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The Texas annexation was the 1845 incorporation of the Republic of Texas into the United States of America, which was admitted to the Union as the 28th state.
After declaring their independence from the Republic of Mexico in 1836, the vast majority of Texas citizens favored the annexation of the Lone Star Republic by the United States.[1] The leadership of both major American political parties, the Democrats and the Whigs, strenuously objected to introducing Texas, a vast slave-holding region, into the volatile political climate of the pro- and anti-slavery sectional controversies in Congress.[2] Moreover, they wished to avoid a war with Mexico, whose government refused to acknowledge the sovereignty of its rebellious northern province.[3] With Texas's economic fortunes declining by the early 1840s, the President of the Texas Republic, Sam Houston, arranged talks with Mexico to explore the possibility of securing official recognition of independence, with Great Britain mediating.[4][5]
In 1843, President of the United States John Tyler, unaligned with any political party, decided, as chief executive, to independently pursue the annexation of Texas in a bid to gain a base of popular support for another four years in office.[6] His official motivation was to outmaneuver suspected diplomatic efforts by the British government to promote a general emancipation of slaves in Texas that would weaken the institution of human bondage in the United States.[7][8] Initiating and impelling secret annexation negotiations with the Houston administration, Tyler secured a treaty of annexation in April 1844. When the documents were submitted to the US Senate for ratification, the details of the terms of annexation became public and the question of acquiring Texas took center stage in the presidential election of 1844. Pro-Texas annexationist southern Democratic delegates denied their anti-annexationist leader Martin Van Buren the nomination at their party's convention in May 1844. In alliance with pro-expansionist northern Democratic colleagues, they secured the unanimous nomination of James K. Polk, who ran on a pro-Texas Manifest Destiny platform.[9]
In June 1844, the Senate, with its Whig majority, soundly rejected the Tyler–Texas treaty. The pro-annexationist Democrat Polk would defeat the anti-annexationist Whig Henry Clay for the presidency by a small margin in November of 1844. In December 1844, the lame-duck President Tyler called on Congress to pass his treaty by simple majorities in each house.[10] The Democratic-dominated House of Representatives complied with his request by passing an amended bill expanding on the pro-slavery provisions of the Tyler treaty. The Senate's minority Democrats narrowly passed a compromise version of the House bill, with critical support from several southern Whigs, designed to provide the incoming President-elect Polk the option to effect immediate annexation of Texas or open new talks to revise the annexation terms of the House amended bill.
On March 3, 1845, shortly after signing the legislation, President Tyler preempted Polk and forwarded the House legislative alternative to Texas, offering immediate annexation to the republic. When Polk entered the White House the next day, he proceeded to encourage Texas to accept the Tyler offer. The Lone Star Republic ratified the treaty with popular approval from Texans. The bill was signed by United States President Polk on December 29, 1845, accepting Texas as the 28th state of the Union. Texas formally relinquished its sovereignty to the United States on February 19, 1846.[11]
First mapped by Spain in 1519, Texas was part of the Spanish empire for over 300 years.[12] When the Louisiana territory was acquired by the United States from France in 1803, many people believed the new territory included parts or all of present-day Texas.[13] The US-Spain border along the northern frontier of Texas took shape in the 1817–1819 negotiations between Secretary of State John Quincy Adams and the Spanish ambassador to the United States Luis de Onís y González-Vara.[14] The boundaries of Texas were determined within the larger geostrategic struggle to demarcate the limits of the United States' extensive western lands and of Spain's vast possessions in North America.[15] The Florida Treaty of February 22, 1819[16][17] emerged as a compromise that excluded Spain from the lower Columbia River watershed, but established southern boundaries at the Sabine and Red Rivers, "legally extinguish[ing]" any American claims to Texas.[18][19] Nonetheless, Texas remained an object of fervent interest to American expansionists, among them Thomas Jefferson, who anticipated the eventual acquisition of its fertile lands.[20]
