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History of Arizona - Mexican Arizona |  | History of Arizona - Mexican Arizona: Encyclopedia II - History of Arizona - Mexican Arizona |  | Main article: Mexican Arizona
In 1821, Mexico won its independence from Spain after a decade of war. The revolution had destroyed the colonial silver mining industry and had bankrupted the national treasury [4]. Along the northern frontier, funds that had supported missions, presidios and Apache peace camps nearly disappeared. As a result, Apaches once again began raiding, running off horse herds, and killing anyone caught outside presidia ...
See also:History of Arizona, History of Arizona - Prehistory, History of Arizona - The Paleo-Indians and Archaic peoples, History of Arizona - The introduction of agriculture, History of Arizona - European colonization, History of Arizona - Spanish Arizona, History of Arizona - Mexican Arizona, History of Arizona - American Arizona Territory, History of Arizona - The Great Depression and the World Wars, History of Arizona - Recent events, History of Arizona - Footnotes |  | | History of Arizona, History of Arizona - American Arizona Territory, History of Arizona - European colonization, History of Arizona - Footnotes, History of Arizona - Mexican Arizona, History of Arizona - Prehistory, History of Arizona - Recent events, History of Arizona - Spanish Arizona, History of Arizona - The Great Depression and the World Wars, History of Arizona - The Paleo-Indians and Archaic peoples, History of Arizona - The introduction of agriculture |  | |
|  |  | History of Arizona: Encyclopedia II - History of Arizona - Mexican Arizona
History of Arizona - Mexican Arizona
Main article: Mexican Arizona
In 1821, Mexico won its independence from Spain after a decade of war. The revolution had destroyed the colonial silver mining industry and had bankrupted the national treasury [4]. Along the northern frontier, funds that had supported missions, presidios and Apache peace camps nearly disappeared. As a result, Apaches once again began raiding, running off horse herds, and killing anyone caught outside presidial walls. As missions began to wither, Mexico began auctioning off more land, causing the Pimería Alta and the Apachería to shrink as territory expanded.
American mountain men began to enter the region, looking to trap beavers for their pelts. In 1846, the ideology of Manifest Destiny and the occupation of disputed territory led the United States to go to war with Mexico, resulting in the Mexican Cession that gave America the region of Arizona. In 1849, the California Gold Rush led as many as 50,000 miners through the region, leading to major booms in Arizona's population. In 1853, President James Buchanan sent James Gadsden to Mexico City to negotiate with Santa Anna, and the United States bought the remaining area of Arizona and New Mexico in the Gadsden Purchase.
Other related archives10, 000 BC, 1000 BC, 14 March, 1539, 1540, 16, 000 BC, 1680, 1690s, 1694, 1700s, 1752, 1765, 1775, 1780s, 1790s, 17th century, 1821, 1846, 1848, 1849, 1853, 1860s, 1863, 1877, 18th century, 1900s, 1912, 1917, 1946, 1948, 1963, 1964, 1972, 1980s, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1996, 19th century, 1st millennium, 2005, 27 September, 2nd century, 3500 BC, 42, 8000 BC, 850 BC, Alaska, Anasazi, Apache, Archaic period, Arizona, Arizona Territory, Attorney General, August 17, Barry Goldwater, Bill Clinton, Bill Richardson, Brigham Young, Bruce Babbitt, California, California Gold Rush, Camelback Mountain, Canada, Central Arizona Project, Charles III of Spain, Christianity, Clovis points, Clovis, New Mexico, Colorado Plateau, Colorado River, Columbian Exchange, Columbus Day, Confederate States of America, Coronado, Cíbola, Desert Land Act, Douglas fir, European colonization of Arizona, Eusebio Francisco Kino, Eusebio Kino, Evan Mecham, February 14, February 24, Fife Symington, Florida, Folsom points, Franciscan, Franciscans, Francisco Vásquez de Coronado, Gadsden Purchase, Gila River, Governor of Arizona, Grand Canyon, Heber, Hohokam, Intaglios, James Buchanan, James Gadsden, Janet Napolitano, Japanese American internment, Jesuits, Joshua trees, Juan Bautista de Anza, Lyndon B. Johnson, Manifest Destiny, Marcos de Niza, Martin Luther King Day, Martin Luther King, Jr., Mesa, Mesoamerica, Mexican Arizona, Mexican Cession, Mexican-American War, Mexico, Mexico City, Mogollon, Mogollon Rim, Mormons, Motorola, Native Americans, New Deal, New Mexico, North America, November 1, Pacific Ocean, Paleolithic, Phoenix, Phoenix Zoo, Phoenix valley, Pimería Alta, Pleistocene, Prescott, Pueblo Revolt, Republican, Rocky Mountain juniper, Rose Mofford, San Xavier del Bac, Sandra Day O'Connor, Santa Anna, Senate, Senator, Snowflake, Sonora, Sonoran Desert, Spain, Spanish Arizona, Steamboats, Super Bowl, Super Bowl XXVII, Super Bowl XXX, Supreme Court, Tempe, The Great Depression and the World Wars in Arizona, Tohono O'Odham, Tubac, Tucson, U.S. state, United States, War Relocation Authority, William Edward Miller, World War II, academies, accelerator mass spectrometer, acorns, admitted into the Union, agave, agriculture, amaranth, architecture, artifacts, assassination of John F. Kennedy, battle of Picacho Pass, beargrass, blue spruce, boom and bust, boomtowns, boycott, brittlebush, buried treasure, cactus, calendar, camels, cemeteries, chenopodium, conifers, copper, cotton, death threat, deserts, drug smuggling, electoral votes, foraging, forests, frontier, fruits, ghost towns, ground sloths, ground stones, high tech, horses, ice, ice age, illegal immigration, irrigation, juniper, livestock, maize, mammals, mammoth, mesquite, military bases, missions, money laundering, mountain men, natural environment, oak, peace camps, petition, phalli, pioneers, pit houses, piñon, plateaus, ponderosa pine, pottery, precipitation, presidency, projectile, radiocarbon dating, rattlesnakes, region, reservations, revolution, right-to-work laws, saguaro, seeds, silver, smallpox, socialist, southwestern United States, spear, state, subsistence economy, suffrage, territory, the Great Depression, the first World War, thunderbirds, tourist, towns, trains, treasury, vegetation, villages, war with Mexico, yucca
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Mexican Arizona", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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