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Why was Texas divided after it joined the USA? (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • čas přidán 15. 08. 2024
  • When Texas joined the USA in 1845 it was about 50% larger than it was today but five years after it had joined, its northern and western lands had been handed over to the federal government. But given that Texas had fought a war with Mexico for this land why did it give it up and why did the US feel the need to take it? To find out watch this short and simple animated history documentary.
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Komentáře • 2K

  • @KonigGustavAdolph
    @KonigGustavAdolph Před rokem +5610

    A side effect of the ceding of those lands to the Feds is that the state of Texas has hardly any federally owned lands in it, compared to most of its more western compatriots.

    • @deanfirnatine7814
      @deanfirnatine7814 Před rokem +405

      Yep forcing Texans to pay expensive hunting lease fees just to go hunting because everything is private

    • @rufusray
      @rufusray Před rokem

      Good, anything the fed gets a hold of is inevitably destroyed....the blm can get bent

    • @aidanrock8719
      @aidanrock8719 Před rokem +131

      @@deanfirnatine7814 good, barbaric practice

    • @ohZeroOne
      @ohZeroOne Před rokem +532

      @@aidanrock8719yeah, how else have humans survived for thousands of years?

    • @josephforeman6612
      @josephforeman6612 Před rokem +284

      ​@@aidanrock8719you better be vegan

  • @slopehoke1277
    @slopehoke1277 Před rokem +528

    America, circa 1845: “Okay, so we won’t admit Texas as multiple states, but let’s keep some of those names in our back pocket in case we ever need them.”

  • @_maxgray
    @_maxgray Před rokem +1556

    For those wondering about "the rule of splitting states" - that's a reference to Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1, which prohibits making a new state out of the territory of another without the consent of the state's legislature.

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 Před rokem

      And for those who say anything about West Virginia, technically as far as the federal government in 1863 was concern the loyal West Virginia government was more or less seen as the “legit” Virginia government and the Virginia state governent sitting in Richmond in 1863 were all rebellious traitors so there word meant nothing now. And the “legit” Virginia government merely changed it's name to west Virginia, moved its capital, and gave up its claims to it's rebelling area’s.

    • @trujustice924
      @trujustice924 Před rokem +178

      Which brings an interesting West Virginian discussion into the fold. 😆

    • @AndreiChirila-wl7ou
      @AndreiChirila-wl7ou Před rokem +319

      ​@@trujustice924well Virginia wasn't there to say no so there was consent by "shut up you were rebelling"

    • @aje4361
      @aje4361 Před rokem +256

      @@AndreiChirila-wl7ou Actually, a group of state legislators and other dignitaries that stayed loyal (mostly representing the areas that would be become West Virginia) declared themselves the legal government of Virginia, after the original committed treason, and were recognized as such by the Federal government (for hopefully obvious reasons). They then approved the split... and then all promptly switched to the new state's government since those were the areas they represented. So technically the legalities outlined in the constitution were fully followed.

    • @hamburgerboy
      @hamburgerboy Před rokem +45

      The video should mention that the Texas state legislature was opposed to any land cession to make it clear. There is no rule against splitting states per se; Virginia consented to give up Kentucky, Massachusetts consented to give up Maine. If Californians were truly upset about their lower representation in the Senate despite their population, their state legislature could easily create several new Californias under a favorable Congress.

  • @Nikkidafox
    @Nikkidafox Před rokem +7064

    Fun Fact. The federal government did not take on ALL the debt. About 10% of it was paid of by a single individual named
    James Bisonette

    • @jamesbissonette8002
      @jamesbissonette8002 Před rokem +495

      Nah

    • @dsxa918
      @dsxa918 Před rokem +382

      James Bisonette told them 'nah' and with such profound dismissal, the 10% the American govt left to out star sponsor, was canceled.

    • @masterimbecile
      @masterimbecile Před rokem +3

      Don’t forget Kelly Moneymaker, words about books podcast, and spinning 3 plates.

    • @Roaden
      @Roaden Před rokem +8

      hell nah

    • @dsxa918
      @dsxa918 Před rokem +4

      Our**

  • @TheFinnishcountryball20
    @TheFinnishcountryball20 Před rokem +616

    I always look forward to the weekends for a history matters episode. (Edit) You guys in the comments need to calm down

  • @johnlienhart2717
    @johnlienhart2717 Před rokem +887

    Okay, follow up question:
    Why was the federal government so insistent on naming something Colorado? Every proposition had something going to something called "Colorado" even though there was very little territorial overlap. The one at 1:36 doesn't have any Colorado on the area called Colorado.

    • @ailo4x4
      @ailo4x4 Před rokem +466

      There is a Colorado River in Texas. Not THAT Colorado, but an important one nonetheless. It runs diagonally from roughly the panhandle down to Bay City on the Gulf Coast. Now you know... ;-)

    • @amerikarhineland3185
      @amerikarhineland3185 Před rokem +48

      Colorado was also planned to be the state of southern california cause both north and south agreed to split. The proposal went missing, probably because a civil war broke out, and the name colorado would never be used again, if Jefferson Territory didnt change their name into the Colorado Territory like 2 month before the civil war that is and later into a state
      I know it doesnt answer entirely, but its mostly its a name in the concious of the people and i guess they really wanted a state named colorado. Also Colorado State was very to being called Idaho as that was the first pick, but congress chose colorado for the territory. So colorado really seemed like a name they wanted to use for something.

    • @timmccarthy9917
      @timmccarthy9917 Před rokem +84

      Austinite here. The Colorado River flows through our city and forms Lady Bird Lake, which is great for stand-up paddleboarding when the lake isn't full of flesh eating amoeba. "Colorado" just means "colored red" or "reddish' in Spanish, so of course multiple rivers have that name.

    • @robtoe10
      @robtoe10 Před rokem +31

      @@timmccarthy9917 'when the lake isn't full of flesh eating amoeba.' egads, that sounds post-apocalyptic!

    • @toastyanon8902
      @toastyanon8902 Před rokem +13

      Ahh! So that’s where the reddish color comes from!

  • @timmccarthy9917
    @timmccarthy9917 Před rokem +2684

    Fun fact, the western stretch of Texas was retained largely because it let Texas keep the strategically important city of El Paso. By all rights El Paso should be in New Mexico, which it is historically, culturally, and geographically part of, but Texans managed an eleventh-hour nab. The same tactic failed in Santa Fe and that's why it's now the capital of New Mexico.

    • @rufusray
      @rufusray Před rokem +96

      If its theirs ,then Let em come and take it.
      Wait, mexico already pulled that card.

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 Před rokem +343

      My family is from El Paso and I can confirm this. Despite El Paso indeed identifying with the overall Texas identity, it still feels way more culturally connected to the rest of the southwest US region than to east Texas.
      We're even on the western powergrid and not the Texas power grid lol. I also do like how the city has embraced more of its railroad past by naming the local minor league soccer team The Locomotives

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 Před rokem +75

      ​@@rufusray other way around. It was Mexican originally but the US took it

    • @Hatypus
      @Hatypus Před rokem

      ​@@rufusray Mexico didn't pull any card lol, the US funded emigration into Texas, backed the Texas rebellion, annexed Texas and used the claims to invade Mexico.

