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Westward Expansion

Teacher: Michael Manko
Across
The nickname for the independent republic of Texas following the Texas Revolution.
The belief of most Americans in the 1840s that it was their duty to spread democracy to the Pacific Ocean.
A battle that took place on April 21, 1836, that lasted only 18 minutes. This was the battle in which Texas won its independence from Mexico.
This is a term that means to add on to something else.
A treaty signed between the United States and Mexico in 1848 that ended the Mexican-American War.
A Spanish mission that was the site of an important battle during the Texas Revolution.
A race to get to Oregon Country during the early 1800s.
Lands given up by Mexico under the terms of the treaty that ended the Mexican-American War.
A religious group that migrated to Utah during the 1840s to escape persecution.
Indian and Mexican cowhands who worked on large cattle ranches in California and other parts of the Southwest.
To give up something.
This is a French word that means "get-together." It refers to the place where fur trappers agreed to meet each year to sell their furs
Down
A person who follows his or her own course in life.
To hang someone without a legal trial.
A place in California where James Marshall discovered gold in 1848.
A land route that pioneer families heading west took to travel from Independence, Missouri, to Oregon Country.
This was the name for people of Mexican decent who were born in Texas.
A huge region in the Southwest that included most of present-day Arizona and New Mexico, all of Nevada and Utah, and parts of Colorado.
A military tactic in which enemy forces try to capture a city or fort, often by surrounding and bombarding it.
A nickname for the independent republic of California.
The ability to produce enough to meet one's own needs.
A route taken by William Becknell in 1821 that helped white settlers travel from Missouri to New Mexico Territory.
Adventurous men that hiked though vast forests to trap animals and live off the land.
A place where people are safe.
A community founded by the Mormons in Liilinois where their original leader, Joseph Smith, was murdered in 1844.
Self-appointed law enforcers in California and other parts of the Southwest.