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Manifest Destiny
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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.

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Essay Doctorate
Texas History French Intentions With Texas Both
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Essay Doctorate
Devil Highway Twenty-Six Men Walked In, Twelve
This is a four page paper about The Devil's Highway, by Luis Alberto Urrea. The author describes an event in 2001 when 12 people perished trying to cross illegally from Mexico into the United States through the Arizona desert. He calls it "the big die-off, the largest death event in border history." (Urrea, 31) In that sense, the story is unique – it is something that has never happened before.
Research Paper Undergraduate
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Research Paper Doctorate
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Research Paper Doctorate
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Research Paper Doctorate
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Essay Doctorate
Huckleberry Finn and What Makes an American
Both Mark Twain and his character Huck Finn are truly the embodiment of what it is to be American. They represent freedom of speech, liberty, equal opportunity, and an undeniable individualism that has been at the core of American ideology since the very inception of this nation. The devotion to these principles is what makes this work, and its author, so American.
Research Paper Undergraduate
No matter concepts and applications
The Cherokee nation was removed from its native lands in 1838 - at the command of President Andrew Jackson and the United States government. The removal of the Cherokee was simultaneously an effort to neuter the most…
Paper Doctorate
American imperialism: a controversial historical assessment
The notion that whiteness was a superior state to blackness and all shades between, the notion of cultural superiority was already firmly entrenched by the time of the Chicago Worlds Fair in 1893.
Thesis Undergraduate
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James Buchanan, fifteenth President of the United States (James Buchanan, n.d.), was born on April 23, 1791 in Cove Gap, Pennsylvania (BUCHANAN, James, (1791-1868), n.d.). He moved when he was five to Mercersburg,…