    • @WeegeeSlayer123
      @WeegeeSlayer123 Před rokem +1

      Thank GOD El Paso ain't part of New Mexico. I can proudly call myself a Texan and not some Goddman New Mexican. Can't stand New Mexico.

  • @itzadam9359
    @itzadam9359 Před rokem +2204

    Video idea as a loyal Patreon supporter: Why was Finland 🇫🇮 given autonomy in the Russian Empire?

    • @EliGAMEZBURN
      @EliGAMEZBURN Před rokem +98

      like this so history matters sees this

    • @capncake8837
      @capncake8837 Před rokem +82

      You’ve been asking for this for so long. I hope he does it one day.

    • @WoaHusko
      @WoaHusko Před rokem +23

      That would be a good video.

    • @AzureRT456
      @AzureRT456 Před rokem +38

      @@capncake8837 See, that's called dedication. Mad props to itzadambunchofnumbers

    • @MillsTC
      @MillsTC Před rokem +74

      As an additional question: Why was Crimea transferred to the Ukrainian SSR by Khrushchev?

  • @unbindingfloyd
    @unbindingfloyd Před rokem +211

    Im a Texan and the current borders are aesthetically pleasing. That extra bit going north doesn't look nice on a map. There's no way you could make a tortilla chip function in that shape either.

    • @dougearnest7590
      @dougearnest7590 Před rokem +18

      You could try, but it would keep breaking off. Fate, maybe?

    • @solgerWhyIsThereAnAtItLooksBad
      @solgerWhyIsThereAnAtItLooksBad Před rokem +29

      Or a waffle for that matter. Current one fits nicely into molds

    • @franciscoacevedo3036
      @franciscoacevedo3036 Před rokem

      Why wasn't Texas or Virginia carved up for conspiring to start world world invredneck?

    • @MadsBoldingMusic
      @MadsBoldingMusic Před rokem +10

      I see a lot of good people here sorely underestimating the human ability to mold food into strange shapes.
      Personally, I'd relish seeing chip and waffle makers take on this challenge.

    • @BS-vx8dg
      @BS-vx8dg Před rokem +9

      @@solgerWhyIsThereAnAtItLooksBad I have definitely had the Texas-shaped waffles in the hotel breakfast bar.

  • @derpyeh9107
    @derpyeh9107 Před rokem +269

    One of my favorite things about Pueblo, Colorado is the row of flags on the riverwalk bridge. It shows all of the countries who have claimed part of Pueblo as their territory; Spain, Mexico, France, Texas, and the United States.

    • @CharlieQuartz
      @CharlieQuartz Před rokem +31

      Perhaps it’s a good thing that city missed out on claiming the sixth flag part of the Six Flags Texas boasts about.

    • @wolliveryoutube
      @wolliveryoutube Před rokem +16

      I remember the Gaylord Texan hotel in Dallas had something similar. Spain, France, Mexico, Texas, the Confederate States, and the United States, being all the countries who have owned land in that state.

    • @really9473
      @really9473 Před rokem +17

      @@wolliveryoutube the WHAT hotel? are you telling me that actually exists????

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 Před rokem +2

      @@really9473: Indeed, it does. I've been there.

    • @ankoku37
      @ankoku37 Před rokem +11

      @@really9473 Yep. I drive past it on my way to work every day. There were surprisingly few jokes about the name when I was in middle school, but that might just be because everyone had heard them all already.

  • @ClementinesmWTF
    @ClementinesmWTF Před rokem +145

    You actually missed a key part in why there was often that straight line cutting across the top, including in modern Texas’ pans handle: that was the Missouri Compromise line (36°30'N). In theory they could’ve just lopped it off there, but the federal government didn’t think that was enough land to repay the debts (and fair enough, neither did the Texians, which is why they agreed to also lopping off the western portions extending to the Rio Grande as a way of ensuring their debt was gone and they’d be admitted).

    • @josedenueces
      @josedenueces Před rokem

      The feds didn't pay or even take over Texas's debt, they just paid Texas $10 million and that was enough to cover 90% of the debt.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Před rokem

      Is that when Texia lost the i and became Texa?

    • @ClementinesmWTF
      @ClementinesmWTF Před rokem +4

      @@lawrencedoliveiro9104 “Texian” is the term used for those who lived in and/or fought for pre-annexation Texas. “Texan” came around once it became a state and is now used to refer to anyone who lived in Texas in any of its forms.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Před rokem

      @@ClementinesmWTF And presumably the ones who left went in a Texi.

    • @markalexander832
      @markalexander832 Před rokem +1

      The Missouri Compromise did not apply to Texas. Texas joined the Union by treaty twenty-five years after the Missouri Compromise, which only applied to the lands of the Louisiana Purchase. In any case, any Act of Congress can be superseded by a subsequent Act of Congress or by a treaty, both of which apply to Texas' annexation. Texas joined the Union in 1846 with her borders intact and as a slave state. The change in Texas' borders came about as a part of the Compromise of 1850, but through negotiation. Texas negotiated both the revised borders and the price for ceding such lands to the United States. Texas could not effectively administer those distant lands and was nearly broke. Texas used part of those funds to pay off her debts from the days of the Republic and kept the remainder. Another interesting tidbit is that just before the Compromise of 1850, Texas had been raising an army to evict federal troops from Santa Fe.

  • @hudg9022
    @hudg9022 Před rokem +459

    As a Texan, with roots in the state going back to the 1830s, I have to say this was a great video! The proposed divsions of Texas were interesting to see, those proposed divisions do map generally speaking to cultural and geographic differences that continue to this day. If you travel around the state, especially outside the major cities, you'll hear different accents from different regions. Yes, there's a general Texan culture and identity but it varies widely throughout the State.

    • @lucinae8510
      @lucinae8510 Před rokem +17

      I know this through an AlternativeHistoryHub video imagining what would have happened if Texas was split up. Short answer: a nightmare.

    • @MqCorey
      @MqCorey Před rokem +4

      They forgot Greer County.

    • @franciscoacevedo3036
      @franciscoacevedo3036 Před rokem

      Why wasn't Texas or Virginia carved up for conspiring to start world world invredneck?

    • @zeb5478
      @zeb5478 Před rokem +1

      What help in the war from the US is he exactly talking about?

    • @jeffreyrodrigoecheverria2613
      @jeffreyrodrigoecheverria2613 Před rokem +3

      Mexico needs to do a reconquista of the yankee southwest

  • @superbrownbrown
    @superbrownbrown Před rokem +68

    *Everything is bigger in Texas, including original Texas.*

  • @airraverstaz
    @airraverstaz Před rokem +352

    Fun fact: During Texas' independence, they asked to join the British Empire and were politely turned down. It's interesting to imagine Britain accepting the deal.

    • @DomWeasel
      @DomWeasel Před rokem +52

      I can't see my countrymen wanting to be caught between the expansive US and the unstable Mexico. Not while expanding their hold over India and the Far East with their incredibly lucrative spice markets.

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 Před rokem +50

      I haven't heard that one before, but I do know that we got British recognition and and embassy (technically, a legation) in London.

