Westward Expansion: Manifest Destiny and American Growth

Westward Expansion (1800s-1890s) was a period of rapid territorial growth for the United States, driven by the belief in Manifest Destiny - the idea that America was destined to expand across the continent.

Manifest Destiny

Coined by journalist John O'Sullivan in 1845, Manifest Destiny justified expansion as a divine right. It fueled policies that doubled the size of the United States and shaped national identity.

Key Acquisitions

Several major land purchases and treaties expanded US territory:

Trails and Migration

Pioneers traveled west using famous routes:

Impact on Native Americans

Expansion displaced indigenous peoples:

Economic and Social Changes

Westward movement spurred economic growth through farming, mining, and railroads. It also intensified debates over slavery, leading to the Civil War. The frontier experience shaped American culture and individualism.

Westward Expansion transformed the United States from a coastal nation into a continental power, but at great human cost to Native Americans and through the expansion of slavery.

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