The Missouri crisis of 1819–1821 sharpened commitments to expansionism among the country's slaveholding interests, when the so-called Thomas proviso established the 36°30' parallel imposing free-soil and slave-soil futures in the Louisiana Purchase lands.[21] While a majority of southern congressmen acquiesced to the exclusion of slavery from the bulk of the Louisiana Purchase, a significant minority objected.[22][23] Virginian editor Thomas Ritchie of the Richmond Enquirer predicted that with the proviso restrictions, the South would ultimately require Texas: "If we are cooped up on the north, we must have elbow room to the west."[24][25] Representative John Floyd of Virginia in 1824 accused Secretary of State Adams of conceding Texas to Spain in 1819 in the interests of Northern anti-slavery advocates, and so depriving the South of additional slave states.[26] Congressman John Tyler of Virginia invoked the Jeffersonian precepts of territorial and commercial growth as a national goal to counter the rise of sectional differences over slavery. His "diffusion" theory declared that with Missouri open to slavery, the new state would encourage the transfer of underutilized slaves westward, emptying the eastern states of bondsmen and making emancipation feasible in the old South.[27] This doctrine would be revived during the Texas annexation controversy.[28][29]
When Mexico won its independence from Spain in 1821,[30] the United States did not contest the new republic's claims to Texas, and both presidents John Quincy Adams (1825–1829) and Andrew Jackson (1829–1837) persistently sought, through official and unofficial channels, to procure all or portions of provincial Texas from the Mexican government, without success.[31]
Anglo-American immigrants, primarily from the Southern United States, began emigrating to Mexican Texas in the early 1820s at the invitation of the Mexican government, which sought to populate the sparsely inhabited lands of its northern frontier.[32][33] Colonizing empresario Stephen F. Austin managed the regional affairs of the mostly American-born population – 20% of them slaves[34] – under the terms of the generous government land grants.[35] Mexican authorities were initially content to govern the remote province through salutary neglect, "permitting slavery under the legal fiction of 'permanent indentured servitude', similar to Mexico's peonage system.[36]
A general lawlessness prevailed in the vast Texas frontier, and Mexico's civic laws went largely unenforced.[37][38] Mexican authorities, perceiving that they were losing control over Texas and alarmed by the unsuccessful Fredonia Rebellion of 1826, abandoned the policy of benign rule. New restrictions were imposed in 1829–1830, outlawing slavery throughout the nation and terminating further American immigration to Texas.[39][40] Military occupation followed, sparking local uprisings and a civil war. Texas conventions in 1832 and 1833 submitted petitions for redress of grievances to overturn the restrictions, with limited success.[41] In 1835, an army under Mexican President Santa Anna entered Texas and abolished self-government. Texans responded by declaring their independence from Mexico on March 2, 1836. On April 20–21, rebel forces under Texas General Sam Houston defeated the Mexican army at the Battle of San Jacinto.[42][43] The Mexican government refused to honor the terms granting the Lone Star Republic its independence agreed to by President Santa Anna in June 1836.[44] Texans, now in possession of a de facto republic, recognized that their security and prosperity could never be achieved while Mexico denied the legitimacy of their revolution.[45]
In the years following independence, the migration of white settlers and importation of black slave labor into the vast republic was deterred by Texas's unresolved international status and the threat of renewed warfare with Mexico.[46] American citizens who considered migrating to the new republic perceived that "life and property were safer within the United States" than in an independent Texas.[47] The situation led to labor shortages, reduced tax revenue, large national debts and a diminished Texas militia.[48][49]
The Anglo-American immigrants residing in newly-independent Texas overwhelmingly desired immediate annexation by the United States.[50] But, despite his strong support for Texas independence,[51] then-President Andrew Jackson delayed recognizing the new republic until the last day of his presidency to avoid raising the issue during the 1836 general election.[52][53] Jackson's political caution was informed by northern concerns that Texas could potentially form several new slave states and undermine the North-South balance in Congress.[54]
Jackson's successor, President Martin Van Buren, viewed Texas annexation as an immense political liability that would empower the anti-slavery northern Whig opposition – especially if annexation provoked a war with Mexico.[55] Presented with a formal annexation proposal from Texas minister Memucan Hunt, Jr. in August 1837, Van Buren summarily rejected it.[56] Annexation resolutions presented separately in each house of Congress were either soundly defeated or tabled through filibuster. After the election of 1838, new Texas president Mirabeau B. Lamar withdrew his republic's offer of annexation due to these failures.[57] Texans were at an annexation impasse when John Tyler entered the White House in 1841.[58]
