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Mexican Cession
*** Shopping-Tip: Mexican Cession
Image:Wpdms_mexican_cession.jpg thumbnail|right|300px|The Mexican Cession (red) and the Gadsden Purchase (orange)
The '''Mexican Cession''' is a historical name for the region of the present day southwestern
United States that was ceded to the U.S. by
Mexico in
1848 under the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo following the
Mexican-American War. The cession of this territory from
Mexico was a condition for the end of the war. The United States also paid $20,000,000 for the land, which was the same it had offered for the land prior to the war. [This was considerably more money than was paid for the
Louisiana Purchase or for
Alaska]. For the 38 years between
1810, when Mexico declared its independence from
Spain, and 1848, the region had formed approximately one-third of the country of Mexico; prior to that, it had been a part – albeit a remote one, with sparse European settlement – of the Spanish colony of
New Spain for some three centuries. A chain of Spanish missions and settlements extended into this region, mostly following the course of the
Rio Grande from the
El Paso area to
Santa Fe, which was a colonial capital under the Spanish and the Mexicans, and which is now the capital city of the U.S. state of
New Mexico. There was also some Spanish settlement and missionary work along the course of the
Colorado River from its mouth up along the current border between California and Arizona.
The region includes all of the present-day states of
California,
Nevada, and
Utah, as well as the portions of:
*
Arizona excluding the region later annexed in the
Gadsden Purchase
*
Colorado west of the boundary of the former
Republic of Texas
*
New Mexico west of the
Rio Grande and excluding the Gadsden Purchase
*
Wyoming west of the former Republic of Texas boundary and south of the 42nd parallel.
The treaty also specified the
Texas-Mexican border as being at the
Rio Grande (Río Bravo del Norte). Previously the portion of
Texas between the
Nueces River and the Rio Grande had remained disputed throughout the existence of the
Republic of Texas. The United States had already claimed the area as part of the voluntary
Texas Annexation in
1845.
See also
*
State of Deseret
*
Historic regions of the United States
{{US-hist-stub}} {{Mexico-stub}}
ja:メキシコ割譲地
Category:History of United States expansionism
Category:1848 in Mexico
Category:Mexican-American War
*** Shopping-Tip: Mexican Cession