Although there is no evidence that these actions had anything like a public mandate, clearly they did not evoke widespread opposition. Nonetheless, the expansionists’ assertion that Polk’s election in 1844 could be construed as a popular clamour for the annexation of Texas was hardly a solid claim; Clay was narrowly defeated and would have won but for the defection from Whig ranks of small numbers of Liberty Party and nativist voters. The nationalistic idea, conceived in the 1840s by a Democratic editor, that it was the “manifest destiny” of the United States to expand westward to the Pacific undoubtedly prepared public opinion for the militant policies undertaken by Polk shortly thereafter. It has been said that this notion represented the mood of the American people; it is safer to say it reflected the feelings of many of the people. Edward Pessen
The continuation of westward expansion naturally came at the further expense of the American Indians. The sociocultural environment of “young America” offered fresh rationales for the dispossession of Native Americans; the broadening of federal power provided administrative machinery to carry it out; and the booming economy spurred the demand to bring ever more “virgin land” still in Indian hands into the orbit of “civilization.”
After 1815, control of Indian affairs was shifted from the State Department to the War Department (and subsequently to the Department of the Interior, created in 1849.) The Indians were no longer treated as peoples of separate nations but were considered wards of the United States, to be relocated at the convenience of the government when necessary. The acquisition of the Louisiana Territory in 1803 and Florida in 1819 removed the last possibilities of outside help for the Indians from France or Spain; moreover, they opened new areas for “resettlement” of unassimilable population elements.
Sauk and Fox Indians, painting by Karl Bodmer, c. 1833.MPI/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Chief Black Hawk.Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.The decimated and dependent Indian peoples of Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin were, one after another, forced onto reservations within those states in areas that Americans of European descent did not yet see as valuable. There was almost no resistance, except for the Sauk and Fox uprising led by Black Hawk (the Black Hawk War) in 1832 and put down by local militia whose ranks included a young Abraham Lincoln. It was a slightly different story in the Southeast, where the so-called Five Civilized Tribes (the Chickasaw, Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, and Seminole peoples) were moving toward assimilation. Many individual members of these groups had become landholders and even slave owners. The Cherokee, under the guidance of their outstanding statesman Sequoyah, had even developed a written language and were establishing U.S.-style communal institutions on lands in north Georgia ceded to them by treaty. The Treaty of New Echota was violated by squatters on Indian land, but when the Cherokees went to court—not to war—and won their case in the Supreme Court (Worcester v. Georgia), Pres. Andrew Jackson supported Georgia in contemptuously ignoring the decision. The national government moved on inexorably toward a policy of resettlement in the Indian Territory (later Oklahoma) beyond the Mississippi, and, after the policy’s enactment into law in 1830, the Southeast Indian peoples were driven westward along the Trail of Tears. The Seminole, however, resisted and fought the seven-year-long Second Seminole War in the swamps of Florida before the inevitable surrender in 1842.
That a policy of “population transfer” foreshadowing some of the later totalitarian infamies of the 20th century should be so readily embraced in democratic 19th-century America is comprehensible in the light of cultural forces. The revival-inspired missionary movement, while Native American-friendly in theory, assumed that the cultural integrity of Indian land would and should disappear when the Indians were “brought to Christ.” A romantic sentimentalization of the “noble red man,” evidenced in the literary works of James Fenimore Cooper and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, called attention to positive aspects of Indian life but saw Native Americans as essentially a vanishing breed. Far more common in American thought was the concept of the “treacherous redskin,” which lifted Jackson and William Henry Harrison to the presidency in 1828 and 1840, respectively, partly on the strength of their military victories over Indians. Popular celebration of allegedly Anglo-Saxon characteristics of energy and independence helped to brand other “races”—Indians as well as Africans, Asians, and Hispanics—as inferiors who would have to yield to progress. In all, the historical moment was unkind to the Indians, as some of the values that in fact did sustain the growth and prosperity of the United States were the same ones that worked against any live-and-let-live arrangement between the original Americans and the newcomers.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.Historical Pictures Service, Chicago
Bernard A. Weisberger
Attitudes toward expansionism
Public attitudes toward expansion into Mexican territories were very much affected by the issue of slavery. Those opposed to the spread of slavery or simply not in favour of the institution joined abolitionists in discerning a proslavery policy in the Mexican-American War. The great political issue of the postwar years concerned slavery in the territories. Calhoun and spokesmen for the slave-owning South argued that slavery could not be constitutionally prohibited in the Mexican cession. “Free Soilers” supported the Wilmot Proviso idea—that slavery should not be permitted in the new territory. Others supported the proposal that popular sovereignty (called “squatter sovereignty” by its detractors) should prevail—that is, that settlers in the territories should decide the issue. Still others called for the extension westward of the 36°30′ line of demarcation for slavery that had resolved the Missouri controversy in 1820. Now, 30 years later, Clay again pressed a compromise on the country, supported dramatically by the aging Daniel Webster and by moderates in and out of the Congress. As the events in the California gold fields showed (beginning in 1849), many people had things other than political principles on their minds. The Compromise of 1850, as the separate resolutions resolving the controversy came to be known, infuriated those of high principle on both sides of the issue—Southerners resented that the compromise admitted California as a free state, abolished the slave trade in the District of Columbia, and gave territories the theoretical right to deny existence to their “peculiar institution,” while antislavery men deplored the same theoretical right of territories to permit the institution and abhorred the new, more-stringent federal fugitive-slave law. That Southern political leaders ceased talking secession shortly after the enactment of the compromise indicates who truly won the political skirmish. The people probably approved the settlement—but as subsequent events were to show, the issues had not been met but had been only deferred.