William Henry Harrison, Whig Party presidential nominee, defeated US President Martin Van Buren in the 1840 general election. Upon Harrison's death shortly after his inauguration, Vice-President John Tyler assumed the presidency.[59] President Tyler was expelled from the Whig party in 1841 for repeatedly vetoing their domestic finance legislation. Tyler, isolated and outside the two-party mainstream, turned to foreign affairs to salvage his presidency, aligning himself with a southern states' rights faction that shared his fervent slavery expansionist views.[60]
In his first address to Congress in special session on June 1, 1841, Tyler set the stage for Texas annexation by announcing his intention to pursue an expansionist agenda so as to preserve the balance between state and national authority and to protect American institutions, including slavery, so as to avoid sectional conflict.[61] Tyler's closest advisors counseled him that obtaining Texas would assure him a second term in the White House,[62] and it became a deeply personal obsession for the president, who viewed the acquisition of Texas as the "primary objective of his administration".[63] Tyler delayed direct action on Texas to work closely with his Secretary of State Daniel Webster on other pressing diplomatic initiatives.[64]
With the Webster-Ashburton Treaty ratified in 1843, Tyler was ready to make the Texas his "top priority".[65] Congressman Thomas W. Gilmer of Virginia was authorized by the administration to make the case for annexation to the American electorate. In a widely circulated open letter, understood as an announcement of the executive branch's designs for Texas, Gilmer described Texas as a panacea for North-South conflict and an economic boon to all commercial interests. The slavery issue, however divisive, would be left for the states to decide as per the US Constitution. Domestic tranquility and national security, Tyler argued, would result from an annexed Texas; a Texas left outside American jurisdiction would imperil the Union.[66] Tyler adroitly arranged the resignation of his anti-annexationist Secretary of State Daniel Webster, and on June 23, 1843 filled the post with Abel P. Upshur, a Virginia states' rights champion and ardent proponent of Texas annexation. This shift in cabinet appointment signaled Tyler's intent to aggressively pursue Texas annexation.[67]
In late September 1843, in an effort to cultivate public support for Texas, Secretary Upshur dispatched a letter to his ambassador to London, Edward Everett, conveying his displeasure with Britain's global anti-slavery posture, and warning their government that forays into Texas's affairs would be regarded as "tantamount to direct interference 'with the established institutions of the United States'".[68] In a breach of diplomatic norms, Upshur leaked the communique to the press in order to inflame popular Anglophobic sentiments among American citizens.[69]
In the spring of 1843, the Tyler administration had sent executive agent Lord Aberdeen, British Foreign Secretary, to provide funds to the Lone Star Republic in exchange for the emancipation of its slaves.[71] Minister to London Everett was charged with determining the substance of these confidential reports alleging a Texas plot. His investigations, including personal interviews with Lord Aberdeen, concluded that British interest in abolitionist intrigues was weak, contradicting Secretary of State Upshur's conviction that Great Britain was manipulating Texas.[72] Though unsubstantiated, Green's unofficial intelligence so alarmed Tyler that he requested verification from his minister in Mexico, Waddy Thompson.[73]
John C. Calhoun, a South Carolina pro-slavery extremist,[74] counseled Secretary of State Upshur that British designs on American slavery were real and required immediate action to preempt a takeover of Texas by Great Britain. When Tyler confirmed in September that the British Foreign Secretary Aberdeen had encouraged détente between Mexico and Texas, allegedly pressing Mexico to maneuver Texas towards emancipation of its slaves, Tyler acted at once.[75][76] On September 18, 1843, in consultation with Secretary Upshur, he ordered secret talks opened with Texas Minister to the United States Isaac Van Zandt to negotiate the annexation of Texas.[77] Face-to-face negotiations commenced on October 16, 1843.[78]
