Essay Topic Hub

Manifest Destiny
Essays

235+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

235 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Manifest Destiny refers to the nineteenth-century belief that the United States was divinely ordained to expand across the North American continent. The concept appears frequently in American history courses, ethnic studies, and foreign policy seminars because it sits at the intersection of ideology, territorial ambition, and national identity. Its academic appeal lies in how a single coined phrase came to justify sweeping consequences — the annexation of Texas, war with Mexico, displacement of Indigenous peoples, and the absorption of vast new territories — while simultaneously intensifying national debates over slavery and race.

Student papers on this topic approach it from several distinct angles. Some trace the ideology's roots and follow its development through westward expansion and the Mexican War, while others examine how race and class shaped who benefited from territorial growth. Historical case studies appear frequently, including analyses of Lewis and Clark's expeditions and the experiences of borderland communities in the Southwest. Other papers extend the argument forward in time, connecting nineteenth-century expansionism to American foreign policy between 1890 and 1930 and asking whether the impulse toward expansion carried into the twentieth century and beyond.

A strong essay on Manifest Destiny requires a focused thesis that moves beyond simply describing expansion to explaining why it unfolded as it did and who bore its costs. Evidence drawn from policy decisions, territorial conflicts, immigration patterns, and the slavery debate tends to carry the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating Manifest Destiny as an inevitable or neutral process rather than a contested ideology that produced real winners and losers along lines of race, class, and nationality.

Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Cuba\'s Loyalty to Spain During
The Spanish empire had a stronghold in Cuba. However, the Cubans were not very satisfied with the rule and small instances of rebellion had started to emerge. In 1895 the rebellion gained momentum and the Spaniards were…
Paper Undergraduate
Germany Won WWII Several Days
Several days prior to the launch of Operation Overlord by the combined Allied forces, a German spy sent a very short coded message to occupied France, "Attack Normandy, Clear Weather, Anchor," the final word being the…
Research Paper Doctorate
History and Development of American Education System
The history of education in America is founded on two basic theories. One is a religious theory or belief that its people have a "manifest destiny" to fulfill in relation to the rest of the world.
Paper Undergraduate
Imperialism: historical contexts, causes, and global impacts
Imperialism is now considered a dirty word, because the desire to exert control over foreign lands and people is associated with a belief that those people are somehow inferior to the ones asserting control.
Paper High School
Cormac Mccarthy\'s Blood Meridian
McCarthy, a Pulitzer Prize winner (for his novel The Road) and highly respected novelist, is said to have gone into a lot of research on the history of the Southwest prior to writing Blood Meridian.
Research Paper Undergraduate
New Western History
¶ … American West as a Place Rather than a Process
Paper Masters
Frederick Douglass: life and legacy
The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, Written by Himself appeared in May 1845. William Lloyd Garrisonwrote the preface; Wendell Phillipswrote an introductory letter. Douglass's stark rendering of his torturous slave experiences, however, was the smash. By 1848, eleven thousand copies had been published in the United States; French and German translations had appeared; and in England, it had already experienced nine editions. Ecstatic praise for Douglass's eloquent and touching narrative was widespread. "The book, as a whole, judged as a mere work of art, would widen the fame of Bunyan or Defoe," wrote the Lynn Pioneer reviewer. This reviewer added: "It is the most thrilling work which the American press has ever issued -- and the most important. If it does not open the eyes of this people, they must be petrified into eternal sleep." A British reviewer marveled at Douglass, "a fugitive slave, as but yesterday, escaped from a bondage that doomed him to ignorance and degradation, [who] now stands up and rebukes oppression with a dignity and a fervor scarcely less glowing than that which Paul addressed to Agrippa."
Paper Undergraduate
Spanish Influence on California From
Spanish Influence on California From 1542 Through the Early 1800s
Essay Doctorate
Police abuse of power and misconduct in traffic enforcement
This paper analyzes the US criminal justice system from the perspective of Paul Butler's book Let's Get Free: A Hip-Hop Theory of Justice. In the book, Butler observes that the Law is prejudiced against minorities and through a policy of mass incarceration and racial profiling prevents these individuals from prospering in a real and true and self-determined way.
Paper Undergraduate
Cold War, How it Came
¶ … Cold War, how it came to be, what the motives were for both superpowers, and how the actions of both the U.S.S.R. And the U.S. have impacted the world. No doubt all three authors, Jeremi Suri, John Lewis Gaddis, and…