    • @ruckusbeblack
      @ruckusbeblack Před rokem +43

      The funny part about that is we have SO MANY British people here in Houston anyway lol. And our English is more similar than we knew (shoutout to Thomas Sowell for teaching me that) because of BP offices. I worked around soooo many British people

    • @ilovemuslimfood666
      @ilovemuslimfood666 Před rokem +8

      Is this true? Where’d you learn that?

    • @scockery
      @scockery Před rokem

      Texans would've had to give up their slaves, just like if they'd remained with Mexico.

  • @Zeruel3
    @Zeruel3 Před rokem +302

    Fun fact: Upon annexation there was a provision that the state of Texas could be split into as many as five states, that provision was never removed and is still in effect, so Texas could still be split up into five states even today

    • @chedelirio6984
      @chedelirio6984 Před rokem +80

      The provision in the annexation document specifically reads: "New States of convenient size not exceeding four in number, in addition to said State of Texas and having sufficient population, may, hereafter by the consent of said State, be formed out of the territory thereof, which shall be entitled to admission under the provisions of the Federal Constitution" This is not really different from the normal procedure for separating one state from within another except that it specifies a maximum number -- and Congress would still have to approve it, Texas can't just unilaterally split itself and force four extra states into existence

    • @doomsdayrabbit4398
      @doomsdayrabbit4398 Před rokem +18

      And that would be assuming a united front for the fragmented Texas. The only reason that states have been partitioned before is because of a difference in economy - see Massachusetts and Virginia as examples.

    • @pax6833
      @pax6833 Před rokem

      Texas does not have any unilateral power to make new states. It still has to follow the same rules everyone does.

    • @franciscoacevedo3036
      @franciscoacevedo3036 Před rokem

      Why wasn't Texas or Virginia carved up for conspiring to start world world invredneck?

    • @centredoorplugsthornton4112
      @centredoorplugsthornton4112 Před rokem +13

      That would quintuple Texas representation in the US Senate. And supremely piss off DC and Puerto Rico statehood supporters. Four new red states jump the line.

  • @Aldo_raines
    @Aldo_raines Před rokem +186

    Part of the consideration was the Missouri compromise. In order to enter the union as a slave state, Texas couldn’t have any land north of the 36th parallel.
    And Texas very much wanted to keep their slaves.

    • @grantorino2325
      @grantorino2325 Před rokem +22

      36⁰, 30'
      to be precise.

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 Před rokem

      More democrat made up history

    • @silver_kestrel
      @silver_kestrel Před rokem +21

      Yes, surprised this wasn't mentioned in the video as it was one of the biggest considerations around statehood at the time.

    • @karlarasmith5944
      @karlarasmith5944 Před rokem +17

      The 36 30 parallel is also the reason Oklahoma has its panhandle and why Texas didn't go all the way north to Kansas.

    • @JustLikeHeaven77
      @JustLikeHeaven77 Před rokem

      Well, who doesn't want a slave? Before you criticize me, go unplug your Roomba.

  • @joedellinger9437
    @joedellinger9437 Před rokem +256

    A lot of the “arbitrary” boundaries in the US are not so arbitrary. The Eastern and Western limits of the Texas panhandle resulted from two midway cuts, dividing an empty stretch of buffer zone land into equal halves. The anchor on the West end was the very old mixed Mexican/Native settlements along the Rio Grande in New Mexico (the Spanish/Mexican territory of Nuevo Mexico). Santa Fe, etc. Those people emphatically did NOT want to be ruled by Texans and would have caused trouble if they were forced into that state against their will. (El Paso was more just a regular Mexican settlement and less hostile, which is why it could be forced into Texas. Mexicans along the river boundary with Mexico also had the option of just moving to the other side, which is why a Nuevo Laredo in Mexico popped up opposite Laredo, Texas.)
    The Eastern boundary of the Texas panhandle is the old Adams-Onis line, negotiated as the boundary between New Spain and the US. It split the distance between the Western part of Arkansas, which was getting populated by Americans already, and the Eastern edge of the population centers of Nuevo Mexico along the Rio Grande. (That Eastern Anchor line is now the Arkansas / Oklahoma border… and its precise location was determined by putting it just West of where the Red River turns from going East to SouthEast.)
    The Western edge of the panhandle just halves the distance again, this time with the Eastern edge of the panhandle as the Eastern anchor.
    This info is from a book “how the states got their shapes”.
    Something not in the book is why so many North-South boundaries in the Western US are displaced slightly Westward from having a nice round number as a longitude. It is because sometimes instead of using Greenwich longitude, they used a system that put longitude zero at the center point of the original territory of the District of Columbia, which happens to be about .05 degrees West of an integer degree of Greenwich longitude.
    For the Eastern edge of the Texas panhandle they snapped the line to an integer Greenwich longitude, but for the Western edge they used an integer DC longitude! The Western edge of the Oklahoma panhandle, which SHOULD line up with the Western edge of the Texas panhandle that it used to be a part of, instead uses Greenwich… which is why in fact it does not quite line up. Which is why there is a strip of New Mexico wrapping three quarters of the way around the NW corner of Texas.
    Now you know. :-)

    • @MesaperProductions
      @MesaperProductions Před rokem +5

      AWESOME! I had to go look that that little tab in northeast New Mexico was an actual thing. And now I know why!

    • @theknightswhosay
      @theknightswhosay Před rokem +6

      Never knew the eastern border of New Mexico was uneven.

    • @joedellinger9437
      @joedellinger9437 Před rokem +2

      @@MesaperProductions I only learned about why the shift was there because I have visited some of the boundary monuments, and some of them state their longitude as being so-and-so many degrees West of the DC prime meridian.

    • @RyHudson
      @RyHudson Před rokem +2

      Bro, I'm not even from the US and I found that interesting af. Especially the part about state boundaries snapping to different longitudinal systems. Thank you.

    • @juanisaac5172
      @juanisaac5172 Před rokem +1

      Thank you. You saved me 30 minutes of writting.

  • @fletchbg
    @fletchbg Před 11 měsíci +13

    Major bonus points to History Matters for the graphic at 1:22. They got it historically correct depicting the old (dark) dome of the Capitol, before the current (white) one was built from 1855 to 1866

  • @penningmeestercgkdelft9159

    The book "How the States got their Shapes" by Mark Stein does actually comment extensively about the relation between the 1821 Missouri Compromise and the present-day shape of Texas. A really fun book to read 🙂

    • @karlarasmith5944
      @karlarasmith5944 Před rokem +3

      I Love that book and the TV series he did. Lots of interesting information.

    • @J-1410
      @J-1410 Před rokem +2

      Is the book any better than the series?
      I know for the Dakota's that was a waste of an episode as it had absolutely noting to do with the borders of ND and SD, which makes me doubt the rest.
      Long story short: One legally stolen territorial capitol later(Yankton to Bismarck) and enough people fed up in both the north and south, with the north and south, the south started drafting a constitution and planning for statehood and the north started soon after and...someone drew a line and...that was that. Aside from Minnesota wanting the rest of the Red River Valley again and once again being told by everyone to go away again. And the president signing the papers in a dark closet so no one knew who who was first or second...until it was filed alphabetically.
      On a side note, I never understood why SD has nothing, development wise, compared to ND.