By the summer of 1843 Sam Houston's Texas administration had returned to negotiations with the Mexican government to consider a rapprochement that would permit Texas self-governance, possibly as a state of Mexico, with Great Britain acting as mediator.[79][80] Texas officials felt compelled by the fact that the Tyler administration appeared unequipped to mount an effective campaign for Texas annexation.[81] With the 1844 general election in the United States approaching, the leadership in both the Democratic and Whig parties remained unequivocally anti-Texas.[82] Texas-Mexico treaty options under consideration included an autonomous Texas within Mexico's borders, or an independent republic with the provision that Texas should emancipate its slaves upon recognition.[83]
Van Zandt, though he personally favored annexation by the United States, was not authorized to entertain any overtures from the US government on the subject. Texas officials were at the moment deeply engaged in exploring settlements with Mexican diplomats, facilitated by Great Britain. Texas's predominant concern was not British interference with the institution of slavery – English diplomats had not alluded to the issue – but the avoidance of any resumption of hostilities with Mexico.[84] Still, US Secretary of State Upshur vigorously courted Texas diplomats to begin annexation talks, finally dispatching an appeal to President Sam Houston in January 1845. In it, he assured Houston that, in contrast to previous attempts, the political climate in the United States, including sections of the North, was amenable to Texas statehood, and that a two-thirds majority in Senate could be obtained to ratify a Texas treaty.[85]
Texans were hesitant to pursue a US-Texas treaty without a written commitment of military defense from America, since a full-scale military retaliation by Mexico seemed likely when the negotiations became public. If ratification of the annexation measure stalled in the US Senate, the Lone Star Republic could face a war alone against Mexico.[86] Because only Congress could declare war, the Tyler administration lacked the constitutional authority to commit its support to Texas. But, when Secretary Upshur provided a verbal assurance of a military defense, President Houston, responding to urgent calls for annexation from the Texas Congress of December 1843, authorized the reopening of annexation negotiations.[87]
As Secretary Abel P. Upshur accelerated the secret treaty discussions, Mexican diplomatic circles became aware that US-Texas talks were taking place. Mexican minister to the US Juan Almonte confronted Upshur with these reports, warning him that if Congress sanctioned a treaty of annexation, Mexico would break diplomatic ties and immediately declare war.[88] Secretary Upshur evaded and dismissed the charges, and pressed forward with the negotiations.[89] In tandem with moving forward with Texas diplomats, Upshur was secretly lobbying US Senators to gain support for annexation, providing lawmakers with persuasive arguments linking Texas acquisition to national security and domestic peace. By early 1844, Upshur was able to assure Texas officials that 40 of the 52 members of the Senate were pledged to ratify the Tyler-Texas treaty, enough to secure the two-thirds majority required for passage.[90] Tyler, in his annual address to Congress in December 1843, maintained his silence on the secret treaty, so as not to damage relations with the wary Texas diplomats.[91] Throughout, Tyler did his utmost to keep the negotiations secret, making no public reference to his administration's singleminded quest for Texas.[92]
The treaty was in its final stages when the chief architects the of the Tyler-Texas treaty, Secretary Upshur and Secretary of the Navy Thomas W. Gilmer, died in an accident aboard the USS Princeton (1843) on February 28, 1844, just a day after achieving a preliminary treaty draft agreement with the Texas Republic.[93] The Princeton disaster proved a major setback for Texas annexation, in that Tyler expected Secretary Upshur to elicit critical support from Whig and Democratic Senators during the upcoming treaty ratification process.[94] Tyler selected John C. Calhoun to replace Upshur as Secretary of State and to finalize the treaty with Texas. The choice of Calhoun, a highly regarded but controversial American statesman,[95] risked introducing a politically polarizing element into the Texas debates, but Tyler prized him as a strong advocate of annexation.[96][97]
With the Tyler-Upshur secret annexation negotiations with Texas near consummation, Senator Robert J. Walker of Mississippi, a key Tyler ally, issued a widely distributed and highly influential letter, reproduced as a pamphlet, making the case for the Lone Star Republic's immediate annexation.[99] In it, Walker argued that Texas could be acquired by Congress in a number of ways – all constitutional – and that the moral authority to do so was based on the precepts for territorial expansion established by Jefferson and Madison, and promulgated as doctrine by James Monroe in 1823.[100] Senator Walker's polemic offered analysis on the significance of Texas with respect to slavery and race. He envisioned Texas as a corridor through which both free and enslaved African-Americans could be "diffused" southward in a gradual exodus that would ultimately supply labor to the Central American tropics, and in time, empty the United States of its slave population.[101]
