Groups of Events -
Napoleon Bonaparte
In the early years of his rule, Napoleon sent a large army to quell a slave revolt in the
French Caribbean sugar colony of Saint-Domingue, which he hoped
to rebuild into the centerpiece of a North American French empire.
When the slaves defeated the French army, Napoleon abandoned his plans for
American empire and sold his mainland territory—Louisiana—to the United States.
Group of events
1898 (continued)
In the Treaty of Paris (December 10), Spain renounces all claims to Cuba and cedes Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines to the United States, marking the emergence of the United States as a world power. The United States also annexes Hawaii this same year.
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Rough Riders
During the Spanish-American war Theodore Roosevelt (center) led the Rough Riders, pictured here at San Juan Heights, Santiago, Cuba, 1898.
National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Group of events
The Effects pt.3
New territories gave the country access to greater natural resources and the Pacific trade. But the acquisition of new territories also revived the debate over slavery and its expansion, an issue that would lead to the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861.
The second wave of Manifest Destiny led to the American acquisition of territories beyond continental North America.
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Manifest Destiny
An illustration by Udo J. Keppler from Puck magazine in 18
Grouper
Group of events
The Effects pt.2
By the end of the Mexican American War in 1848, the United States had extended
sovereignty from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean and from the 49th parallel on
the Canadian border to the Rio Grande in the south.
Indigenous populations suffered through armed conflict and forced relocation.
The sparsely populated western regions of the continent became folded into a
nation with enormous potential for power. The hundreds of thousands of
settlers who moved west establish
Group of events
The Causes pt.4
Some historians have stressed the role of government and influential
corporations, which had the ability to overwhelm indigenous
populations during the pursuit of land and resources.
Military strength led to a second wave of Manifest Destiny in the
late 19th century.
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