    • @pigslave3
      @pigslave3 Před 2 měsíci

      🙂

  • @anomalyldn
    @anomalyldn Před rokem +44

    The fact you guys are CONSISTENT and ALWAYS COVER ‘INTERESTING’/RELEVANT TOPICS is why I’ve watched your whole catalogue and INSTANTLY watch any new-uploads when I get the notification
    I would go as far as saying YOU GUYS are “carrying” the WHOLE ‘history’ community (and creators) on CZcams (and I don’t say that lightly)

    • @secret5816
      @secret5816 Před rokem +3

      History Matters is just one guy, but I wholeheartedly agree

    • @anomalyldn
      @anomalyldn Před rokem

      @@secret5816 pisstake when the HUGE channels with couple million subscribers/hundreds of millions of views; and WHOLE TEAMS can’t even upload 1 or 2 videos A YEAR

    • @secret5816
      @secret5816 Před rokem +1

      @@anomalyldn what was the point of that comment? I didn't disagree with you, I just corrected you.

    • @anomalyldn
      @anomalyldn Před rokem

      @@secret5816 I know you agreed (and I doubled down).. My ‘comment’ was to ‘throw shade’ at “certain YT channels” that ARE GIVING ME ANXIETY waiting for their next video(s) (and hoping the ‘follow-up videos’ come sooner rather than later)

  • @AloisAgos
    @AloisAgos Před rokem +71

    When Colorado almost became a desert hellscape instead of today's mountainous hellscape.

    • @amckittrick7951
      @amckittrick7951 Před rokem

      Lol

    • @andrewklang809
      @andrewklang809 Před rokem +7

      As a Washingtonian, I almost threw up when I saw this first proposed "state".

    • @theknightswhosay
      @theknightswhosay Před rokem +2

      Colorado is beautiful. Too bad about the granola hippie types taking over.

    • @morbidsearch
      @morbidsearch Před rokem +2

      ​@@theknightswhosay
      The "granola hippies" aren't the ones at risk of destroying the landscape

    • @theknightswhosay
      @theknightswhosay Před rokem +4

      @@morbidsearch Assuming they live in modern housing, yes they are. It’s become a less pristine environment as the population of lefties who claim to care about the environment has increased. Also, potheads aren’t known to clean up after themselves very well even if they do spend a lot of time outdoors.

  • @niclausgronwaldt7718
    @niclausgronwaldt7718 Před rokem +96

    As a native Texan, I love this video topic! I had always wondered what happened to the claimed border. Thank you for explaining!!

    • @franciscoacevedo3036
      @franciscoacevedo3036 Před rokem

      Why wasn't Texas or Virginia carved up for conspiring to start world world invredneck?

    • @maytheus
      @maytheus Před rokem +3

      As a native Texan you should have paid more attention in your 7th grade Texas History class. You would have learned about the Compromise of 1850. 😉

    • @mojewjewjew4420
      @mojewjewjew4420 Před rokem +1

      usa education system is well known to be shit so he isnt exactly to blame.@@maytheus

  • @WhyDoThat
    @WhyDoThat Před rokem +15

    Fun fact: You could say Texas is still the largest state because there is more land owned by the state in Texas vs Alaska whose land is mostly federal

  • @scotandiamapping4549
    @scotandiamapping4549 Před rokem +19

    I've wondered this for AGEEES! Thank you History Matters!

  • @robertlarson7224
    @robertlarson7224 Před rokem +3

    I watch these so often that I usually happen to be rewatching one when a new video drops lol. Every time a new one releases I end up clicking onto it from the annotation in a prior video

  • @MewxPro
    @MewxPro Před rokem +13

    As a Texan, this video was well made. Will say as a side note, we did claim a portion of land right before the Civil War called Greer County. It was eventually taken and given to Indian Territory after the people in that area voted on it. Lasted from 1860-1896.
    Texas does have a little bit of land just West of the Rio Grande thanks to an event called the Country Club Dispute. In 1927, Texas and New Mexico argued who was able to claim what boundary of land. The Supreme Court sided in Texas' favor. Despite the Rio Grande changing course, the old river border is still legally seen as Texan, much to New Mexico's butthurt. Look up the Country Club Dispute and New Mexico v. Texas, 275 U.S. 279 (1927) if you want to learn more.

    • @MqCorey
      @MqCorey Před rokem

      And the Supreme Court had to weigh in regarding which fork of the Red River was applicable, since it was poorly articulated in previous surveys. So, I agree this was a good video, but when it says the agreement resulted in "this" shape, Greer County should be included, as the Supreme Court didn't award it to Indian Territory until much later, as you rightly note.

    • @gregsells8549
      @gregsells8549 Před 10 měsíci

      Greer County actually went to Oklahoma Territory, which was split from Indian Territory after the land runs. The twin territories would reunite into the state of Oklahoma. Oklahoma is another story.

  • @davethebaron
    @davethebaron Před rokem +14

    Giant Texas isn't real, it can't hurt you.
    Giant Texas: 1:12

    • @_Xexel_
      @_Xexel_ Před rokem +5

      I actually thought for a second that was Texas… 😅

  • @morskojvolk
    @morskojvolk Před rokem +85

    Fun fact: Texas remained the largest state for the next 104 years, not 11, as shown in the video. Texas became the second largest state in 1959, when Alaska joined the union.

    • @jaopeke
      @jaopeke Před rokem +63

      The agreement that is being referred to happened in 1850. Texas left the union in 1861.

    • @ronan5228
      @ronan5228 Před rokem +40

      He's referring to the fact that civil war kicked off 11 years later so texas was no longer in the union

    • @morskojvolk
      @morskojvolk Před rokem +8

      @@jaopeke OK, gotcha. I was assuming it was from 1845, otherwise I would have realized the "11 years" was a ref to the Civil War.

    • @williamhrivnak7345
      @williamhrivnak7345 Před rokem +18

      @@ronan5228 If I remember correctly, the Union never recognized the South as leaving during the Civil War and so from their perspective Texas and the other states were still part of the union but just in rebellion.

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 Před rokem +8

      @@williamhrivnak7345 They still had to admit as states afterward with Texas in particular getting readmitted in 1870.

  • @BreakstuffzMapping
    @BreakstuffzMapping Před 11 měsíci +7

    0:34 I love that little paper covering the panhandle of texas XD

  • @GuildsmanPirate
    @GuildsmanPirate Před rokem +74

    Key missing bit of information (which, to be fair, was alluded to and I’m sure not outright said for monetary reasons), but Texas specifically being cut off at their northern boundary where they are was so they could maintain slavery

    • @matthewbrotman2907
      @matthewbrotman2907 Před rokem +17

      The Missouri Compromise line, 36-30 North.
      Later, the Kansas Territory was formed with a southern border of 37 North. This left a half-degree strip of unclaimed land, which was stuck onto Oklahoma, hence the Oklahoma Panhandle.

    • @TheJhouston
      @TheJhouston Před rokem

      Not true. That's just a conspiracy theory. The video covered all of the actual facts of the matter.

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 Před rokem

      More democrat made up history

    • @markalexander832
      @markalexander832 Před rokem

      Texas already had slavery. That was not an issue. See some of the above posts for a more thorough explanation.

