Manifest Destiny Overview
No nation ever existed without some sense of national destiny or purpose. Manifest Destiny — a phrase used by leaders and politicians in the 1840s to explain continental expansion by the United States — revitalized a sense of "mission" or national destiny for many Americans. And while the United States put into motion a quest for its Manifest Destiny, Mexico faced quite different circumstances as a newly independent country. Mexico achieved its independence from Spain in 1821, but suffered terribly from the struggle. Recovery was difficult.
Manifest Destiny
An Introduction
A Go-Ahead Nation
A Conversation With Robert W. Johanssen
The Power of an Idea
By Miguel Ángel González Quiroga
Native American Displacement
A Conversation With R. David Edmunds
An Ideal or a Justification?
A Conversation With David M. Pletcher
An Early Agenda of Expansion
A Conversation With Josefina Zoraida Vázquez
A Mexican Viewpoint on the War
By Jesús Velasco-Márquez
Manifest Destiny
By Sam W. Haynes
Manifest Destiny
By Robert E. May
Boundary Disputes
by Donald S. Frazier
Expansionism and Imperialism
by Thomas Hietala