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"I
do not think there ever was a more wicked war than that waged by the United
States in Mexico. I thought so at the time, when I was a youngster, only
I had not the moral courage enough to resign."
- memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant, 1885
This image depicts
the Battle of San Pasqual, fought east of San Diego on Dec. 6, 1846. The
sketch shows Californios (native Californians of Mexican descent) fighting
U.S. soldiers. The bloodiest battle fought in California, San Pasqual
represented the determination of the Californios to resist American expansionism
during the Mexican War.
The ideology of Manifest Destiny was a prime motivation for the acquisition
of California in the 1840s. This philosophy linked the expansion of U.S.
territory with extending the "boundaries of freedom". The belief
that Anglo-Saxon social and political systems were the height of human
achievement led some to the conclusion that these systems would one day
extend across the continent. However, non-whites were seen as incapable
of practicing this "freedom". Poet and author Walt Whitman expressed
this view when he stated, "What has miserable, inefficient Mexico--with
her superstition, her burlesque upon freedom, her actual tyranny by the
few over the many--what has she to do with the great mission of peopling
the new world with a noble race? Be it ours to achieve that mission!"
To accomplish this mission, a force of 300 mounted soldiers was organized
at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas, under the command of Col. Stephen W. Kearney,
in the summer of 1846. This "Army of the West" was sent to California
to seize Monterey and San Francisco. By early December, the Americans
were about 40 miles east of San Diego. Here, Kearney learned that an equal
force of Californios was encamped a few miles away in San Pasqual Valley.
Rather than march around this force, Kearney decided to attack.
In the early morning hours of Dec. 5, 1846, 100 U.S. soldiers moved into
San Pasqual Valley. Already alerted to their presence, the Californios
fled. Spurred on by this apparent retreat the Americans began a disorganized
pursuit. As the Americans raced along the length of the valley, the Californios
suddenly turned and charged straight into them. In 15 minutes of violent
combat, 21 U.S. soldiers were killed and 17 more were wounded while the
Californios suffered only one casualty. Having stopped the American advance,
the Californios abandoned the valley. Only after the arrival of U.S. reinforcements
from San Diego was Kearney's force able to make it to safety.
In the months following the "victory" at San Pasqual, the U.S.
military defeated the Californios in a series of small engagements in
southern California, finally forcing their surrender near Los Angeles
on Jan. 13, 1847. The transfer of American rule to California following
the end of the Mexican War was a severe blow to the Californios. Forced
to prove legal ownership of their land under U.S. law, many lost their
homes. As the basis of the Mexican socioeconomic system had been land
ownership, this loss forced many Californios into menial labor and poverty.
The mass migration of white miners brought about by the gold rush of 1849
soon made California-born Mexicans a minority in their own homeland. Likewise
a series of laws, such as the anti-vagrancy act of 1855 and an act negating
the requirement that laws in California be translated into Spanish, further
disconnected California from its Hispanic heritage. This would continue
into the 20th century, as Mexican migrants faced discrimination and social
inequality when they came to California looking for a new start.
Standards:
4.2 Students describe the social, political, cultural, and economical
life and interactions among people of California from the pre-Columbian
societies to the Spanish mission and Mexican rancho periods.
4.3 Students explain the economic, social, and political life in
California from the establishment of the Bear Flag Republic through the
Mexican-American War, the Gold Rush, and the granting of statehood.
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