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This document represents one of the earliest in a progression of events that would eventually lead to theMexican American War. The Louisiana Purchase had raised the question of whether the United States or Mexico could claim Texas.The Adams-Onís treaty of 1819 settled this dispute by granting control of the Floridas to the United States and control of Texasto Mexico. However, as early as 1825 the United States began to make attempts to purchase Texas from the Mexican government andthese attempts would continue until Texas declared its independence in 1836 (Tutorow 17)

1Tutorow, Norman E. Texas Annexation and the Mexican War. Chadwick House Publishers, LTD: Palo Alto,1978.
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This declaration came about as a result of the Mexican Congress making substantial changes to its constitution inJanuary of 1835. These changes consolidated power in the central government and weakened the state governments of Mexico. Texasdebated what course of action to take: whether they would push for political change or declare their independence from the Mexicangovernment. When Mexican troops marched into Texas in January of 1836, the local Texas government saw no choice but to declareindependence from Mexico (Tutorow 18).

Since the United States had been making efforts to acquire Texas for more than a decade, it is no surprisethat Texas’s separation from Mexico would lead to a new push within the U.S. to acquire it. The document presented here is one of thefirst signs of that push, as it calls for the U.S. House of Representatives to create a salary for a minister to Texas, a movethat was followed just three days later by the Senate declaring official recognition of Texas as an independent nation. This, inturn, led to a decade long debate within the United States regarding the possible annexation of Texas–a debate that hinged largely on the concerns of many in the northern U.S. who fearedthat annexation would lead to the further spread of slavery (Price 25)

2Price, Glenn W. Origins of the War with Mexico: The Polk-Stockton Intrigue. University of Texas Press:Austin, 1967.
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As much as this debate raised tensions between northerners and southerners in the United States, it created aneven more tense political situation between the United States and Mexico. While Mexico“made no serious effort to reconquer Texas, she stubbornly refused to acknowledge the independence of theterritory”(Price 24). The United States’recognition of Texas and the subsequent debate over its annexation, then, did not sit wellwith Mexican leaders. The document presented here represents the first step in that recognition, and thus also represent a key firststep in the developing tensions between the U.S. and Mexico–tensions that would, ten years later, result in open war.

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Source:  OpenStax, Americas archive document introductions. OpenStax CNX. Oct 16, 2006 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10384/1.2
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