Gadsden purchase
Arizona, California, Nevada, Utah and New Mexico. The Gadsden Purchase completed the southern borders of Arizona and New Mexico.
The Gadsden Purchase saw the purchase of land from Mexico by the United States. Most of the land acquired from this purchased exists in southern Arizona just below Phoenix. The remaining land exists in New Mexico.
The Gadsden Purchase completed the New Mexico and Arizona southern borders and was made to provide land for a transcontinental railroad route.
The Gadsden Purchase.
Mexico. It included today's southern New Mexico and Arizona.
The Mesilla or Gadsden Purchase, which included parts of Arizona and New Mexico.
The Gadsden Purchase.
(1853) U.S. purchase of land from Mexico that included the southern parts of present-day Arizona and New Mexico; set the current borders of the contiguous United States (the U.S. states, minus Hawaii, Alaska, and commonwealth of Puerto Rico)
the state that borders Arizona to the east is New Mexico
Yes, Mexico borders the state of Arizona. Arizona borders the Mexican state of Sonora to be precise.
The Gadsden Purchase (1853). See related questions.
The purchase was arranged by James Gadsden, Ambassador to Mexico and it extended the southern borders of present day Arizona and New Mexico for the purpose of constructing a transcontinental railroad.