    • @kyliestory1451
      @kyliestory1451 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​​@@markalexander832Anglo-Texans had illegal slaves as Mexico had previously outlawed the custom. And in fact many of the German and Spanish settlers in Texas, of which made up a plurality at the time of statehood, opposed the legality of slavery and became targets of the Texas confederate army during the Civil war. The reason for why Texas gave up its lands was to maintain slavery in the state.

  • @nickmacarius3012
    @nickmacarius3012 Před 7 měsíci +3

    "It's hard to run an Empire when you're dead."
    *Emperor Palpatine's inevitable return somehow:* "Soon."

  • @_Devil
    @_Devil Před rokem +34

    In an alternate universe, Texas and Colorado have one of the largest state borders in the country. What a timeline.

    • @jross9919
      @jross9919 Před rokem

      To be honest there is no reason to be 4states in such a arid and very few populated as the sothwest ou tehe US

    • @ClementinesmWTF
      @ClementinesmWTF Před rokem +2

      It would also split the city of Austin in two as most of their border would have been the Colorado River (no, not that one, the other one). Presumably, both Austins could’ve stayed the capitols for their respective states and made for an interesting history lesson about Austin, Texas and Austin, Colorado.

    • @jeremywilliams5107
      @jeremywilliams5107 Před rokem

      With the apparent wish of so many territories to be called Colorado, it might have turned into a default - "You've got two weeks to think of a better name than Colorado. If you can't, then Colorado it is."

    • @h2.t2
      @h2.t2 Před rokem

      @@jeremywilliams5107colorado is love colorado is life

    • @jul1440
      @jul1440 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I prefer the alternate universe where New Mexico got to keep all of its Territorial-Era land.

  • @Daydrimmy
    @Daydrimmy Před rokem +177

    As a Texan, I see this as an absolute win.

    • @UltimateNut
      @UltimateNut Před rokem +7

      Texas time 🔫💪

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 Před rokem +15

      As a Texan, you see everything as an absolute win.

    • @tommoore2012
      @tommoore2012 Před rokem +5

      Should we invade all the sates we lost land to? Oklahoma would roll out the red carpet for us.

    • @djb903
      @djb903 Před rokem +3

      Yeehaw

    • @john2g1
      @john2g1 Před rokem +1

      ​@@dannyarcher6370Not true...
      The Alamo and the Civil War
      Even if they had to be reminded of the L Juneteenth-ish.

  • @josephsalinas5405
    @josephsalinas5405 Před rokem +17

    Aww little Texan babies! 2:11

  • @ayesaarif7347
    @ayesaarif7347 Před rokem +11

    2:14 bro got the most unoriginal names 😭😭💀

  • @dgart7434
    @dgart7434 Před rokem +15

    Great job! As a Native Texan you learn that the territory claimed by Texas vs was what controlled by Texas in the early 18040's was... vague. The "official" justification for the Mexican-American war was a dispute over where the border was when Texas became a state (Nueces river vs Rio Grande).

  • @mrterp04
    @mrterp04 Před rokem +20

    Speaking of US territorial expansion, I’d like to see a video on the Gadsden Purchase that goes beyond “they wanted to build a train track there”

    • @adrianjohnson7920
      @adrianjohnson7920 Před 7 měsíci

      I seem to recall something about the Rio Grande River changing course, which changed the border. . . .

  • @braedenh6858
    @braedenh6858 Před rokem +30

    The area controlled by the Comanches, along the front of the Rockies from Wyoming down to Abilene and San Angelo and even into Mexico, was the last remaining uncontrolled territory in the US.
    The Comanche crushed the Apache and stopped the advance of the Mexicans, Texans, and Americans for almost 200 years. Even into the 1880s it was dangerous to travel through Comancheria, let alone try to build in it. It wasn't until the buffalo herds were culled that the Comanche finally surrendered and moved into reservations, which allowed for the development of those lands.

    • @robboss1058
      @robboss1058 Před 11 měsíci +8

      New Mexicans were unique in that they were the one group that was on good terms with the Comanches. Since a treaty was signed between the two in 1786 they maintained good trade relations and New Mexican settlements even expanded into Comanche territory at Mora and Las Vegas.
      New Mexican traders known as Comancheros, who were often part Comanche themselves, could translate their languages into Spanish and English and were indispensable for opening up trade between Missouri and Mexico along the dangerous Comanche-controlled portion of the Santa Fe Trail.

  • @windykingdom6153
    @windykingdom6153 Před rokem +3

    As a Texan I never imagined getting as History Matters video
    2:06 That’s the Brazos River but it’s close enough to Trinity

  • @Hand-in-Shot_Productions

    As an American (Californian, to be exact), I've read quite a bit into how Texas was admitted to the Union, including the "Colorado" proposal and how a large amount of "Texas" was controlled by the Comanche, not by Texas. However, I didn't know that one of the plans was rejected over "a tiny piece of land" going to Texas (I laughed at that)! Also, to answer the question, American politicians wanted Texas to be smaller, Texan ones wanted it to be large, and they eventually accepted their borders in exchange for the US government taking on their debt... and Texas ceding Comanche lands that it never really "controlled".
    Thanks for making this video!

  • @MustacheCashStash125
    @MustacheCashStash125 Před rokem +21

    Because James Bissonette wanted some of the land for himself

  • @Sound557
    @Sound557 Před rokem +7

    0:43 the Comanche are a really fascinating people. Reading Empire of the Summer Moon right now and it gets a glowing recommendation from me.

  • @BrownFoxWarrior
    @BrownFoxWarrior Před rokem +1

    Got through all this last semester in college. Glad to see a nice condensed version that gets to the point.

  • @texaswolf4655
    @texaswolf4655 Před rokem +28

    As a Texan, thanks for teaching this. I didn't even learn this in Texas history class

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 Před rokem +9

      I definitely remember learning in Texas History class (in 4th or 7th grade) about the Compromise of 1850 and ceding our northern/western land claims in exchange for $10 million to pay off our debts. I don't think they covered the alternative border proposals, though.

    • @dgart7434
      @dgart7434 Před rokem +2

      I distinctly remember them talking about how the extra land went to pay off all the debts from the Texas independence.

    • @Jaseford
      @Jaseford Před rokem

      To be fair, most of Texas history in school is just propaganda. They taught us about what happened during the Texas Revolution, but the given cause of the war was basically “Santa Anna was mean.”

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před rokem

      some of it is taught (as mr bishop notes) but not the details about which scheme to split this nation would actually pan out.

    • @MqCorey
      @MqCorey Před rokem

      @@danielbishop1863 As someone who went K-12 in Texas, I concur - we learned about the debt swap, but not the alternative proposals.

  • @corymorimacori1059
    @corymorimacori1059 Před rokem +4

    SpongeBob: No, I’m Texas!
    Patrick: What’s the difference?

    • @lsnow_20
      @lsnow_20 Před 10 měsíci

      Don't you DARE take the name of Texas in vain!

  • @joaquinperez9146
    @joaquinperez9146 Před rokem +8

    I can't imagine Texas not being shaped the way it is now. I come from a long line of Tejano families that have been cowboys and ranchers since the 1780's in the disputed area of South Texas between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande River that was one of the issues that led to the US-Mexico war. As we like to say, we never crossed the border, the border crossed us!

