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U.S.-Mexican War (Updated ed)

Part of the America at War series
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Controversial and unpopular, at the time the U.S.-Mexican War divided the country's loyalties more than any event since the Revolution.

Abraham Lincoln argued against it in Congress; Henry David Thoreau went to jail rather than pay taxes that would help to finance it.

The only public issue that rivaled the U.S.-Mexican War for bitterness of debate was slavery - and slavery played an important role in starting the conflict.

But the realities of the time were powerfully shaped by the belief in the myth of "Manifest Destiny" - that the United States was predestined to occupy the North American continent "from sea to shining sea" - and so a war of conquest was launched.

When it was over, the United States had doubled its size at the expense of Mexico, which had shrunk by half.

A fast-moving narrative filled with evocative and historically accurate detail, U.S.-Mexican War, Updated Edition tells the full story of a long ignored but critical passage in American military history that was soon overshadowed by the Civil War, New box features cover topics such as early 19th-century Mexican politics; the roles slavery and "Manifest Destiny" played in bringing about the war; and Winfield Scott's struggle to create a professional U.S.

Army.

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Product Details
Facts on File Inc
0816049327 / 9780816049325
Hardback
973.62
31/03/2003
United States
English
general /postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Previous ed.: published as Mexican War. 1992.