This "safety-valve" theory "appealed to the racial fears of northern whites" who dreaded the prospect of absorbing emancipated slaves into their communities in the event that the institution of slavery collapsed in the South.[102] This scheme for racial cleansing was consistent, on a pragmatic level, with colonization proposals for blacks, pursued by a number of American presidents, from Jefferson to Lincoln.[103] Walker bolstered his position by raising national security concerns, warning that in the event annexation failed, imperialist Great Britain would maneuver the Republic of Texas into emancipating its slaves, forecasting a dangerous destabilizing influence on southwestern slaveholding states. The pamphlet characterized abolitionists as traitors who conspired with the British to overthrow the United States.[104][105]
A variation of the Tyler's "diffusion" theory, it played on economic fears in a period when slave-based staple crop markets had not yet recovered from the Panic of 1837. The Texas "escape route" conceived by Walker promised to increase demand for slaves in fertile cotton growing regions of Texas, as well as the monetary value of slaves. Cash poor plantation owners in the older eastern South were promised a market for superfluous slaves at a profit.[106] Texas annexation, wrote Walker, would eliminate all these dangers and "fortify the whole Union."[107]
Walker's pamphlet brought forth strident demands for Texas from pro-slavery expansionists in the South; in the North, it allowed anti-slavery expansionists to embrace Texas without appearing to be aligned with pro-slavery extremists.[108] His assumptions and analysis "shaped and framed the debates on annexation but his premises went largely unchallenged among the press and public.[109]
The Tyler-Texas treaty, signed on April 12, 1844 was framed so as to induct Texas into the Union as a territory, following constitutional protocols. To wit, Texas would cede all its public lands to the United States, and the federal government would assume all its bonded debt, up to $10 million. The boundaries of the Texas territory were left unspecified.[110] Four new states could ultimately be carved from the former republic – three of them likely to become slave states.[111] Any allusion to slavery was omitted from the document so as not to antagonize anti-slavery sentiments during Senate debates, but it provided for the "preservation of all [Texas] property as secured in our domestic institutions."[112]
Upon the signing of the treaty, Tyler complied with the Texans' demand for military and naval protection, deploying troops to Fort Jesup in Louisiana and a fleet of warships to the Gulf of Mexico.[113] In the event that the Senate failed to pass the treaty, Tyler promised the Texas diplomats that he would officially exhort both houses of Congress to establish Texas as a state of the Union upon provisions authorized in the US Constitution.[114] Tyler's cabinet was split on the administration's handling of the Texas agreement. Secretary of War William Wilkins praised the terms of annexation publicly, touting the economic and geostrategic benefits with relation to Great Britain.[115] Secretary of the Treasury John C. Spencer was alarmed at the constitutional implications of Tyler's application of military force without congressional approval, a violation of the separation of powers. Refusing to transfer contingency funds for the naval mobilization, he resigned.[116]
Tyler submitted his Texas-US treaty for annexation to the US Senate, delivered April 22, 1844, where a two-thirds majority was required for ratification.[117][118] Secretary of State John C. Calhoun of South Carolina (assuming his post March 29, 1844)[119] included a document known as the Packenham Letter with the Tyler bill that was calculated to create a sense of crisis in Southern Democrats of the Deep South.[120] In it, he characterized slavery as a social blessing and the acquisition of Texas as an emergency measure necessary to safeguard the "peculiar institution" in the United States.[121] In doing so, Tyler and Calhoun sought to unite the South in a crusade that would present the North with an ultimatum: support Texas annexation or lose the South.[122]
President Tyler expected that his treaty would be debated secretly in Senate executive session.[123] However, less than a week after debates opened, the treaty, its associated internal correspondence and the Packenham letter were leaked to the public. The nature of the Tyler-Texas negotiations caused a national outcry, in that "the documents appeared to verify that the sole objective of Texas annexation was the preservation of slavery".[124] A mobilization of anti-annexation forces in the North strengthened both major parties' hostility toward Tyler's agenda. The leading presidential hopefuls of both parties, Democrat Martin Van Buren and Whig Henry Clay, publicly denounced the treaty.[125] Texas annexation and the reoccupation of Oregon territory emerged as the central issues in the 1844 general election.[126]
