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Database ID: 210
Annexation of Texas and Boundary with Mexico. Message from the President of the United States.
1837
The official annexation of Texas in 1845 was the culmination of an almost decade long debate within the United States, and also the beginning of a direct conflict that would lead to war between the U.S. and Mexico. Though Texas declared its independ...
Author(s):
Forsyth, John
Van Buren, Martin
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Database ID: 210
25th Congress, First Session: Doc. No. 40 Reprinted.
1837
The official annexation of Texas in 1845 was the culmination of an almost decade long debate within the United States, and also the beginning of a direct conflict that would lead to war between the U.S. and Mexico. Though Texas declared its independ...
Author(s):
Forsyth, John
Van Buren, Martin
View All Details
Link to Original Resource
Database ID: 211
Boundary - United States and Mexico. Message from the President of the United States of America.
2008-03-03T13:25:54Z
The official annexation of Texas in 1845 was the culmination of an almost decade long debate within the United States, and also the beginning of a direct conflict that would lead to war between the U.S. and Mexico. Though Texas declared its independ...
Author(s):
Van Buren, Martin
View All Details
Link to Original Resource
Database ID: 211
25th Congress, First Session: Doc. No. 42 Reprinted.
2008-03-03T13:25:54Z
The official annexation of Texas in 1845 was the culmination of an almost decade long debate within the United States, and also the beginning of a direct conflict that would lead to war between the U.S. and Mexico. Though Texas declared its independ...
Author(s):
Van Buren, Martin
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Link to Original Resource
Database ID: 212
Plan de Iguala
1821
The Plan of Iguala was the outcome of the Mexican war for independence from Spain and established the short-lived Mexican Empire. The Mexican war of independence began in 1810 when Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla organized peasants in a revolt against Spa...
Author(s):
Iturbide, Agustin de
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Database ID: 213
Correspondence Between the Consuls of the United States at Rio de Janiero, &c, with the Secretary of State, on the Subject of the African Slave Trade.
1849
This document is a report submitted in 1849 by president James K. Polk regarding the U.S. consuls' (George W. Gordon and Gorham Parks) correspondence with Brazilian authorities regarding the illegal slave trade in Brazil. Following the lead of the E...
Author(s):
United States. Congress. House.
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Database ID: 213
30th Congress, Second Session: Doc No. 61 [ House of Representatives]
1849
This document is a report submitted in 1849 by president James K. Polk regarding the U.S. consuls' (George W. Gordon and Gorham Parks) correspondence with Brazilian authorities regarding the illegal slave trade in Brazil. Following the lead of the E...
Author(s):
United States. Congress. House.
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Database ID: 214
Letter from James Cramp, December 1835
1835
The Tampico expedition of 1835 was an episode of the Texas Revolution that followed Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna's rise to power in Mexico and the revolutions that arose to resist his dictatorship. Mexican refugees George Fisher and José Antonio Mexi...
Author(s):
Cramp, James
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Database ID: 215
Message of the President of the United States, communicating information of the existing relations between the United States and Mexico, and recommending the adopting of measures for repelling the invasion committed by the Mexican forces upon the territor
1846
This document represents the culmination of tensions that had been building between the United States and Mexico for more than a decade. When the U.S. annexed Texas in 1845, there ensued a conflict regarding the placement of the Texas-Mexico border ...
Author(s):
United States. Congress. Senate.
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Database ID: 215
29th Congress, First Session: Report 337 [Senate]
1846
This document represents the culmination of tensions that had been building between the United States and Mexico for more than a decade. When the U.S. annexed Texas in 1845, there ensued a conflict regarding the placement of the Texas-Mexico border ...
Author(s):
United States. Congress. Senate.
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