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'Mexico in his head': slavery and the Texas-Mexico Border, 1810-1860.


Abstract: Sean Kelley, "'Mexico in His Head': Slavery and the Texas-Mexico Border, 1810-1860"

The continual redrawing of the boundaries between the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , Texas, and Mexico in the nineteenth century prompted slaves to view the border as a symbol of liberation. When the border was first fixed by treaty in 1819, enslaved Enslaved may refer to:
  • Slavery, the socio-economic condition of being owned and worked by and for someone else
  • Submissive (BDSM), people playing the 'slave' part in BDSM
  • Enslaved (band), a progressive black metal/Viking metal band from Haugesund, Norway
 Texans attached no particular significance to it because slavery was legal in both the United States and Spanish Texas Spanish Texas is the name given by Texas history scholars to the period between 1690 and 1821 when Texas was governed as a province of the Spanish colony of New Spain. The period began with the expedition of the governor of Coahuila to destroy the ruins of the French colony of Fort . Slaves only began to associate the Mexican state with freedom in the 1820s, when national and state governments adopted a series of antislavery Antislavery
Abolitionists

activist group working to free slaves. [Am. Hist.: Jameson, 1]

Emancipation Proclamation

edict issued by Abraham Lincoln freeing the slaves (1863). [Am. Hist.
 measures. However, because Texas was still part of Mexico, the border played no role in slave resistance. With the establishment of an independent Texas in the 1830s and with annexation to the United States in 1845, slavery was placed on a firm footing in Texas for the first time. The border soon became the focal point focal point
n.
See focus.
 of slave flight and resistance. Even with the end of slavery, black Texans continued to associate Mexico with freedom and equality.
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Publication:Journal of Social History
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 22, 2004
Words:171
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