In response, Tyler, already ejected from the Whig party, quickly began to organize a third party in hopes of inducing the Democrats to embrace a pro-expansionist platform.[127] By running as a third-party candidate, Tyler threatened to siphon off pro-annexation Democratic voters; Democratic party disunity would mean the election of Henry Clay, a staunchly anti-Texas Whig.[128] Pro-annexationist delegates among southern Democrats, with assistance from a number of northern delegates, succeeded in ousting the anti-expansionist presidential candidate Martin Van Buren at their convention, nominating the pro-expansionist champion of Manifest Destiny, James K. Polk of Tennessee. Polk would unify his party under the banner of Texas and Oregon acquisition.[129]
In August 1844, in the midst of the election campaign for president, Tyler withdrew from the race. The Democratic party was by then unequivocally committed to Texas annexation, and Tyler, assured by Polk's envoys that as president he would effect Texas annexation, urged his supporters to cast their votes for the Democratic Party.[130] Polk narrowly defeated Whig Henry Clay in the November election.[131] The victorious Democrats were poised to acquire Texas under the leadership of their president-elect James K. Polk, the pro-Texas annexation champion of Manifest Destiny,[132] rather than on the pro-slavery agenda favored by the Tyler-Calhoun expansionists.[133]
As a treaty document with a foreign nation, the Tyler-Texas annexation treaty required the support of a two-thirds majority in the Senate for passage. But in fact, when the Senate voted on the measure on June 8, 1844, fully two-thirds voted against the treaty. The vote went largely along party lines: Whigs had opposed it almost unanimously (27–1), while Democrats split, but voted overwhelmingly in favor (15–8).[134] The election campaign had hardened partisan positions on Texas among Democrats.[135] Tyler had anticipated that the measure would fail, due largely to the divisive effects of Secretary Calhoun's Packenham letter.[136] Undeterred, he formally asked the House of Representatives to consider other constitutional means to authorize passage of the treaty. Congress adjourned before debating the matter.[137]
The same Senate that had rejected the Tyler–Calhoun treaty by a margin of 2:1 in June 1844[138] reassembled in December 1844 in short (lame-duck) session.[139] (Though pro-annexation Democrats had made gains in the fall congressional races, those legislators – the 29th Congress – would not assume office until March 1845.)[140] Lame-duck President John Tyler, persisting in his efforts to annex Texas in the final months of his administration, wished to avoid another overwhelming Senate rejection of his treaty.[141] In his annual address to Congress on December 4, he declared the Polk victory a mandate for Texas annexation[142] and proposed that congress adopt a joint resolution procedure by which simple majorities in each house could secure ratification for the Tyler treaty.[143] This method would avoid the constitutional necessity of a two-thirds majority for international treaties in the Senate.[144] Bringing the House of Representatives into the equation boded well for Texas annexation, as the pro-annexation Democratic Party possessed nearly a 2:1 majority in that chamber.[145][146]
By resubmitting the discredited treaty through a House-sponsored bill, the Tyler administration reignited sectional hostilities over Texas admission.[147] Both northern Democratic and southern Whig Congressmen had been bewildered by local political agitation in their home states during the 1844 presidential campaigns.[148] Now, Democratic legislators found themselves vulnerable to charges of appeasement to their southern wing if they capitulated to Tyler's slavery expansion provisions. On the other hand, Manifest Destiny enthusiasm in the north placed politicians under pressure to admit Texas immediately to the Union.[149]
Constitutional objections were raised in House debates as to whether both houses of Congress could constitutionally authorize admission of territories, rather than states. Moreover, if the Republic of Texas, a nation in its own right, were admitted as a state, its territorial boundaries, property relations (including slave property), debts and public lands would require a Senate-ratified treaty.[150] Democrats were particularly uneasy about shouldering the United States with $10 million in Texas debt, resenting the deluge of speculators, who, in possession of inflated Texas bonds, lobbied Congress in favor of the Texas House bill.[151] House Democrats, at an impasse, relinquished the legislative initiative to the southern Whigs.[152]
