid Mexico 15 million.

37
Vocabulary Check
  • Cession - the transfer of
    land from one country to another

38
Critical Thinking
  1. Other than to gain control of Texas, what
    prompted the United States to fight against
    Mexico? The United States wanted to fulfill its
    Manifest Destiny by gaining control of land all
    the way to California. Some U.S. citizens felt
    their country wanted Texas and Mexican land in
    order to expand slavery.
  2. How did the scouting skills of the Texas Rangers
    help the U.S. troops? The Texas Rangers
    scouting skills helped guide troops into Mexico.
  3. What did the United States gain from the Treaty
    of Guadalupe Hidalgo? The United States gained
    all of Mexicos possessions between Texas and the
    Pacific Ocean.
  4. What did Mexico gain? In return the United
    States paid Mexico 15 million, assumed claims by
    U.S. citizens against Mexico, and agreed to
    respect the rights of Spanish-speaking people.

39
The United States and Mexico at War
Section Two
Main Idea
  • Soon after Texas became a state, war broke out
    between Mexico and the United States. Both
    countries claimed Texas as part of their nation,
    and the United States wanted control of other
    territories under Mexican rule.

Why it matters now
The War with Mexico determined Texass
present-day southern border.
40
The Texas-New Mexico Border Dispute
Section 3
  • The southern border of Texas had been established
    as the Rio Grande under the Treaty of Guadalupe
    Hidalgo.
  • There was still disagreement, though about the
    western border of Texas.
  • Texans thought their western border should follow
    the Rio Grande all the way to Santa Fe.
  • Most citizens in New Mexico, however still
    thought of themselves as Mexican and were still
    angry over Mirabeau B. Lamars attempt to control
    the area.

41
Texass Efforts to Gain Control of New Mexico
  • Governor Henderson sent a representative of Texas
    to try to persuade U.S. forces that Santa Fe
    belonged in Texas.
  • The commander in Santa Fe refused to surrender
    the land to Texas.
  • When George Thomas Wood became Texas Governor in
    1847 he promised to continue to claim all of the
    land along the Rio Grande for Texas.
  • Robert S. Neighbors was sent to the area to
    establish counties in the disputed territory, but
    he was only able to convince the residents of
    El Paso that they belonged to Texas.

42
Disagreements over Slavery and Territories
  • In 1848 Zachary Taylor (the hero of the
    Mexican-American War) became the president of the
    United States.
  • He faced the challenge of slavery in Americas
    states and territories.
  • America had a balance between states that allowed
    slavery and those that did not allow slavery.

43
http//www.latinamericanstudies.org/mex-war/mex-wa
r-map.jpg
44
Disagreements over Slavery and Territories
  • California wanted to join the Union as a free
    state (a state that outlawed slavery).
  • If California became a free state, though, it
    would have meant that there were more free states
    than slave states (states where slavery was
    legal).
  • Pro-slavery states did not want California to
    become a state.

45
What were President Taylors thoughts on slavery?
  • President Taylor had promised the residents of
    California that they would become a state.
  • He was also concerned about lawlessness in the
    California because many people were moving there
    in search of gold.

46
An abolitionist is a person who wants to end
slavery.
  • Abolitionists wanted to limit the size of Texas
    since it was a slave state.
  • Abolitionists also wanted to outlaw slavery in
    Washington, D.C.
  • Residents of New Mexico and Utah were asking to
    be admitted into the Union.
  • President Taylor and the U.S. Congress could not
    agree on a solution to these
    problems.

www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/ 1898/slaves.html
47
What did the U.S. Congress think?
  • Congress wanted to settle the issue of slavery in
    the territories before admitting new states to
    the Union.
  • Southern members of Congress also wanted a
    federal law to help pay for finding runaway
    slaves.
  • This law became known as the
    Fugitive Slave Law.

http//www.swagga.com/gifs/slaves.jpg
48
Fugitive Slave Law
  • Require American citizens to help police offices
    in capturing enslaved people who had run away
    from their owners.
  • Gave harsh punishments to people who helped
    slaves escape.
  • Gave harsh punishments to runaway slaves.
  • Denied recovered slaves a jury or the right to
    testify at their trial.
  • Often returned slaves to their owners.

49
Henry Clay was a Senator from Kentucky offered a
compromise
  • Immediate admission of California as a free
    state.
  • The organization of New Mexico and Utah into
    territories.
  • Residents of these two territories would be
    allowed to decide the question of slavery on
    their own.
  • The abolition of the slave trade in Washington,
    D.C.
  • The enactment of the Fugitive Slave Law.

50
The Texas Question
  • If Texas were to give up its claim on New Mexico,
    slavery would not be permitted in this territory.
  • If New Mexico were to remain part of Texas,
    slavery would be allowed in the area.
  • To settle the Texas Question Clay suggested
    that the United States gave Texas 10 million
    dollars for 40 percent of its western lands.

51
The Compromise of 1850
  • President Taylor and Congress would not agree on
    how to settle the issue of Californias
    annexation.
  • President Taylor wanted the annexation first,
    then the question of slavery settled.

52
The Compromise of 1850
  • Zachary Taylor died while in office and was
    succeeded by his vice president, Millard
    Fillmore.
  • Henry Clay left congress and was replaced by
    Senator Stephen Douglas from Illinois.

53
The Compromise of 1850
  • In the Compromise of 1850 Congress and President
    Fillmore agree to
  • the annexation of California
  • making territories of Utah and New Mexico
  • ending the slave trade (but not slavery) in
    Washington, D.C.
  • the Fugitive Slave Law in the south

54
The Compromise of 1850
  • The Texas Question was also settled when the
    compromise first offered by Henry Clay was agreed
    to.
  • Texas gave up territory in the west and north in
    return for 10 million.
  • The boundaries established in the Texas and New
    Mexico Act became the present day border between
    the two states.

55
The Compromise of 1850
  • Some Texans did not like the Compromise of 1850
    because it reduced the size of Texas.
  • Others believed that Texas needed the money more
    than the land.
  • When Texans voted in November of 1850 the
    majority of Texans supported the compromise.
  • The money Texas received finally freed Texas from
    debt and left money for government programs.

56
What is a Constitution?
The system of fundamental laws and principles
that prescribes the nature, functions, and limits
of a government or another institution. The
document in which such a system is recorded.
http//dictionary.reference.com/search?qconstitut
ion
57
A New Western Border
Section Three
Main Idea
  • After the War with Mexico, the Rio Grande was
    made the southern border of Texas. However,
    disagreement arose over Texass western border.
    This issue, along with others, was resolved by
    the Compromise of 1850.

Why it matters now
The Compromise of 1850 established the
present-day western border of Texas.
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