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před rokem

      yes, and the border is still crossing you.
      enjoy your fentanyl, and enjoy the ms-13 tats on your daughter's classmates.
      hispanics sneering at anglos (when they benefit from anglo government) is the dumbest LARP, and I say this as a 1978 immigrant with no particular connexion with either race.

  • @floricel_112
    @floricel_112 Před rokem +13

    0:15 because the US hates funny shapes and prefers the boring ones

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 Před rokem +3

    I was actually very interested to hear this. Honestly, I think I would like to learn more about the events leading up to the Mexican-American War and the war's aftermath in general. Thank you for this video!
    God be with you out there everybody. ✝️ :)

  • @BS-vx8dg
    @BS-vx8dg Před rokem +8

    I'd like to see a video on the division of the New Mexico Territory after its establishment, the subsequent addition of the Gadsen Purchase, the attempt of the CSA to establish Arizona along the entire Mexican-Texan border, and the subsequent division into the shapes they (NM and AZ) have today.

  • @langostinooo
    @langostinooo Před rokem +15

    As a New Mexican Hispano I'm glad Texas never realized its claims considering how they treated the Tejanos.

  • @koaasst
    @koaasst Před rokem +2

    2:07 "east of the Trinity River"
    That line doesnt quite fit the Trinity, the Trinity River heads to Dallas. Youve used the Colorado River that heads thru the Hill Country near Austin.

  • @joshmayich7959
    @joshmayich7959 Před rokem +2

    How do you make a topic this boring both interesting and open-mouth-cackle funny?
    Let this guy tell the story. 😂😂 love it

    • @Merennulli
      @Merennulli Před rokem +1

      The first step is realizing it wasn't boring for the people involved. That tells you where to start looking for the human element that makes it interesting. It's only boring when you take the human stories out of it and turn it into a speedbump in a history textbook.

  • @robertdavenport7802
    @robertdavenport7802 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Just because they claimed it didn't make it their territory. New Mexico had been a settled area with their own governor and government for 250 years by then. Kind of presumptuous of them to claim the northern strip of the Rio Grande in the first place.

  • @georgekyle9926
    @georgekyle9926 Před rokem +6

    As a Texan, thank you so much for this vid! While we are in the US it is under unique circumstances and Texians to this day are still a distinct culture. Thank you for shedding light on our history :)!!

  • @Myrddin_Nebelstein
    @Myrddin_Nebelstein Před rokem +2

    lol that for 11 years sign broke me 😂

  • @Azrael_the_Black
    @Azrael_the_Black Před rokem +1

    Not sure why, but every time one of those little Funko Pop guys start waving or running through the daisies it makes me smile.

  • @arnulfo267
    @arnulfo267 Před rokem +3

    I live in Texas and have always been old maps of Texas original shaped, but I never studied why it lost that land.

  • @brandonlyon730
    @brandonlyon730 Před rokem +7

    There was also the Missouri Compromise to considered. Where no new slave states can be made above Missouri’s southern borders, and Texas a new slave state technically did go over Missouri’s southern border a bit with it's claims. So to be apart of the union and continue on slavery it would have to give up much of it's northern border claimed lands that passes over missouri’s southern border to remain a slave state. It's why Oklahoma has that random panhandle.

    • @markalexander832
      @markalexander832 Před rokem

      The Missouri Compromise applied to the lands of the Louisiana Purchase, not to Texas. In any case, the Missouri Compromise was an Act of Congress. Any Act of Congress can be overridden by a subsequent Act of Congress, not to mention a treaty, both of which apply to Texas' later admission to the Union. Texas joined the Union by treaty, keeping all her claimed lands and borders and entered as a slave state.

  • @sgwilliams1313
    @sgwilliams1313 Před 9 měsíci +1

    You are doing great. Thank you for the videos.

  • @edwardhayward1937
    @edwardhayward1937 Před rokem +1

    I like how these episodes always start with him saying “as many of you will know,” followed by something I don’t know

  • @Moromom22
    @Moromom22 Před rokem +13

    "As many of you know Texas looked like this."
    *Sweats nervously*

  • @ArthurCSchaperMR
    @ArthurCSchaperMR Před rokem +20

    Please do a video on the following subjects:
    1. Why did the People's Revolution of 1848 fail in the Germanies and Spain?
    2. Why do people drive on different sides of the road in different countries?

    • @WoaHusko
      @WoaHusko Před rokem +6

      Those two are good. I also want a video where why didn’t Leopold didn’t accept the Spanish throne in 1870.

    • @GLASSMOSCOWANDBEIJING
      @GLASSMOSCOWANDBEIJING Před rokem

      "People's Revolution"
      Lolz

    • @bruhbruh-us6gl
      @bruhbruh-us6gl Před rokem +1

      1.- People hated revolutionaries after the Napoleonic wars
      2.- Some "people" decided it was more convenient to drive on the left and nobody ever bothered fixing it

    • @alessiodecarolis
      @alessiodecarolis Před rokem +1

      From what I read, the drive on the right side was estabilished after Napoleon's conquests of Europe, so the military traffics were semplified, this could explain why UK was pratically the only country in Europe to drive on the left.

    • @jeremywilliams5107
      @jeremywilliams5107 Před rokem

      2 - there wasn't much fuss in the horse&buggy/pedestrian times. You drove in the middle of the road until you had to move for someone else.

  • @hostandersson4301
    @hostandersson4301 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Your vids are addictive (:

  • @smarticus9123
    @smarticus9123 Před rokem +1

    Cool to see a historical mention of one of my ancestors, keep up the good work!

  • @sclm046
    @sclm046 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Liked the video! Here is how Texas "regained" some lost territory with the admission of New Mexico as a state. This proves the theory of having good friends in "High Places". In 1881 the state capitol at Austin was destroyed by fire. To replace the capitol with a new building the State Legislature set aside 3,050,000 acres of public land to finance the building of a new capitol (unlike other states, Texas owns its public lands). A group of investors, largely from Illinois, known as the Capitol Syndicate took title to the land that extended through parts of what would become ten Texas counties. The new capitol building was completed in 1888, paid for by the investors. The land transferred to the Capitol Syndicate was set up as a ranch and named the XIT (Ten In Texas). Ranching would give investors income until land could be divided and sold in parcels for ranching and farming. A good portion of this land abutted the 103rd meridian which was set as the western boundary of the Texas panhandle and designated as the eastern boundary of New Mexico. Going back to 1859, surveyor John H. Clark set out to survey the 103rd meridian which was the boundary set by the Compromise of 1850. The survey was beset by many difficulties including but not limited to lack of water and hostile Indians. End result was the 103rd meridian's north end was placed about 2.3 miles to the west of the actual meridian, while the south end was placed about 3.1 miles to the west of the meridian (you can look at a Google map of the western end of the Oklahoma panhandle and see the location of the actual 103rd meridian). This resulted in Texas gaining about 942 square miles. The 1859 survey was certified as the legal boundary in 1891. Jump to 1910. New Mexico is preparing to be admitted as a state. The New Mexico committee is aware of the boundary error and as part of its requirement to designate borders of the new state to be, has requested that the true 103rd meridian be the actual eastern boundary of the new state. John V. Farwell, one of the Capitol Syndicate investors attempted to get Texas legislators aware of what was likely to occur, but apparently no one was listening. A hefty chunk of the XIT Ranch would suddenly be in a different state. That hefty chunk of land would be in limbo with an enormous loss to the Syndicate. Fortunately, John V. Farwell had a friend. No less than the President, William Howard Taft, Farwell's old Yale College buddy. Long story short, the New Mexico committee was told to accept the 1859 boundary or there would be no statehood. The committee accepted the 1859 survey as law and that boundary exists to this day. The southern end of the "land beyond the 103rd meridian" lies within the Permian Basin which has supplied incredible amounts of oil and gas revenue to Texas.