Anti-Texas Whig legislators had lost more than the White House in the general election of 1844. In the southern states of Tennessee and Georgia, Whig strongholds in the 1840 general election, voter support dropped precipitously due to the pro-annexation excitement in the Deep South – and Henry Clay lost every Southern state to James K. Polk.[153] Northern Whigs' uncompromising hostility to slavery expansion increasingly characterized the party, and southern members, by association, had suffered from charges of being "soft on Texas, therefore soft on slavery" by Southern Democrats.[154] Facing congressional and gubernatorial races in 1845 in their home states, a number of Southern Whigs sought to erase that impression with respect to the Tyler-Texas bill.[155][156]
Southern Whig legislators in the House, including Representative
Lame-duck Republican President Benjamin Harrison (1889–1893) attempted, in 1893, to annex Hawaii through a Senate treaty. When this failed, he was asked to consider the Tyler joint house precedent; he declined. Democratic President Grover Cleveland (1893–1897) did not pursue the annexation of Hawaii. When President William McKinley took office in 1897, he quickly revived expectations among territorial expansionists when he resubmitted legislation to acquire Hawaii. When the two-thirds Senate support was not forthcoming, committees in the House and Senate explicitly invoked the Tyler precedent for the joint house resolution, which was successfully applied to approve the annexation of Hawaii in July 1898.[199]
The formal controversy over the legality of the annexation of Texas stems from the fact that Congress approved the annexation of Texas as a state, rather than a territory, with simple majorities in each house, instead of annexing the land by Senate treaty, as was done with Native American lands. Tyler's extralegal joint resolution maneuver in 1844 exceeded strict constructionist precepts, but was passed by Congress in 1845 as part of a compromise bill. The success of the joint house Texas annexation set a precedent that would be applied to Hawaii's annexation in 1897.[198]
A Texas annexation convention debated the Tyler-Polk annexation offer and almost unanimously passed it on July 4, 1845. President James K. Polk signed the legislation making the former Lone Star Republic a state of the Union on December 29, 1845.[196] Texas formally relinquished its sovereignty to the United States on February 14, 1846.[197]
When President Polk entered the White House the following day, March 4, 1845, he was in a position to recall Tyler's dispatch to Texas and reverse his decision. On March 10, after conferring with his cabinet, Polk upheld Tyler's action and allowed the courier to proceed with the offer of immediate annexation to Texas.[192] The only modification was to exhort Texans to accept the annexation terms unconditionally.[193] Polk's decision was based on his concern that a protracted negotiation by US commissioners would expose annexation efforts to foreign intrigue and interference.[194] While President Polk kept his annexation endeavors confidential, Senators passed a resolution requesting formal disclosure of the administration's Texas policy. Polk stalled, and when the Senate special session had adjourned on March 20, 1845, no names for US commissioners to Texas had been submitted by the White House. Polk denied charges from Senator Benton that he had misled him on his intention to support the new negotiations option, declaring "if any such pledges were made, it was in a total misconception of what I said or meant."[195]
Senate and house legislators who had favored Benton's renegotiated version of the Texas annexation bill had been assured that President Tyler would sign the joint house measure, but leave its implementation to the incoming Polk administration.[186] But, during his last day in office, President Tyler, with the urging of his Secretary of State Calhoun,[187] decided to act decisively to improve the odds for the immediate annexation of Texas. On March 3, 1845, with his cabinet's assent, he dispatched an offer of annexation to the Republic of Texas by courier, exclusively under the terms of the Brown–Foster option of the joint house measure.[188] Secretary Calhoun apprised president-elect Polk of the action, who demurred without comment.[189][190] Tyler justified his preemptive move on the grounds that Polk was likely to come under pressure to abandon immediate annexation and reopen negotiations under the Benton alternative.[191]
