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    Tamara Cruder May/8/13 06.02 Manifest Destiny 1) What is Manifest Destiny? it was the nation’s manifest destiny to overspread and to posses the whole of the untied states. Many things happen during this time that the United States was forced to put into effect a program to make room for all the settlers that were coming to this county from many parts of the world ‚ but mostly from Europe. The United States was justified to take some land from Native Americans by signing agrements with the

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    Manifest Destiny was the belief that the United States had a mission to expand and that not only was it good but it was destined. Because everyone believed in manifest destiny‚ they wanted to push westward‚ no matter what. Manifest destiny also be-came known as not only expanding the territory‚ but also the institution of slavery. President John Quincy Adams believed so much in manifest destiny that he orchestrated the Treaty of 1818‚ provided for the joint occupation of the Oregon Country. He negotiated

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    Manifest Destiny is the term for the attitude that was prevalent during the 19th century period of American expansion that the United States not only was able to‚ but was actually destined to‚ stretch from coast to coast and expand its territories‚ even if it was at the expense of others. While terrority would expand and progress‚ it would also be liberty and economic opportunities for individuals that would expand as well. The term Manifest Destiny actually originated sometime in the 1840s‚ when

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    "The American claim is by the right of our manifest destiny to overspread and possess the whole of the continent…" John L. O’ Sullivan At the time of the mid- 1800’s most Americans thought that it was destiny for the United States to stretch from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. There were many reasons why people wanted to move from the Atlantic to the Pacific. A few reasons were free farmland was offered to people out west. As well as the growing population along the Atlantic‚ gold‚ and other

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    19th Century American Art America in the 19th century was constantly changing. Industry had its first main beginnings‚ slavery was an important issue‚ a war was imminent... many things were going on. As all of this was occurring‚ artists from all over started painting about it. The paintings are great representations of the era‚ as they truly show what everything was like during the time‚ albeit with beautiful landscapes and different viewpoints of the time. The art of the 19th century in America

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    TODAY‘S MENU 1. Origins of American Exceptionalism and Manifest Destiny 1.1 Rhetorical Origins 1.2 Manifest Destiny 2. American Exceptionalism and American Imperialism 2.1 American Imperialism 2.2 “America’s Destiny” 2.3 Strategic and Imperialistic Reasons 2.4 Translatio Imperii 3. Manifest Destiny and American Exceptionalism in the 21st Century 3.1 G.W. Bush’s Address to the Nation (2001) 3.2 Barack Obama and the American Exceptionalism 3.2.1 1st Inaugural Address (2009) 3.2.2 Obama’s View

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    exceptionalism not to be confused with the ideology of americanism. American Exceptionalism: Belief that U.S.A. is historically and politicaly a completely unique nation and therefor superior to other nations (Hebel 2008) Rhethorical origins: - especially John Winthrop´s ’’A Model of Christian Charity’’ - sermon by Puritan layman and leader John Winthrop‚ who delivered on board the ship Arbella while on route to the Massachusetts Bay Colony - biblical aproach - Puritan colonists are god’s ’’chosen

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    (13.1)In 1845‚ John O’Sullivan made credit for the phrase Manifest Destiny. Manifest Destiny is used to describe America’s 19th century. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 seen the U.S. Congress forcibly displace‚all Native Americans living in the Southeast to west of the Mississippi River. The 1838 Trail of Tears also saw the U.S. government forced the Cherokee nation to relocate from the East Coast to Oklahoma. Beginning in 1840‚ American settlers set out on the Oregon Trail‚ a wagon route starting

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    With Antebellum America followed a desire for Manifest Destiny. The people soon wanted to own all of the land in the country and began moving west. While this westward movement seemed euphoric for the Americans‚ advertised nearly as a getaway from the already crowded east‚ such a feeling did not exist for the Indians. Manifest Destiny was an aggressive imperialism pursued at the expense of others due to the facts that it was made out to be an expansion prearranged by Heaven when it simply was the

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    hindered on the expansionist ideologies that were eventually funnelled through the widely-known doctrine: Manifest Destiny. Settlers resolutely believed in what was considered to be the “inevitable” expansion of the United States throughout America‚ giving themselves a means of credibility for their actions through religion or otherworldly avenues‚ such as fate. Throughout this time‚ Manifest Destiny substantiated religious sentiments as well as economic

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