Explore the Louisiana Territory, find a water route to the Pacific Ocean, and to establish trade with Native American Groups, and to claim land in the West for the US.
The Indian Removal Act was signed into law by this president in this year.
Andrew Jackson- 1830
These three land acquisitions were purchased along with the countries they were purchased from
Louisiana- France; Florida- Spain; Gadsden Purchase- Mexico
This group of people earned the most money during the California Gold Rush
Merchants who catered to gold seekers
The Missouri Compromise
Most of the westward trails began here.
Independence, Missouri
This tribe was the first of the Five Tribes to be forcibly removed.
The Choctaws
This independent country was annexed and became a US State
Texas
The California Trail ended here
The Compromise of 1850
The Mormon Trail ended here.
Salt Lake City
Native Americans were removed to this place, present-day Oklahoma
Indian Territory
The Thirteen Colonies and the Mexican Cession
Name one impact of the California Gold Rush
Population boom, strengthened world economy, financed the Transcontinental Railroad, Native Americans forced to leave their land
This agreement passed the Fugitive Slave Act where citizens were required to return runaway slaves, even in the north
The Compromise of 1850
These people traveled the California Trail.
Gold-seekers
The US Constitution establishes the Native American tribes as this.
Sovereign, independent nations
Your home state and the territorial acquisition (with the date of acquisition
Idaho- Oregon Treaty of 1846
1848-1855
As a result of this law, pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers fled to the area to make sure the vote went their way.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
The transportation revolution made westward travel this.
Easier and faster
Cherokee
Webster-Ashburton Treaty
This was ONE way gold miners would get to California
Cape Horn, Panama shortcut, California Trail
This law allowed Kansas and Nebraska to organize as territories. The local people could decide if they wanted slavery or not.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act