  • @Darkred28
    @Darkred28 Před rokem +33

    Fun fact: When Texas joined the union there was a provision added that the state could split into five new states if it wanted to.

    • @chedelirio6984
      @chedelirio6984 Před rokem +4

      Well, sure, but the provision specifically reads: "New States of convenient size not exceeding four in number, in addition to said State of Texas and having sufficient population, may, hereafter by the consent of said State, be formed out of the territory thereof, which shall be entitled to admission under the provisions of the Federal Constitution" This is not really different from the normal procedure for separating one state from within another except that it specifies a *maximum* number -- and Congress would still have to approve it, Texas *can't* just unilaterally split itself and force four extra states into existence

    • @BS-vx8dg
      @BS-vx8dg Před rokem +2

      Yeah, I was really surprised the Texas Split Proviso didn't come up.

    • @markalexander832
      @markalexander832 Před rokem +1

      @@chedelirio6984 An interesting conundrum -- electing not to admit such states (remember "entitled to admission") might very well be construed as an abrogation of the Treaty of Annexation.

    • @chedelirio6984
      @chedelirio6984 Před rokem +1

      @@markalexander832 However "entitled", it does say admitted "according to the Constitution" i.e. by individual Act of Congress, and one state cannot command the delegations of 26 others how to vote.

  • @csh000
    @csh000 Před 11 měsíci +1

    2:07 your Trinity River looks more like the Brazos River. Trinity flows from DFW into Galveston Bay east of Houston while Brazos passes western suburbs of Houston.
    Unless it's the Colorado River which parallels the Brazos River.

  • @docvideo93
    @docvideo93 Před rokem +1

    As a native Texan, we had two years on Texas history and this was NEVER covered. THANKS!

  • @alabamaal225
    @alabamaal225 Před rokem +13

    Fun Fact: The payment the state of Texas received from the U.S. Federal government for the "excess lands" were in the form of U.S. Treasury Bonds held by the Texas state government. At the outbreak of the Civil War the new Confederate state government of Texas sold those bonds to speculators to help finance the Confederate war effort (among other things). After the War the sale of those bonds were challenged and the case went to the U.S. Supreme Court. In the famous case of "Texas v. White (1869)" the Supreme Court ruled that the sale of the bonds were invalid because the secessionist state government of Texas had no authority to sell the bonds. This was from the ruling that the secessionist state government of Texas did not legally exist because the act of arbitrary secession from the Union was in itself unconstitutional.

    • @markalexander832
      @markalexander832 Před rokem +2

      There was only one justice on the Court who had a legally valid opinion in that case. The majority opinion was a political expediency required to justify the war against the seceded states. To take the view that the same people who validly exercised their sovereign right to join the Union by ratifying the Treaty of Annexation did not have the right to reverse their decision requires considerable perverse logic and mental gymnastics.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před rokem

      @@markalexander832 Sam Houston would agree, they had the right to secede. But not the right to join the CSA as an avowed enemy to the USA.
      Sending men to fight in Kentucky and Pennsylvania meant Texas became a belligerent to the neutral and loyal states (respectively) which meant Texas lost all its rights vis-a-vis the USA after the USA won.
      tl;dr, play stupid games and win stupid prizes. and I say this as a 713 with no love for Washington DC.

    • @markalexander832
      @markalexander832 Před rokem +2

      @@zimriel We're getting a bit off topic now, but if I understand your argument, we should have been OK if after secession we had just gone it alone without joining the CSA. Given Lincoln's eagerness to provoke a war with the CSA after rebuffing early Southern efforts at negotiating a peaceful and orderly secession, I somehow doubt it.

  • @jul1440
    @jul1440 Před rokem +2

    Please make an episode: "Why is there a _New_ Mexico?" Very good info and history there...

  • @arfyego0682
    @arfyego0682 Před rokem

    I was re-binging your videos yesterday, so glad to see an upload so soon :DD

  • @hugokatz
    @hugokatz Před 11 měsíci +1

    I wasn't born in Texas, but my parents came to their senses, and moved here in 1965. There's a great reason for the way Texas looks. It's the only shape, that would make, a great belt buckle. If we hadn't changed it, imagine how silly cowboy belt buckles would look.

  • @Mullynx5735-gu7ik
    @Mullynx5735-gu7ik Před rokem +4

    Wow, even Texas was bigger than Texas.

  • @FastTquick
    @FastTquick Před rokem +5

    Here’s an idea: Why was Britain’s territory of Sudan called “Anglo-Egyptian Sudan” and not “British Sudan?”

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 Před rokem

      Because Arabs like to pretend they're in charge

    • @thomasrinschler6783
      @thomasrinschler6783 Před rokem

      Because it was ruled by Egypt and Britain jointly.

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 Před rokem +1

      @@thomasrinschler6783 on paper. The Egyptians needed British help for anything more complicated than a shovel

  • @Geojr815
    @Geojr815 Před rokem +1

    Thanks James Bisonette!!

  • @sirgavalot
    @sirgavalot Před 11 měsíci

    I'm loving all these comments starting "fun fact:", I bet the Fun Fact guy would love seeing how much his influence and love of fun facts has spread

  • @thenabbitgamer
    @thenabbitgamer Před rokem +32

    Another reason Texas lost all of that land was because of the Missouri Compromise Line. For those who don't know, The Missouri Compromise line is on the Southern border of Missouri, and it banned any new slave states from being created above the line. Texas wanted to be a Slave state, but most of the territory it lost was above the Missouri Compromise line. So not only was Texas stripped of the territory because the government didn't want Texas to have to much political power, but also so Texas could be a Slave state.

    • @MagiconIce
      @MagiconIce Před rokem +3

      "We want to own human beings so badly, we give up the land"
      "What part of "all men are created equal" did you not understand?"

    • @JonathanRager
      @JonathanRager Před rokem

      This, this is the biggest reason. Always was. All the other reasons and compromises are tertiary to Texas's need to remain a slave state.

    • @markalexander832
      @markalexander832 Před rokem +2

      Texas officially joined the Union in 1846 with ALL her claimed lands and retained them until the Compromise of 1850. True, the northern border of the Panhandle was drawn in 1850 to satisfy the spirit of the Missouri Compromise, but the lands sold to the United States were agreed through negotiation. Texas was unable to extend her jurisdiction to those distant territories and needed money to pay her debts from the days of the Republic. The Missouri Compromise applied only to the lands of the Louisiana Purchase.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před rokem

      @@MagiconIce the bit where West Africans are considered 'men'.
      Do West Africans consider whites to be 'men'? 'kill the boer, kill the farmer' . . .

