Texas used to belong to Mexico. When Texas gained independence from Mexico, it became its own country, essentially. Texas wanted to become a part of the United States, but Mexico was opposed because:
(a) Mexico knew that it had a better chance of reclaiming Texas if it only had to fight a Texas military as opposed to a U.S. military.
(b) Mexico was very opposed to slavery. If Texas was going to be annexed, the U.S. would make it a slave state, meaning slavery could exist in Texas, which Mexico didn't like.
they thought that they were going to loose land
Cause of the Ipads. they have been walking around eating people. CHA! CHA!
i have the same question
Slavery.
what did edwards try to do that upset cherokee and meican families in east texas
The Northeast was the region most opposed to the annexation of Texas in the mid-19th century. Many in the Northeast saw the annexation of Texas as a move that would expand slavery and upset the balance between free and slave states. They were concerned about the potential expansion of slavery and the implications it would have for their own state economies and political power.
If the state was brought into the union it would upset the balance of free and slave states.
Texas would be admitted as a slave state, and it would upset the balance of the equal number of states being slave states and non-slave states. -1d4evr
Anglo settlers to Texas weren't the only Mexican citizens upset in 1835. Quite a few areas of Mexico were in open revolt. Santa Ana had abrogated the 1821 Mexican Consstitution. This is why you will see Mexican flags with an 1821 on them, it was the bearers way of saying that the government should uphold the Constitution. They were upset, because Santa Anna and the Mexican government had locked Stephen F. Austin up.
The political effects of the Texas Revolution included Texas gaining independence from Mexico, forming the Republic of Texas, and ultimately joining the United States as the 28th state. It also heightened tensions between the US and Mexico, leading to the Mexican-American War.
Texas wasn't annexed, it joined the USA by treaty, which is why the state flag flies at the same height as the U.S. flag when on side-by-side flagpoles. Tyler and everyone else was afraid that the treaty would mean a war with Mexico, which in fact DID occur within months. Texas wasn't the only issue between the USA and Mexico, as there were problems with Southern California too, but Texas was the biggest and final straw on the camel's back. The Mexican-American war began when Mexican artillery opened up on Fort Texas, in Brownsville, from across the Rio Grande, in Matamoros, starting a six-day siege and war with the USA. Tyler was right.
Texas practiced slavery, and the US already had adequate problems maintaing a balance between the north and the south on that issue. Texas had made an effort to go it alone as a Republic, but it lacked recognition by most of the world and had created an enormous burden of debt. Texas needed a handout in a big way.
When Texas gained independence from Mexico, it fiercely fought to protect and guarantee its slavery rights. While Texas remained its own independent nation as the Republic of Texas, little notable attention from the United States was given to the newborn country with regards to the slavery issue. However, once the Union began discussions on the possible annexation of Texas, the slavery issue burst through once the free states realized that Texas' annexation would upset the balance of free and slave states representation.
It was delayed because the issue of Slavery and to balance whether it should be a free or slave state.