On February 27, 1845, less than a week before Polk's inauguration, the Senate voted 27–25 to admit Texas, based on the Tyler protocols of simple majority passage. All twenty-four Democrats voted for the measure, joined by three southern Whigs.[182] Benton and his allies were assured that Polk would act to establish the eastern portion of Texas as a slave state; the western section was to remain unorganized territory, not committed to slavery. On this understanding, the northern Democrats had conceded their votes for the dichotomous bill.[183] The next day, in an almost strict party line vote the Benton-Milton measure was passed in the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives.[184] President Tyler signed the bill the following day, March 1, 1845.[185]
The Benton proposal was intended to calm his party's northern anti-slavery wing, which wished to eliminate the Tyler-Calhoun treaty altogether, as it had been negotiated on behalf of the slavery expansionists, and allow the decision to devolve upon the soon-to-be-inaugurated Democratic president-elect James K. Polk.[176] President-elect Polk had expressed his ardent wish that Texas annexation should be accomplished before he entered Washington in advance of his inauguration on March 4, 1845, the same day Congress would end its session.[177] With his arrival in the capital, he discovered the Benton and Brown factions in the Senate "paralyzed" over the Texas annexation legislation.[178] On the advice of his soon-to-be Secretary of the Treasury Robert J. Walker, Polk urged Senate Democrats to unite under a dual resolution that would include both the Benton and Brown versions of annexation, leaving enactment of the legislation to Polk's discretion when he assumed the presidency.[179] In private and separate talks with supporters of both the Brown and Benton plans, Polk left each side with the "impression he would administer their [respective] policy. Polk meant what he said to Southerners and meant to appear friendly to the Van Burenite faction."[180] Polk's handling of the matter had the effect of uniting Senate northern Democrats in favor of the dual alternative treaty bill.[181]
Thomas Hart Benton, an anti-annexation Senator from Missouri, had been the only Southern Democrat to vote against the Tyler Texas measure in June 1844.[171][172] His original proposal for an annexed Texas had embodied a national compromise, whereby Texas would be divided in two, half slave-soil and half free-soil.[173] As pro-annexation sentiment grew in his home state, Benton retreated from this compromise offer.[174] By February 5, 1845, in the early debates on the Brown amended House bill, he advanced an alternative resolution that, unlike the Brown scenario, made no reference whatsoever to the ultimate free-slave apportionment for an annexed Texas and simply called for five bipartisan commissioners to resolve border disputes with Texas and Mexico and set conditions for the Lone Star Republic's acquisition by the United States.[175]
By early February 1845, when the Senate began to debate the Brown-amended Tyler treaty, its passage seemed unlikely, as support was "perishing".[168] The partisan alignments in the Senate were near parity, 28–24, slightly in favor of the Whigs.[169] The Senate Democrats would require undivided support among their colleagues, and three or more Whigs who would be willing to cross party lines to pass the House-amended treaty. The fact that Senator Foster had drafted the House amendment under consideration improved Senate Democratic prospects to pass the measure.[170]
Politically, the Brown amendment was designed to portray Southern Whigs as "even more ardent champions of slavery and the South, than southern Democrats."[162] The bill also served to distinguish themselves from their northern Whig colleagues who cast the controversy, as Calhoun did, in strictly pro- versus anti-slavery terms.[163] While almost all Northern Whigs spurned Brown's amendment, the Democrats quickly co-opted the legislation, providing the votes necessary to attach the proviso to Tyler's joint resolution, passing 118–101.[164] Southern Democrats supported the bill almost unanimously (59–1), while Northern Democrats split strongly in favor (50–30). Eight of eighteen Southern Whigs cast their votes in favor. Northern Whigs unanimously rejected it.[165] The House proceeded to approve the amended Texas treaty 120–98 on January 25, 1845.[166] The vote in the House had been one in which party affiliation prevailed over sectional allegiance.[167] The bill was forwarded the same day to the Senate for debate.
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Texas, New Mexico, Wyoming, Sam Houston, Oklahoma
Handbook of Texas, Houston, Dallas, New Mexico, Oklahoma
New York City, United States, American Civil War, Hawaii, Western United States
Texas, Mexico, Republic of Texas, Spanish Texas, Spain
Huntsville, Texas, Texas, Virginia, Tennessee, American Civil War
Texas, Republic of Texas, Houston, Spanish Texas, Austin, Texas
Republic of Texas, Mexico, Texas, Sam Houston, Battle of the Alamo
El Paso, Texas, Rio Grande, Mexican Revolution, American Civil War, Ciudad Juárez
Dallas, Texas, Republic of Texas, Transportation in Dallas, Trinity River (Texas)