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Territory
ceded by Mexico
As
a result of the U.S. annexation of Texas in 1845,
hostilities between the two nations exploded. Although
officials in Mexico wanted peaceful negotiations,
vigorous demands from Mexican centralists pressured
them to refuse. On April 25, 1846, Mexican soldiers
attacked U.S. troops along the southern border of
Texas. On May 13, president James K. Polk declared
war on Mexico. Meanwhile, the Mexicans had attempted
two other attacks on American soldiers near the Rio
Grande. Both ended in failure. The failures were devastating
to the Mexicans, who had a larger and better trained
army than the Americans.
In
a series of battles at Palo Alto and Resaca de Palma
(near current-day Brownsville, Texas), the army of
General, and future president, Zachary Taylor defeated
Mexican forces and began to move south. In August
of 1846, Taylor began formulating plans to attack
the Mexican stronghold of Monterrey. Meanwhile, nearly
20,000 American volunteers had gathered near the Rio
Grande. Almost all of them were volunteers. Sub-tropical
diseases such as dysentery and malaria ravaged the
makeshift American military forces. If Mexico would
have attacked during this time (July or August), the
Mexican War may have very well been won by the Mexicans.
Unfortunately for the Mexicans, the country was in
civil disarray and the collapse of their central government,
combined with numerous militant rebellions in central
Mexico, prevented them from organizing any serious
offensives. The rebels even offered to help Zachary
Taylor defeat the Mexican army. Antonio Lopez de Santa
Anna, the same man who surrendered to the Texans,
took over as president and commander of the Mexican
army.
On
September 21, 1846, General Zachary Taylor and 2,000
soldiers easily took Monterrey. Soon after, Saltillo
and Parras, Mexico were also taken. In February of
1847, general Winfield Scott, who had taken Veracruz,
Mexico, began an advance toward the Mexican capital
of Mexico City. American forces led by future heroes
Robert E. Lee, George McClellan and others, routed
Mexican resistance under General Santa Anna at Cerro
Gordo on their way to the Mexican capital. The Mexicans
suffered 3,000 casualties. On May 14-15, American
forces easily took Puebla. After routing Mexican forces
at Churubusco, Winfield Scott and soldiers defeated
Santa Anna's army from the Mexican Military College
on the fortified hill of Chapultepec in Mexico City.
The Mexicans suffered terrible casualties and were
forced to surrender. American forces would next occupy
New Mexico and California amidst sporadic resistance.
On March 10, 1848, the Americans and Mexicans signed
the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo which resulted in
the addition of 1.2 million square miles of territory
for the United States (virtually all of the American
southwest and Texas). It also set the Rio Grande as
the border between Mexico and the United States. America
agreed to pay Mexico 15 million dollars.
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