John OSullivan And Americas Manifest Destiny

John O’Sullivan and America’s Manifest Destiny

When leaders wish to conquer foreign lands, they invariably put forth a list of justifications. In America in the 1840s, politicians and others invoked the phrase “manifest destiny” to optimistically explain continual territorial expansion by the United States. In modern terms, manifest destiny might be described as something that is “obvious and certain”. In short, leaders in the 1840s were arguing that American expansionism was quite natural and good, determined by fate.

The term seems to have been coined mid-decade by journalist John O’Sullivan. In an essay entitled “Annexation”, O’Sullivan urged the US to annex Texas from Mexico. Not only was this justified because of Texans’ own wishes, O’Sullivan contended, but also because it was America's “manifest destiny to overspread the continent”. In a second and more widely-read column in New York Morning News, O’Sullivan reiterated his phrase when advocating for the US claim to “the whole of Oregon”. This time, he added the notion of a pro-expansion God:

And that claim is by the right of our manifest destiny to overspread and to possess the whole of the continent which Providence has given us for the development of the great experiment of liberty and federated self-government entrusted to us.

By invoking “Providence”, the journalist was suggesting that the highest moral authority actually supported the US annexation of the Oregon Country; since the British were not spreading democracy, their claims had lower moral status in the eyes of God. Ironically, O’Sullivan did not condone the violence that his phrase eventually supported. He had expected territorial expansion to be truly “natural”, coming about through settlements and voluntary annexation by residents. After all, residents of Texas actively sought to become the Union’s twenty-eighth state, and thousands of Americans had already migrated to the Oregon Country via the Oregon Trail. What could be more obvious and certain?

The actual process of expansionism entailed violence and suppression that a kindly god would not condone. The idea of “Indian Removal” garnered a following. Native Americans were removed from lands by force, and at the same time, some lands were desired solely for African American slave labor. This was clear to Henry David Thoreau, who asked:

How does it become a man to behave toward this American government today? I answer that he cannot without disgrace be associated with it. I cannot for an instant recognize that political organization as my government which is the slave's government also.

Ironically, O’Sullivan’s term was not popularized until seized upon by Whig opponents. Whigs in particular contested what “Providence” would desire; the “mission” of the United States, they maintained, was simply to behave as a virtuous (non-conquering) example for the rest of the world.

In 1846, a Whig representative named Robert Winthrop ridiculed O’Sullivan’s concept when speaking before Congress. Observing the notion’s self-interest and chauvinism, he commented:

I suppose the right of a manifest destiny to spread will not be admitted to exist in any nation except the universal Yankee nation.

Despite this public criticism, the Polk Administration and other expansionists quickly embraced the phrase. The era of US history encompassing the War of 1812 through the Civil War is often called the Age of Manifest Destiny. During this time period the United States were expanded to the Pacific Ocean, and borders began to look much as they do today.

 

 
Translate Page Into German Translate Page Into French Translate Page Into Italian Translate Page Into Portuguese Translate Page Into Spanish Translate Page Into Japanese Translate Page Into Korean

More Articles

 

 

Search This Site

 

Related Products And FREE Videos





 

More Articles


Deep Throat And His Legacy

... House and W.H. The Watergate Hotel scandal immediately attracted media attention. Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein covered the story for two years. Their investigative reporting contributed to implicating Nixon and his associates of crimes far beyond burglarizing the DNC. It became ... 

Read Full Article  


Equality And The Seneca Falls Convention

... not much different in the United States. For example, women virtually lost their legal identities once they married, and they were not permitted to vote for lawmakers. Education was also restricted, with boys having much wider educational opportunities. Following the 1840 convention, Mott and Stanton ... 

Read Full Article  


Chinese Immigrants And The Iron Road

... amount of human labor. Much of this labor was Chinese. Americans had contemplated constructing a transcontinental railroad since the 1830s. Without an iron road , overland travel from the eastern states to the California Territory entailed four to six months of hardship. A railroad would facilitate westward ... 

Read Full Article  


France And The American Revolution

... powers was a much greater threat to Britain than the colonies could produce alone, and the crucial 1781 victory at Yorktown could not have been won without the French alliance. Unfortunately for France, following the Battle at Yorktown, Ben Franklin engaged in secret negotiations with Britain. This was ... 

Read Full Article  


The Scandalous Typhoid Mary

... She said she didn t understand how she could be related to all the sickness surrounding her when she herself seemed healthy. In 1909 after spending two years on the island -- she sued the health department, saying that stool samples she d sent to a private lab tested negative. However, the judge ruled ... 

Read Full Article