    • @yaz2928
      @yaz2928 Před rokem +4

      @@MagiconIce The US never had "All men are created equal" as a motto, slavery was big in America since day 1 and was only phased out in northern territories after they were able to industrialize and get rid of slave labor (which the South hadn't done yet).

  • @WILLIAM1690WALES
    @WILLIAM1690WALES Před rokem +16

    When Texas was a country that actually had an embassy in London. Incidentally, when it did vacate the premises, it didn’t pay its rent, but never mind we still love the Lone Star State.🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇺🇸👌

    • @ScottishMeetBall
      @ScottishMeetBall Před rokem +3

      When the Texian Militia men were fighting & taking their revenge on the Mexican Army at the Battle of San Jacinto, they held flags blazon with the Union Jack. 💪 💪 💪 🇺🇸 🤝 🇬🇧

    • @lljkgktudjlrsmygilug
      @lljkgktudjlrsmygilug Před rokem

      Texans are rentoids.

    • @ZolaClyde
      @ZolaClyde Před rokem

      No, “we” do not love Texas! Not while it is the most authoritarian state in the country.

  • @andreabennington
    @andreabennington Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great video!

  • @mrhehveee5213
    @mrhehveee5213 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Man, it feels good to have the subject be about your own Homestate!🤗

  • @DISTurbedwaffle918
    @DISTurbedwaffle918 Před rokem +3

    The idea of Colorado and Washington being where parts of Texas are is rather disturbing

  • @Punker85_YouTube
    @Punker85_YouTube Před rokem +3

    Actually, spliting states is legal in the constitution, you just need the approval of the state who would be split

    • @sexygeek8996
      @sexygeek8996 Před rokem

      They could also split it before it becomes a state.

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 Před rokem

      West Virginia’s case is a bit complicated though.

  • @jorgetovar3969
    @jorgetovar3969 Před rokem +2

    You always impress me with your accurate representations of history figures 😍 (even though, all of them are squares)
    Santa Anna's lock of hair is absurd 😝

  • @jimgorycki4013
    @jimgorycki4013 Před rokem +1

    At one point, there was a small strip of land called "no man's land" separating Texas from Kansas. Texas relinquished land north of 36 degrees 30 minutes north. Missouri Compromise stated that any land north of 36 -30 was free state. That land was eventually annexed by Oklahoma.

  • @SkyTheBear
    @SkyTheBear Před 8 měsíci +4

    For more context, the Comanche had held those “Texan” lands for hundreds of years, halting Spanish, Mexican, Texan, and American expansion into the region despite only numbering in the few thousand.
    If you want the full story, I suggest reading Empire of The Summer Moon by S. C. Gwynne. He paints the whole picture of Comanche history and prowess during the colonial era

  • @Taukingur
    @Taukingur Před rokem +7

    3:13 why is the border like that?

    • @David_Dude
      @David_Dude Před rokem +4

      Well some New Mexico land was bought after Texas becoming a state and the new border

  • @imopman
    @imopman Před rokem +1

    Excellent videos, subscribed.

  • @WolfenX4
    @WolfenX4 Před rokem +1

    You just made my work day so much better. ❤

  • @adamkaufman724
    @adamkaufman724 Před rokem +4

    Love your work.

  • @looinrims
    @looinrims Před rokem +4

    As a North Carolinian I can confirm that South Carolina is actually called ‘Less than North Carolina’

  • @KONYT427
    @KONYT427 Před rokem +2

    good day when he uploads

  • @tahaymvids1631
    @tahaymvids1631 Před rokem +1

    On behalf of James Bisonette, We need a Peak Texas mug!

  • @pabcu2507
    @pabcu2507 Před rokem +7

    Do a video on Spain when they were on the verge of sending another blue division to japan during ww2

    • @WoaHusko
      @WoaHusko Před rokem +2

      Yeah that would be a good video. I always wondered that.

    • @pabcu2507
      @pabcu2507 Před rokem +2

      @@WoaHuskowould’ve been interesting to see them fight against Japanese soldiers since we know how they fought in the Soviet Union and they were very competent and the Japanese fought to the end with different tactics (no doubt there would’ve been a one on one sword fight with a Japanese and Spanish officer)

    • @genghiskhan5701
      @genghiskhan5701 Před rokem +3

      You know you went to far when one of your "allies"(technically) wants to go to war with you

    • @WoaHusko
      @WoaHusko Před rokem +2

      @@pabcu2507It would be very interesting. I also want to see more videos on Spain like why didn’t Leopold accept the Spanish throne in 1870.
      I also want to see a video on why did the United States invade Haiti and the Dominican Republic in 1916.

  • @cooper7240
    @cooper7240 Před rokem +2

    Another day another history lesson summed up in 4 minutes.

  • @thedragondemands5186
    @thedragondemands5186 Před rokem +2

    "well, there were numerous causes. Apart from the obvious schism between abolitionists and anti-abolitionists, there were also many trade factors both local and international which played a significant - "
    " - just say 'slavery'"

  • @DarkVeghetta
    @DarkVeghetta Před 11 měsíci

    I love how 'Welcome to Texas. Please annex us.' manages to rhyme while conveying so much with so little.

  • @jeepmega629
    @jeepmega629 Před rokem +3

    The fact that Texas for a time owned part of Wyoming still messes with my brain.

    • @adrianjohnson7920
      @adrianjohnson7920 Před 7 měsíci

      That piece of land is in Carbon County. You can look carefully at the county borders and make out where the Texas territory had been. I once fantasised about buying land there and calling it the "Texas" or "Lone Star" Ranch. . . .

  • @raoulduke344
    @raoulduke344 Před rokem +6

    I love how the guy who wanted to name different parts of Texas "Colorado" must've kept proposing to the government that they make a new state, and called it "Colorado", they eventually caved and did it. He must've brought it up every chance he could.
    "Great party James, but Stephen's just came in. I swear, if he mentions creating a state called "Colorado" once tonight...".

    • @ClementinesmWTF
      @ClementinesmWTF Před rokem +2

      Every time a proposed Colorado happened, it was due to an already existing major river being named Colorado (the main one most think about and the Texas Colorado)

    • @raoulduke344
      @raoulduke344 Před rokem

      @ClementinesmWTF thanks for clearing that up.
      It was just a joke, but I appreciate the info.

  • @nik65stgt60
    @nik65stgt60 Před rokem +1

    Great content!

  • @themathforyou
    @themathforyou Před rokem

    I have a bunch of video ideas I would like to see in your vids!
    Why are Romanians descendants of the Roman Empire?
    What happened to the Venician Empire?
    What was the Thirty Years War?
    What happened to the Ottoman's Seha?
    Why didnt the Ottomans conquer Persia or Saudi Arabia?
    Why didn't Africa try to colonize?
    Why was Prussia's lands so spread out?
    How did the Habsburg Monarchy and Holy Roman Empire work?
    Why didn't Italy get Corsica during WW2?
    How did Portugal's kingdom fall apart?
    How did Africa respond to the Ottomans?
    Why didn't Austria and Czechia get any land from Germany after WW2?
    Why didn't Japan invade the Soviet Union during WW2?
    And one that is a little bit different is
    Why do we use the Mercator Projection?