
Introduction
As early as 1751 Benjamin Franklin described a destiny
for Americans to fill up new lands to the west, and
Jefferson, Monroe, and Adams all expressed expansionist
dreams. In the 1840s, however, under Presidents Tyler
and Polk, the territory of the United States increased
by nearly eight hundred million acres through the
annexation of Texas, the acquisition of Oregon south
of the forty-ninth parallel, the military conquest
of California and New Mexico, and the assumption of
Native American lands in the Great Lakes region as
those tribes were forced to resettle on the Great
Plains. Not only was the expansion of the 1840s dramatic
in its extent, it was also quite aggressive and nationalistic
in tone. Americans justified the expansion with the
ideology of “Manifest Destiny,” invoking
divine providence, national superiority, and exceptionalism.
This lesson looks ways that the ideology of Manifest
Destiny expressed both national political objectives
and the goals of ordinary men and women who settled
the west.
Objectives
1. To explain the economic, political, racial,
and religious roots of Manifest Destiny and analyze
how the concept influenced the nation’s westward
expansion.
2. To understand the motivations and expectations
of Americans who settled in the West.
Part 1:
Students should begin with journalist John O’Sullivan’s
1839
and 1845
articles in the Democratic Review in which
he wrote about an American destiny and first used the
phrase “manifest destiny.” Ask them to list
the economic cultural, political, and religious assumptions
implicit in O’Sullivan’s formulation of
Manifest Destiny. What do the two articles reveal about
American attitudes toward other nations? Toward themselves?
A collection of resolutions,
declarations, and treaties dealing with Texas
independence, the acquisition of Oregon and Texas,
and the Mexican-American War provides another way
to approach the ideology of Manifest Destiny. What do these political and diplomatic documents
reveal about American intentions, justifications,
and assumptions? Students could then juxtapose two 1859 documents
by Juan
Cortina, a Mexican living in Texas. How were Anglo-Texan cultural and racial attitudes
perceived by non-Anglos?
The
John Gast’s painting “American
Progress" and George
Crofutt’s copy used to market the print
may be reproduced. Students should make a detailed analysis of
the picture in terms of Manifest Destiny. What transformations—economic, political,
technological, environmental—does the movement
from east to west represent? Is there a linear progression implied here? Does the appearance of the trapper figures
in the center bottom, in advance of the farmers with
their oxen and plow, help us understand why the Hudson’s
Bay Company was mentioned in the Oregon Treaty, or
why that conflict was settled peaceably? For fun, teachers could as students to contrast
Gast’s original imagery with a modern parody
that satirizes contemporary American ideals and expansionist
dreams.
Part 2:
Did the ideology of Manifest Destiny that trumpeted
and championed national expansion also shape the lives
of ordinary Americans who traveled and settled the
West? A multitude of settlers’ journals, letters,
diaries, and published narratives has survived. These
may be used in a variety of ways, either singly or
grouped. Two celebrated contemporary published narratives,
Josiah Gregg’s 1842 Commerce
of the Prairies and Thomas James’s
1846 Three
Years among the Indians and Mexicans reward
close reading, but they are both lengthy. The
Prairie Traveler: A Hand-Book for Overland Expeditions,
Capt. Randolph B. Marcy’s 1859 guide for prospective
settlers, laid out the conditions of overland travel
on the western frontier, listed the provisions needed
for the journey, and gave advice on dealing with Indians
and wild animals. Similar lists of necessary provisions were
published for the use of early English settlers in
North America in the seventeenth century; students
might be asked to find analogous lists. In order that students appreciate the enormity
of undertaking the westward journey—and the
usefulness of Capt. Marcy’s handbook, students
could be directed to nineteenth-century maps. An 1802
map of North America, with its western region
empty, should be contrasted to Lewis
and Clark’s map published after their expedition. Finally, ask the students to compare these earlier maps with
the geographical detail present in an 1867
railroad map.
Another
set of sources-Narcissa
Whitman's letters and journals; Catherine Sager Pringle's
Across the Plains
in 1844; and “Cayuse Request for a Material
Witness”—deals with travel to the Oregon
Country in the 1830s and 1840s. Whitman consciously kept a journal of her journey
from Pittsburgh aboard a steamboat and subsequent
land travel. It charts her changing expectations and experience
of frontier conditions, missionary activities, and
Indian hostilities. Catherine Pringle and her siblings, traveling
from Missouri to Oregon, lost their parents when Native
Americans killed them, following a measles outbreak
among the Indians, who attributed the epidemic to
poisoning by Dr. Whitman.
Students could read other diaries and letters collected
by the Library
of Western Fur Trade Historical Source Documents.
William Becknell’s “Selected Letters,”
for example, offers a version of events also discussed
by Josiah Gregg, who embellished his account with
descriptions of the travelers drinking the blood of
mules and dogs and the water of a buffalo’s
stomach to satisfy their thirst. Henry H. Spalding’s
1836 “Letter from the Rocky Mountains”
offers another view of missionary work among the Indians.
Finally, George Catlin’s 1844 Letters and
Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Conditions of North
American Indians offers a romantic, idealized
vision of Native Americans. Students might compare and contrast Catlin’s
favorable attitudes with the those of Americans who
lost family members and possessions to hostile Indians. Students doing this exercise should also examine
Catlin’s
paintings of Native Americans for evidence of
both the disappearing lifestyles of Native American
peoples and of his sentiments toward the Native Americans
themselves. |